Shawn Ryan Show - #105 General Robert Spalding - Is TikTok a PSYOP?
Episode Date: April 15, 2024Robert Spalding is a former United States Air Force Brigadier General and B-2 Stealth Bomber Pilot. General Spalding served as the chief China strategist for the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the Join...t Staff at the Pentagon. He has served in senior positions of strategy and diplomacy within the Departments of Defense and State for more than 26 years. His experience has made him one of the foremost authorities on U.S. foreign policy and intelligence concerning China. Today, he servers as the CEO of SEMPRE, a company specializing in secure, EMP hardened telecommunication and cloud systems that are redefining security across the industry. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://lairdsuperfood.com - USE CODE "SRS" https://helixsleep.com/srs - USE CODE "HELIXPARTNER20" https://meetfabric.com/shawn https://hillsdale.edu/srs https://moinkbox.com/shawn https://blackbuffalo.com https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner General Robert Spalding Links: Company - https://sempre.ai X - https://twitter.com/SEMPRE_USA IG - https://www.instagram.com/generalspalding FB - https://www.facebook.com/GeneralRobertSpalding LinkedIn - http://linkedin.com/company/sempre1 Website - https://generalspalding.com Books - https://www.amazon.com/Stealth-War-China-While-Americas/dp/0593084349 | https://www.amazon.com/War-Without-Rules-Playbook-Domination/dp/0593331044 Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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General Robert Spalding, welcome to the show.
Great to be here.
It's an honor to have you here.
I've been kind of following your ex account for the past couple of years and I love, love
may be the wrong word, but you always are posting thought-provoking articles and thoughts that
I don't think a lot of people think about.
And you know, it really, the stuff that you're putting out on there challenges anybody that's
looking into what's going on.
It challenges them to think and maybe not tie themselves so much to a particular
party and or candidate.
And I just, I really appreciate that because I don't think there are a whole lot of critical
thinkers left in the world.
At least it doesn't seem that way.
It seems like everybody's just wanting to jump on a bandwagon. And you see kind of both sides of the aisle here
calling each other sheep.
And the reality is, if you're not a critical thinker,
and you cannot call your own party or political candidates
bullshit, then you just fall into the sheep category.
And I think it's important that no matter how inconvenient
the truth may be, it needs to come out.
Corruption needs to be exposed,
even if it inconveniences who you believe in.
And so I just wanted to say that I really appreciate that.
Thank you.
But I'm gonna go ahead and read your introduction here, which is
quite the intro. So
CEO of Semperi.A.I., globally recognized national security expert,
United States Air Force Brigadier General, retired former B-2
stealth bomber pilot, former senior director of strategy at the National Security Council
in the White House.
Innovation while serving in the White House has led to a reset in national security and
public policy regarding telecommunications in the United States as well as globally.
Author of Stealth War, How China Took Over While America's Elites Slept, and War Without
Rules, China's Playbook for Global Domination.
Received the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Defense Meritorious Service
Medal and Joint Service Accommodation Medal,
received Air Force Meritorious Service Medal with One Oak Leaf Cluster, Air Force Accommodation
Medal with One Oak Leaf Cluster, and Air Force Achievement Medal with One Oak Leaf Cluster.
Fluent in Chinese Mandarin under General Spalding's leadership, the 509th Operations Group, the nation's only B-2 stealth bomber unit experienced unprecedented technological and operational advances. State Department for more than 26 years, senior fellow at Hudson Institute 5G slash 6G technology
commissioner with the Global Tech Security Commission.
And I think that covers it.
Am I missing anything?
There's probably some things in there, but they don't really matter.
Wow.
But never actually met a stealth bomber pilot. So
there's not very many of us. Yeah, very cool. Very. I mean,
that's not what we're here to talk about today. But I just
that that is. That's really cool. I've never even seen a
stealth bomber in person.
It's because they're so stealthy.
Yeah, I guess that makes sense, right?
But, so I want to talk to you today
a lot about 5G technology,
what you're doing with your company.
And I want to talk a lot about China
and where you think they
Might have us cornered things. We need to look out for things that you just want the general population to be aware of
I'm I'm
just
Very interested in in in that subject
I've had a number of people on to to talk about things we should be looking out for
from the CCP.
And like I said, been following you for a while now
and I love what you have to say.
So I just wanna get more in the weeds with what you know.
But before we do that, I have a Patreon account,
it's a subscription account.
They are our top supporters.
They've been with us here from the beginning.
And they're the reason I get to sit here and do this
and that you get to be here and educate all of us.
So I give them an opportunity to ask a couple of questions.
Couple of good ones here.
First one is from Gregory Lawton.
And he wants to know, do you think China will attempt to
take over Taiwan by force, and if so, how?
Absolutely.
They've been very clear they're going to do that.
Xi Jinping has not missed words.
We're going to take back Taiwan.
How? I think they're going to take back Taiwan. How?
I think they're going to come by the air.
The general notion is that they're going to use an amphibious landing.
I think they will use elements of maritime forces, but I think that's going to be a massive
air invasion.
And the reason I think that is because you can go to Unrestricted Warfare, the document
written by two People's Liberation Army colonels.
And it's a dissection in addition to a lot of other things, but it's a dissection of
the Gulf War, the first Gulf War.
And they really talk about the use of combined arms, particularly the Air Force, and how
it was used.
If you go back to that war, the air power was used to kind of kick down the door and
then everybody flowed in.
And I think they're going to do the same thing. Obviously, they have
been studying us for a long time.
Do you think there are, when do you think this is going to happen?
Do you have any idea?
At any time, literally at any time. We, you know, trying to predict, you know, we
just had Admiral Alcalino come and testify in Congress, I think it was this week, that they're going to be
ready by 2027.
I don't like to put a date on it because that implies that we can have insight into that.
We really can't.
It's going to happen on their timeline.
And so what we have to look to, are they capable?
And I would say they're absolutely capable. The weaponry that they've arrayed on their side of the Taiwan Strait has been building
for decades.
So I mean, you think about it, they've been preparing for this invasion for decades, stockpiling
weapons.
And when you kind of wargame that, you can take those weapons, you can make Taiwan look
like the surface of the
moon and still have weapons left.
So it's just the forces are overwhelming.
It's 70 miles off their coast.
They don't really care about the people.
They just want the ground.
So I just think that not calling a spade a spade is a problem.
They're ready.
They've said they're going to do it.
And so now it's just, when are they going to do it?
And it's really, it's on their timeline.
Why are they so interested in Taiwan?
The Chinese Communist Party, within about nine days after they annexed what was called
East Turkestan, they called it Xinjiang, it's where the Uyghurs live, they claim it was
part of, traditionally part of Chinese territory.
It's part of the Chinese Communist Party's lore, the restoration of the great Chinese
empire.
They have built into this lore that Taiwan was always a part of China, and that's not true.
And so it is something that they have basically,
you know, concocted based on part of their platform
and they're a political party.
And so that's what they have, you know,
programmed the population to believe.
I think when you look at it strategically in the region, it does complicate our ability
to defend Japan, defend Korea, defend the Philippines because it basically it cuts the
first island chain in two when they occupy that, allows them to offset forces even farther from their shore.
So, I think it's strategic, Terry, but really it's part of the lore that they've kind of
created about themselves and about restoration of Chinese hegemony.
Is that why, is that the reason that we as Americans should be so concerned is because if they take Taiwan,
we won't be able to strategically defend Japan, Philippines, Thailand, the countries that
you had just mentioned, or would it be more towards the chip manufacturing that goes on
there?
Well, I mean, some of the candidates have said chip manufacturing is the only thing
that matters, right?
I think you've got to go back to the end of World War II and the beginning of the Cold
War, what interested we have in protecting Western Europe.
And I think the interest was in understanding that if we become the only society in the world that believes in liberty,
then it makes it a lot harder for us
to survive in that world.
And so part of the Cold War is really just saying
we're gonna stand for a set of principles and values
and we're going to, because we think that makes us safer
in the end.
And so you can take the approach that it's just the chips.
There happens to be a lot of American citizens that are living in Taiwan.
I think that part of what's going on there is, do we want to create a world that's beginning to slowly move towards
China's direction, which is really authoritarianism and the right to basically subjugate a country
of 23 million people?
There's a lot of complication in there.
Originally I was, we probably shouldn't fight over Taiwan, but the more
I thought about it and the more I really just, I believe very strongly that we cannot defend
our republic and the ideals of the republic if we're willing to basically just look away
from that kind of activity.
The problem is though, we can't fight because if we fight, then it raises a specter of nuclear
war and there's no way of knowing when you fight over Taiwan where that goes, where that
escalates to.
Do you protect Taipei and then lose Los Angeles?
Is that something that we are willing to do?
And I don't think that answer, any American would say,
yes, I'm willing to lose Los Angeles for Taipei.
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And so you kind of get into this situation where if you're not proactively transmitting
what you're liable to do, then it's liable to happen. And then at that point, you've kind of lost the advantage
or lost the escalation advantage.
What we did during the Cold War is we said,
if you come, if you invade Soviet Union,
then it's gonna be all out nuclear war
and we're gonna destroy you.
And that kept the peace.
We haven't said that with regard to Taiwan.
And there's no policy.
I don't think anybody in Washington, D.C. thinks that this should be the policy.
And so therefore, the Chinese think that they have complete carte blanche to roll in there.
And we've also done a very good job during the Cold War and after the Cold War of preventing
countries from getting nuclear weapons, particularly friendly, countries friendly to the United
States.
Obviously, countries hostile to the United States have been doing it like North Korea,
but countries friendly to the United States, like Ukraine, like Taiwan, we persuaded not to get nuclear weapons.
I think that's dangerous.
We've kept them unarmed.
We haven't extended our nuclear embargo.
In other words, we haven't said the same thing to the Chinese that we said to the Soviet
Union.
Therefore, we're inviting war.
War will come.
It will come at the time of
China's choosing. And so I think what we're left with is, do we want to evacuate the island?
Do we want to put Americans in harm's way for a NEO? To me, the Berlin airlift becomes
kind of the thing that I think about when I think about Taiwan,
at least at this point.
If we're not going to have some kind of declaratory policy that says, just like we did for Western
Europe, that we are going to unleash the full retaliatory capability of the United States
on the China, then I think then war will come. I wasn't planning on going down this road, but how advanced are China's weapons?
We hear about, let's scratch that, let's go nuclear war.
We hear about it all the time with Putin and what's going on in Ukraine,
and he's threatened it.
There is so much more technology out there now.
Do we, I mean, are they even close to the technology that we have and, or is nuclear war still as much of a threat as it was?
With, from what I understand, we have,
we have new technologies that don't,
that like these laser technologies,
these directed energy weapons.
From what I understand, we're very close to having a dome
over the United States that will interdict anything
that's coming in.
I mean, are you aware of any of this type of technology
that we have, this new kind of new modern age weapons?
Okay, let's put it this way.
Okay.
It's you against a thousand bad guys.
Thousand bad guys have all the ammunition in the world,
don't have any training,
and you've got 990 bullets,
and you're the best trained guy in the world.
Somebody's gonna get through that.
Right, so it's all about mass in the end.
And that's what we're talking about here with China.
It doesn't matter, the technology doesn't matter if we're Winchester
and they've still got weapons.
And that's what we're talking about.
We can have the best technology in the world.
We can have a thousand to one kill ratio.
But it's that thousand and one that's going to kill us.
And that's the problem we face.
It's just a pure numbers game.
Nobody would say, I'm gonna send an ODA team
against a battalion, right?
That would be crazy.
And that's what we're talking here.
It's just, the numbers are overwhelming.
Ships, planes, bombs, rockets, missiles,
just, it is staggering.
Do they have more of everything than we have?
Oh my gosh, so much more.
And you think about what we've been doing recently,
we've spent most of our munitions
to Middle East and Ukraine.
So, I mean, yes, they have so many more things.
And so it doesn't matter how good you are,
if somebody has just overwhelming amounts of people
and weapons, and that's what the Chinese have.
And they're willing to spend them.
Makes a lot of sense.
Moving on, I wanted to get into, I mean, China has,
they seem a lot more strategic than we are.
And some of the ways that I've found that they seem to be taking the US, I want to just dive into some of those. Let's start with the cartels and the fentanyl crisis.
They definitely seem to be behind the fentanyl crisis. They're sending in the chemicals.
They're sending in chemists
to train the cartels how to make the world's most deadliest fentanyl.
They're moving on to the next drug, you know, fentanyl took heroin.
Now they're developing this drug, I believe it's called Niduson, and that's already started
pumping through the border.
How legitimate is that? Is that, is it as strategic as I make it out to be
or is that just cartels reaching out to China
for the chemicals?
I mean, you have to take a step back and say,
what did the Chinese study?
Who won the Cold War?
We did.
How do we win the Cold War?
It's really about unleashing the power of our society.
And so what the Communist
Party wanted to do was figure out how they harness that, right? How to harness individual ambition
for their own interests. And so if you can do that, if you can harness individual ambition to
a certain set of interests, then you can unleash the creative capabilities of people, but still
get the kind of outcome you want.
So we don't have a fentanyl problem in China, do we?
Because they know the people that are making money at selling these things are precursors
and helping both the cartels and the triads out of Hong Kong.
They can make all the money they want.
They just can't allow any of it to seep into China
or they'll end up dead.
The Communist Party will kill them.
And so they know that.
So the triads, the cartels, and the Chinese,
these people that are involved in it make money.
And they have factories in China
and they create factories in Latin America and elsewhere
and move the drugs.
And they move it not just in the United States,
all over the world.
And it's a profit making in Denver.
Now, is Xi Jinping personally sitting back
and managing this?
No, they recognize that if you can narrowly
enable your people to get rich, but get rich in ways that support your interests, then you've unleashed the American model in a way.
That's what they do.
There's all kinds of things that you can get rich at in China that are absolutely abhorrent
and illegal here.
Wow. What about all the farmland within the US being bought by China or Chinese companies?
Is that...
Well, I think, again, there are multiple likely reasons for that. One is just,
There are no likely reasons for that. One is just if you have a lot of money in China and you want to have an escape route,
transferring that money into some kind of real asset is very important.
You don't want to keep it all liquid because that can be seized.
Getting some kind of real property somewhere outside of you can be in good favor at one time,
and then very quickly, like we saw with Jack Ma,
the founder of Alibaba, you can be out of favor,
and then you have nothing.
And so a lot of it, I believe,
is getting assets outside of the country
for themselves and their family members.
And so, you know, I think that's a good thing.
And I think that's a good thing, too, be out of favor, and then you have nothing. And so a lot of it, I believe, is getting assets outside
of the country for themselves and their family members. Another is, in the Communist Party,
the way that they look at what's called the hua chao or the expatriates that are outside the
country, they look at them as a resource just like
a citizen lives within China.
There may also be an interest, for instance, to build facilities within that are in strategic
locations.
There might be an interest to be a part of the food supply, to provide security.
There's a lot of things where your individual interests can align with the Chinese Communist
Party interests, and that's why property can be purchased.
It could also be for influence.
As I was telling you, we had Faraday Futures, which was an EV company that was building
a factory outside in the Los Air Force base.
This was when I was still in uniform,
where the mayor of Las Vegas comes to the wing commander
at Nellis and says, hey, please don't say anything
about this factory because I want to have jobs
for Las Vegas citizens.
So it can be a way to also influence local politicians,
state politicians, federal politicians about how things that you want them to do.
I'm going to go build something in your district so that I scratch your back, you scratch mine.
Now the asks are not going to be deliberate, like obvious, support us if we invade Taiwan,
it's going to be more along the lines
You know, these are our interests and and let's you scratch my back. I'll scratch yours in the case of the this Faraday futures
Okay
Now the Chinese Communist Party has built this advanced manufacturing facility right off to one of our most strategic air bases in the United States
Where you can start doing all kinds
of intelligence collection and whatever that can be a base for that.
And so there's likely, there's no one reason.
I think people want one reason.
There's no one reason.
There's a multitude of reasons that come through the relationships that are created
by investing in real assets or in companies
here in the United States.
And you may not even understand what all those opportunities
and benefits may be, all you know is you've just created
a tie, you've created a relationship that can be exploited
at some time in the future.
I mean, this is a well-known intelligence technique, right?
Gain an asset, cultivate that asset.
You may not know where that's gonna go.
You may be like somebody that maybe has an opportunity
to rise to some level of prominence within a society,
but you've got them, you've got a relationship,
and over time you figure out how you're gonna exploit that.
And that's what they're so good at.
I mean, could you talk a little bit about
how they would extract intelligence from a factory
next to one of our most strategic air bases?
Right, you're collecting signals intelligence.
You've got people working there.
So they're downtown in the casinos, in the bars,
collecting hument.
So you just think about all.
You've got the people.
You've got the technology.
You've got the geography to basically set up a perfect place
to...
I mean, a consulate in the United States or an embassy in the United States is the same
type of thing.
It is a resource to gather intelligence.
That's why we shut down the consulate in Houston. So all the forms of intelligence, all the ints, that's a base for that capability.
I mean, when you talk about human and signal intelligence, I'm trying to make this more
real.
I understand it, but I can't explain it as well as you can, I don't think.
What kind of intelligence could they be extracting
from that air base? I want to make it more real for the everyday listener.
So first of all, it's off the departure end, so you get a real close look at the airplane
and the underside of the airplane as they go over. So, and then with SIGINT, you're gonna be able to collect
information on transmission now, where you might be saying,
hey, I'm not gonna turn on something here on the base,
because I don't wanna run it through tests,
because this is going on.
So it basically begins to force you as the operator
to change how you do things in order
to prevent revealing certain things.
Now we already do a lot of these things already
for overhead intelligence collection.
But having somebody right next door is a
whole other effort. Like, for instance, when we would take the B-2 over to
air shows, all of a sudden you've got an aircraft, like a helicopter, hovering
right over in front of the B-2. Now, you know, what are they doing with that aircraft?
Are you using radar to basically understand
the characteristics of the airplane
and how it uses that?
It's hard to tell, but once you're within the fence line,
there's all kinds of stuff that you can do
that gives away secrets that we don't wanna give away.
And then with the human intelligence piece,
I mean basically what they could do is create an asset,
whether that's sex exploitation, financial reasons,
and then you have basically a plan inside of this.
Well, I mean guys go out to the bar
and they start talking about what they're doing on base.
Yeah.
Right? Yeah.
And you basically just invited a whole host of people
in that you don't know.
We were like, oh, well, they're just workers.
Well, workers in China are assets
of the Chinese state by law, right?
So you're inviting people that are part
of the intelligence apparatus because by virtue
of the fact they're Chinese.
And what the Chinese Congress party will say,
well, then you're being racist.
No, you're just, you have to recognize
that this is the way that they orient their society
and the way that they use their citizens.
They co-opt their citizens.
You and me, citizens of the United States, no longer serving the government.
Well, in China, we are.
Everybody is.
If you don't, then you find yourself in a bad space with the government.
You just have to understand that this is the way that their society is arranged and this is the expectation.
You know, I think that this particular conversation is very relevant after the article that I
saw you post on your ex account where Trump was talking about being friends with Xi Jinping and allowing him to open car manufacturing
plants within the United States.
The argument seemed to be, oh, well, this is going to bring American jobs in.
But from what I understand, what the article said, according to the article, is that China has more industrial robots
than anyone else in the world,
which means there would be little to possibly no jobs
for American workers,
as the robots take over basically the blue collar jobs.
On top of that,
that also affects the chip war going on in Taiwan, but now we have the
espionage piece as well.
And so if you could go into kind of your thoughts on that.
Yeah, you can look at the Belt and Road Initiative.
Anytime that China builds a railroad, a bridge, a dam, any type of infrastructure, a factory.
Usually they bring in Chinese workers
to do that work, almost always.
So yeah, there may be some Americans getting jobs,
but you're bringing in Chinese too.
You are creating opportunities for them to collect espionage.
More importantly, I think they are committed to providing for the Chinese people, opportunities
for the Chinese people, even when they're outside of their borders.
Anything that they're doing, they're doing on the basis of for the Chinese people. So if you say, hey, I'm going to bring in a Chinese facility into my country, then you
have to be of the mindset that the Chinese Communist Party wants it to benefit them.
And so anything that you think you might gain out of it is going to end up being not what
you think.
It's not going to provide as many jobs as you think.
It's not going to provide the what you think. It's not going to provide as many jobs as you think. It's not going to provide the benefits you think.
But it will provide a benefit to them
because they see these things in zero sum terms, right?
I will not do something that benefits you
that doesn't also benefit me more.
And that's the way you have to look at it.
And I think it takes people,
it's hard to recognize that you
could orient a society this way until you take a step back and
you understand that from the time you start kindergarten to
the time you graduate university, you're taught a
certain way of thinking.
All your media, all your social media, every single thing is
wrapped around love and to love and
cherish the party. And so you, while you have opportunities to advance your own
interests within that framework, it's within a framework where everything you
do is for the party and you know that. And so, I mean, that's what you're bringing
in. When you bring in Chinese factories with Chinese people,
they're there to harvest the benefits of America
for China, period, end of story, and themselves,
and themselves.
You have to add that in there because that's how they're
able to be so creative in the way they do it.
Because at the end of the day,
the party doesn't tell them how to do it.
They just tell them it's okay to do it. And I'll give you some resources to do it, but you guys have to figure out how they do it because at the end of the day, the party doesn't tell them how to do it, they just tell them it's okay to do it
and I'll give you some resources to do it,
but you guys have to figure out how to do it.
If you make a profit on it, great.
Great for you, great for me.
And this is Huawei, right?
Our model is different, right?
We have the National Security Agency.
National Security Agency, your tax dollar
goes to the government, the government creates
the NSA, NSA goes out and tries to figure out how to listen to things.
In China, it's like, okay, well, we'll build the infrastructure so that it's built into
this business model.
So instead of it just being a tax on the American people. It's actually also a profit center
Right if I if I'm deploying all the infrastructure now, I'm not just spending money on a federal agency
like the United States is I'm
Actually making money while fulfilling the same mission
That's that's the beauty of the model. I can make money in carrying out what I'm trying to do in terms of my political interests,
rather than just having to spend money to do it.
It's brilliant.
It is.
It is.
How else are they doing this?
You name it.
And I think unrestricted warfare does a good job of explaining it. Every single thing that we find to be common everyday things can be turned into weapons
that support their interests.
We just talked about fentanyl, we've talked about infrastructure, electronics, you name
it.
It's all done in the service of two things.
One, individual interests, but that has to be aligned with national interest.
And if you create the incentive system right, right, like for instance, if you're giving
a tax break for doing X versus Y, you're gonna do X. And so, or if you're given more loans to do X versus Y,
you're gonna do X.
And so I can basically create incentives
for you to get rich, but do it in ways
that I can use the levers of the state
to direct you in the ways that I want you to get rich.
Like I don't care how you get rich
until I see an interest in it
and then I'm gonna basically, I'm gonna align.
So I just mentioned Jack Ma, Alibaba,
go out and build Alibaba, get rich.
Okay, I see now that some of this
is actually creating a problem.
In the case of Jack Ma, it's like
you're kind of drawing attention away from the party, right?
You're this very successful tech entrepreneur
that has a somewhat kind of Silicon Valley-ish feel.
Okay, we need to pull attention back to the party
because Jack Ma, you're out of favor
and we're gonna take over your company.
This is the way that the party works.
It's very capitalistic in a lot of sense, but it's capitalism tied to a single party
state.
And when you do it that way, it's just a completely separate way of doing business, of thinking
about the world.
When it comes to the tech piece, which I think is probably where most of your knowledge lies,
if I'm not mistaken, I would like to dive into TikTok. TikTok's hot in the media right now.
It's been talked about for several years how it's a ginormous spy apparatus. And
a lot of people believe it is dubbing down the intelligence level of the US citizens.
Can you elaborate on why that was invented, what they're doing with it, and why you're
for the ban?
So I think first of all, the bill that's going before the Senate is not technically a ban.
It is a, you must divest ByteDance, which is the company that owns TikTok and owns the
algorithms that are behind how TikTok does its thing.
You have to divest of TikTok if you want it to stay, and if you don't, then it's banned.
So I think the idea that it's just a ban, that's all anybody talks about, is obviously
perpetuated by TikTok.
I think you do know that the congressional lines were flooded as this was coming to vote. In fact, they took the phones off the air because they were overwhelmed by TikTok users
calling Congress to say, don't vote for this bill.
And that was all orchestrated by TikTok itself.
And so what the Chinese Communist Party recognized in what Silicon Valley was building was this
enormous influence machine.
You can influence people's perceptions, their behavior patterns.
Now Silicon Valley has been doing this a long time.
It's how you create a trillion dollar company like Amazon or Google.
It's really about using the information you gather about people to then curate the content
that brings them in line with what you want them to do.
What do you want them to do?
You want them to be better consumers on your platform so you make more money.
This is the business model of Silicon Valley.
Well, the Chinese recognize, okay, I can make you not just a better consumer,
I can make you a better person, a better citizen.
And how is that?
And they say this, they say, you know, ByteDance, it's your job to make citizens, to create
content for citizens that make them better socialists, right?
So ByteDance creates algorithms that power the TikTok platform.
Okay. algorithms that power the TikTok platform. Okay, so how might the Chinese Communist Party
take advantage of this?
Well, now 30% or more of young people
get their news from TikTok.
That's a platform they get their news from.
So I'm less concerned about the intelligence collection.
That's obviously a problem,
but that's not where this is going. It's about
creating a movement. It's about creating a community. A community, number one, that loves TikTok,
but then because it loves TikTok and it's on the platform, you know, often hours per day,
then there's also things that you can begin to love,
or at least not hate.
And so it's an influence tool.
It's an influence tool.
You know, you can like, you sense this in your bones.
Like, if you put one of these things
in the hands of somebody,
there's ways to slowly get them to do things.
So he's just like, well, where's the evidence?
So another YouTuber, LaoY86,
puts the evidence right on this thing.
It's like, here is message after message after message,
promoting some policy that the Chinese Communist Party
wants, different venues, different people,
because you have to take the message and you have to break it up into the content that
people want.
What type of people do they want to see saying this message?
What type of venue do they want them in?
What type of, you know, how do we frame that shot so that we get this segment of people?
And then you do it over a bunch of segments.
He's shown verbatim messages that are in TikTok.
Like somebody's reading the message,
but it's different people, different places,
different times.
And so it really becomes a platform
for you to do all kinds of things. And this is a thing that we never had prior to the internet.
So I think it's well established that the Soviet Union had active measures programs, right?
That they were trying to subvert the United States, people in the United States.
But we didn't really give them purchase.
Now we've given the Chinese Communist Party not just purchased, they are basically plugged
in to what, 180 million people in the United States of a population of 330 million?
Directly plugged into them.
And do they love the Constitution?
Hell no.
That is their biggest fear is that their people become aware, somehow sentient of the US Constitution.
And so in the same way that we made the world safer democracy during the Cold War, they're people become aware, somehow sentient of the US Constitution.
In the same way that we made the world safe for democracy during the Cold War, they're
making the world safe for the Chinese Communist Party by slowly eroding our value system,
our belief system in terms of what's right, what's proper, what's expected by a citizen
of a country. That's the biggest thing.
Now you mentioned another that is, I think,
equally a problem, and that is, you know,
what happens to a person that stays on this platform
for hours of a day?
Well, they stop doing other things, right?
So just if you look at productivity,
you know, national productivity,
as a positive thing for your society,
if I can get you to do this for hours and hours of a day,
then I can, at the macro level,
again, 170 million people out of 330 million, they're watching these things
for hours of a day, your national productivity goes down.
Okay?
Well, you say, well, where's the evidence of that?
Well, they have the Chinese language equivalent
of TikTok called Douyin.
Douyin, the kids get 40 minutes a day, max, by law,
no more, shuts off.
That's the Chinese version of TikTok in China.
Chinese version.
By the way, TikTok itself is not allowed in China.
So no TikTok, you can't have Douyin, basically Chinese language version of TikTok, but you
can do it for 40 minutes a day.
And when you interview those kids and you say, hey, what do you want to be when you grow up?
The number one thing is I want to be an astronaut.
When you interview Americans on TikTok,
the number one thing they want to be is an influencer.
Right, so you're influencing people,
their behavior patterns,
you're reducing national productivity, and you're also taking
an entire generation of people and saying, you know, this is the number one thing to
be, right?
Not an engineer, not a doctor, you know.
So it's a very powerful tool, and it's just basically taking
the tools that Silicon Valley created and just tweaking them
a little bit for not just economic benefit, but for social
and political benefit.
It's really very basic, and I think anybody that's in Silicon
Valley and understands, you know, why you want to get
somebody like Facebook to, you know Facebook to 100, 200 million users,
and the power of that as a platform, or Google,
and the power of that as a platform, or Amazon,
and the power of that as a platform,
can understand a regime that's dedicated to the downfall
of our constitutional republic,
using those same techniques and tactics and procedures
to slowly get the American people to stop believing in,
you know, what is unique about America.
Do you think this differs?
I mean, is this more dangerous than what we're seeing
on other social platforms like Instagram, X, Facebook,
Snapchat, and YouTube?
Is it, I mean, because the messaging that's coming
from Silicon Valley, as we just kind of discussed
at breakfast, I mean, it's maybe just as toxic.
Well, so I've been thinking about this for a long time.
And so you kind of take the framework.
If you've read the Federalist Papers,
by and large the Federalist Papers argue for Republic
because of national security,
what we would call national security.
Basically, Alexander Hamilton and quite a few of them argues that we need to come together
as a federal republic because if we're separate, then we're going to be picked off one by one
as states, as colonies, if you will. And so national security was heavily kind of the most, I think, important thing.
There was other things, but primarily how do we protect ourselves from England or any
of these other monarchies that may want to take away our freedoms?
We have to band together in order to do that.
And so what are the things that we need to worry about?
Well, in the Constitution says we need an army, we need a navy.
We had powerful armies and we had powerful navies.
There was no like, we need a cybersecurity organization or we need a cyber command because
there's no internet. So at least as they could conceive of a threat
to our individual political independence and sovereignty,
it could only come by force of arms, right?
Somebody could come and occupy us
and then take that away by force of arms.
And that's why we have things like the Second Amendment.
But imagine if you could say,
hey, I can slowly erode your political independence and sovereignty
by beginning to change your mind through this medium called the internet.
How might we have conceived of the republic differently and instantiated it not just in
laws but also in technology?
And that's the thing that I think is a real problem.
When Trump went to China, I can't remember who told him,
but they basically said, hey, you know,
we're gonna be number one in AI.
We've got all the, our data and we've got your data.
You really can't compete with that
because you can't really collect data as a government
and drive all the resources of the state
to become the most powerful country
in artificial intelligence.
So we're gonna dominate the world that's coming and get in line or don't and we'll either
keep you in plugged in or we'll cut you off.
Those are powerful ideas.
What the former head of Google China, I wrote the book AI Superpower.
What he says is we want to become the Saudi Arabia of data.
What does that mean?
Well, that's oil for AI engines.
We want to be dominant in artificial intelligence.
And by doing that, we can use all these tools,
tools like ByteDance's algorithms,
to begin to manipulate the world in ways that
we want.
And I think recognizing that and recognizing that certainly since 2007 when the iPhone
came out and then shortly thereafter, about a couple years later when 4G networks started,
iPhone on a 3G network was trash.
It's like it was fun for a little bit, but then you really didn't get a good user experience.
But when they had a 4G network
and you really had broadband,
a broadband cellular link that you could connect that device.
Now I've got something that I can get you hooked on.
I can create applications.
I can get you, so now everybody just kind of
stares at these things.
When that happened, this ability to bypass
these two big oceans that protect us
and these two friendly borders
and go directly to the heart of American civilization,
that's what we created.
And all you have to do is look at,
hey, here's how these big tech companies
manipulate the narrative, manipulate your behavior to do is look at, hey, here's how these big tech companies manipulate the
narrative, manipulate your behavior to make money from you.
They're the 25% of S&P 500, the most economically powerful companies ever, and most influential
companies ever.
The Chinese Communist Party just takes that in, learns about it, and then begins
to iterate on it.
They've taken your technology and then they've advanced it for their own interests in ways
that...
What are you most worried about when it comes to TikTok in China?
Well, I mean, just the ability to take our population.
To manipulate it.
To manipulate it and manipulate it in ways that, number one, reduce national productivity
and, number two, get them to not appreciate the principles and values that are in our
society.
Why is the Constitution, why the separation of powers?
And so getting back to that, you know, that what does it mean?
It means the separation of powers
really no longer exists.
It's kind of a function of the 20th century.
Because now we've gone in the 20th century
where the narrative has become so hard to get past.
I'm not saying China created the narrative.
You mentioned it yourself.
These tech companies have a certain political ideology.
Elon just said, hey, 99% of Twitter
was basically donated to a single party.
And as we've seen, that has basically crept
into the tech companies.
And the Chinese Communist Party, to the fact that it actually benefits, is more than happy
to use that as a tool to get its interests met. So, you know, in a lot of ways,
the way that they manipulate us
is through these corporate and financial relationships,
and that's tied right into the tech company relationships.
And so, you know, the fact that Apple wants to sell phones
in China is a great piece of leverage
for the Chinese Communist Party.
You want to be in China?
Okay, well, this is what we want you to do.
And so, it is a way for, and I don't think,
I'm not calling what's happened in this country
kind of a movement towards what,
have you read cynical theories?
I have not.
It's a really good book.
It kind of talks about the history of postmodernism
and how theories like critical race theory and DEI
have started out as more or less an ineffective critique of the Western
Order, post-enlightenment Western Order, kind of on the same line as Marxism, but became
more than just a critique in universities and kind of like a sideshow to transition to more of an activist
tone and kind of walks you through that, you know, starts in France and then kind of builds
and builds and builds to where, and so when I was getting my PhD in the university, I
was starting to hear some of these things, but I really didn't understand kind of where
it was going.
And now it's fully matriculated throughout our university system.
And then it's made because our students are coming out and they're coming into white collar
jobs, a lot of them, you know, Silicon Valley software developers.
Now you've started to kind of build this throughout the framework of our society.
And so if you look at China just as an influence engine, how the system works. The party gives narratives centrally, and that gets sent down to the local level.
So you have then a pretty comprehensive, clear-cut narrative that is the same across the country.
That's why when you talk to a Chinese person, they have certain responses to things like what do you think about Taiwan?
It's Chinese territory because that is part of that whole process.
Well, if you take a step back and you say, okay, what's going on here in the United States?
Effectively, we've created the same system.
It's not a an ideology that escaped the university system,
became embedded in the white collar class,
and then became a patina over the entire architecture.
And then as the internet begins to grow,
local media begins to lose value, be sold off, consolidated.
So now you have basically five major legacy, we call them media companies.
It's better to think of them more as propaganda companies that have a similar kind of narrative
that spreads to the technology companies. And then, so now you have a reinforcing kind of phenomenon where I just mentioned, you
know, 99% of Twitter employees were donating to a single political party.
If you look within the beltway of Washington, DC, 94, 95% of people vote for a single political
party.
You have the tech companies, you have the government agencies, you have the financial institutions,
the very big ones that own probably 10% or more
of the major media companies, right?
So you're starting to see the system that is not the same
in terms of who it benefits, a single political party,
but more of a class of people it benefits, a single political party, but more of a class of people it benefits.
So we've created more of a class-based,
centrally controlled narrative system
that's very, very much like
how the Chinese control their population.
And also because these corporations
have financial relationships with China,
it's plugged into it, right?
And so now you take a step back and,
like if you take a God's eye view of the planet
and you see, okay, you're creating narratives
that are essentially acceptable in China
and the United States, one's the Democratic Republic,
the other is clearly an authoritarian system.
How is that possible?
What's possible because they're connected.
And they're connected and they're essentially
the mechanism by which you translate that narrative
are the same.
It's just who they're benefiting.
In the case of China, Chinese Communist Party,
in the case of this, I would call it maybe
the white collar class of the United States. And to the detriment of China, Chinese Communist Party, in the case of this, I would call it maybe the white collar class of the United States.
And to the detriment of who?
In China, anybody that's not in the Chinese Communist Party.
To America, it's anybody that's not in that white collar class, right?
Or somebody within the white collar class that basically dissents to the narrative.
And who is that here?
That's the working class.
I mean, one of the arguments for the bill about the TikTok bill is a lot of people are
saying it's the Patriot Act 2.0.
What do you have to say about that?
Okay, so first of all, I think the Patriot Act was the worst thing that we've ever done
as a country.
Absolute worst thing.
It goes back to that point about open data, what Trump was told when he went to China.
I think open data was the biggest destroyer of individual freedoms ever created, and we
created here.
I don't think that we recognized what we were doing, right? We were
basically getting rid of those two big oceans and two friendly borders as a way to protect ourselves,
in addition to our military, and allowing this thing to be built right there is the, you know,
that's the problem.
The Patriot Act,
the Patriot Act is what brought the US government
into this white collar class-based narrative control, right?
Gave it purchase. into this white collar class-based narrative control, right?
Gave it purchase. The fact that Obama repealed this anti-propaganda law
that we had on the books
that you weren't supposed to create propaganda.
Well, ostensibly we're gonna do it
to kind of change the narrative for the terrorist threat.
But in reality, it's been used in other ways.
I think everybody would agree with that.
There are court cases in front of the Supreme Court talking about the government now being
in league with the tech companies.
This is a problem.
It's a problem for a democracy because you have to have, in a separation of powers, people
talk about the fourth estate, the fourth estate being the press.
So you have a judiciary, a legislative, an executive branch that don't really have dominance
over each other.
But then you also have a free press that's supposed to basically be the ones
calling out the government
for the things that are going wrong.
And how many things have we found out
that were being hidden from us over the years
because of things like the New York Times?
But if you can corporatize that and consolidate it
and you can tie it to a certain set of ideologies,
now instead of New
York Times throwing potshots at the federal government because they don't trust them,
like what are they hiding? There's something going on. They're like,
if the government says something, they just repeat it. And that's where we've come to.
And I think that's the challenge. So the people that are saying that the TikTok divestment bill, by dance divest of TikTok
or TikTok will be banned, the people that are against that, I believe, are the ones
that are promoting this ability to continue to have TikTok operating in the way that it
wants to here in the United States.
Now, who are those? Well, there's
Jeff Yass, good guy, that invested in TikTok, wants to keep his billions. He's obviously one of them that wants to keep TikTok around. And the Chinese Communist Party is not going to divest of
what is a very good propaganda tool for the United Front workgroup. So, I think if this does pass the Senate, you're going to see it banned. And obviously, he doesn't want
it banned. There's others that don't want it banned. So, there's financial motive for them to say,
hey, it's either government overreach or the government wants to use TikTok to spy on you.
You know, I don't read that in any parts of the bill.
That being said, Patriot, very bad, needs to go away, period.
It just needs to go away.
And I think, I'll go one further, I think encryption,
when we say free speech is a fundamental human right
or the right to keep them bare arms, the right
to protect yourself, the right to private property.
I think the right to encryption of your data should be characterized as a fundamental human
right.
That's because the power of these tools to manipulate you without your consent is based
on the ability for them to take data about you and data that you own and then turn around and characterize who you are as an
individual, how you think, how you respond to stimulus, and then begin to feed those
things back to you to manipulate you.
That's why I think we have to be able... We thought of encryption as only the venue of the NSA or the federal government.
They should have the ability to encrypt things, but you as a person shouldn't.
I disagree with that.
In fact, I think our constitutional republic is probably the best type of society that could accept a citizenry, not just armed with weapons, but armed with
the power of their own data to protect from outside influence, whether it be the government,
whether it be a corporation, or whether it be a foreign power.
There's also an argument that talks about a lot of people are saying that this would basically infiltrate into
supposed free speech platforms such as rumble and x is how would that how would this bill affect
those platforms? It's very clear in the bill that it's tied to bite dance okay and ticktock right
in the bill that is tied to bite dance and TikTok.
I don't see anything where it's gonna go after any, it's really, really focused on bite dance
as a tool of the Chinese Communist Party, which it is.
And we can get the party has already said it,
their words are there.
And so,
I don't know how else to do it other than to read the bill yourself
and tell me how you get,
and what would it be?
It would be that Rumble was owned
by the Chinese Communist Party
and then whoever owned that share of it
would have to divest of it because they're a foreign power.
Okay, I think that's great.
So if you're the CEO of Rumble and you're telling me that you want to have the ability
to sell over half your company to the Chinese because you want to make a bunch of money
and you don't really care what happens with it, and so therefore you're going to be against
this bill.
And I'm not saying that they are, but I'm just saying these are the types of arguments that you could make is,
you know, I should be able to sell my company to the Chinese Communist Party, who would give me a
lot of money if they get kicked out of TikTok and they need some other platform. And they may do it
in pieces, so it's not detectable, but that's a problem.
If you can discover that, hey, ultimately the Chinese Communist Party is behind what's
going on on TikTok or say X or Facebook, then yes, those people need to divest of their
shares.
That's what the bill says.
If it's related to a foreign power.
So I don't know how you get that the government,
the US government is going to use that other than,
you know, even if they got the Chinese to buy it for them,
they would be in violation of the law, so.
Well, I think the people are getting that
because that's what they're being told. Well, of course., so. Well, I think the people are getting that because that's what they're being told.
Well, of course.
That's part of the CEO of TikTok's,
that's part of his plan.
And it's part of all the other proxies plan
is let's confuse the issue.
Let's make it sound like this is government overreach
because Americans hate government overreach
and everybody will lap it up.
Look, I understand people like TikTok.
You can like something and have it still be bad
for your republic.
And I think that gets into another matter,
which is do we really understand what our Republic stands for anymore?
It's that kind of just wilted away.
I feel like it's wilted away on that note.
Let's, um, let's take a quick break.
And, uh, when we come back, uh, we'll get into some 5g, 6g stuff.
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All right, we're back from the break.
We're getting ready to dive into some 5G stuff.
But before that, I wanted to talk to you
about what kind of data
is being collected, because we all hear,
oh, they're collecting all our data,
they're collecting all of our data
and potentially weaponizing it or using it for whatever.
Can you go into a little more detail
on what they're collecting and how this is affecting us?
Well, I think the best way to approach that is,
how does somebody collect data about you?
And the answer is, the software development kits
for the applications that run on the devices
have data about your device
that they collect.
So those developers collect, it's sold on the open market.
Anybody can buy it, you can buy it, I can buy it.
And then you can take that data and you can look at it
and you can stare at it, you can get an intel analyst
or you can put, do a massive learning model like, you know,
chat GPT, go over that data and begin to look at information.
And so what does that look like?
Well, it looks like, you know, when you look at data on a military base, for example, you
can see when devices are at a certain location,
what device is at a certain location.
So you can start to see things like shift changes,
and you can start to see generations.
And so you start to get a good picture of the ops tempo
and the daily behavior that's going on at that base.
But also, you can watch that, and you can see, hey, this device was in this
location and this can be the Pentagon, this can be a military base like Whiteman Air Force
Base where I spent a lot of my career, could be the White House. And then you can watch
that device and watch what it does. And then that device will go home, right? Off into
the same place every night. So now you can say, okay, well, who owns that home?
Now you can start to tie a person to the device.
Now you have the person, you have the device,
and now you can begin to watch that.
Where's that person go?
Right?
It's a way to build a picture about what they do.
And that's just for somebody that's not
within a platform like TikTok, right?
So that's just the data, the metadata
that's collected around that device.
You can buy it, anybody can buy it.
And so that's information, but then if you're actually
in the platform itself, now you can not only collect that information, you know
exactly who it is.
Not only that, you know the things that they respond to.
You can get a good picture of the personality type of the person and the behavior patterns
and the things that they like.
And that can lead into, you know, where you bump and say, hey, I just happened to randomly
bump into this person and, hey, how's it going?
By the way, you know what they like, you know all the things they care about, you can strike
up a conversation.
This can be end up developing into a friendship, and then that's how you become an asset.
So it is literally the best tool.
So I mean, when the Chinese Communist Party did this, it was actually, in my opinion,
the most brilliant use of technology.
We talk about nuclear weapons being dangerous.
Yeah, they're dangerous, they're destructive,
but there is literally no weapon that's ever been created
that's as dangerous in the context of what war is,
which is a political act,
than what Silicon Valley created.
It is literally the most dangerous weapon known to mankind
because it's subtle,
and most people aren't,
they don't understand the technology,
they don't understand how it's used or how it can be used.
Not just people don't understand it,
our own government doesn't understand it.
Our intelligence community doesn't have, doesn't own Google, doesn't own Facebook, doesn't own Twitter.
I mean, it's been, it's tried to like, and we've seen that particularly with the Twitter
files that, hey, you know, this was going on, but it doesn't own those platforms.
China owns those platforms.
Right? So they become part of the fabric of Western society, and then they become assets
for the Chinese Communist Party, whether it's, you know, TikTok and then ByteDance owns TikTok and ByteDance is a Chinese company, or it's Facebook and you're able to get in and get,
you know, exploit their information. So whether they're in...
And I would...
That's where...
If I was going to build the most effective war machine today, it would be the war machine
that, you know, basically Silicon Valley built.
And it's not...
They don't consider it a war machine, but if war is a political act,
and you can achieve political influence through this tool,
then by nature, can't that be viewed as a weapon of war?
I mean, the way we used it in Coso with the B-2
was we used stealth bomber, 2,000 pound bombs
to take out factories owned by and other assets owned by the elite in Kosovo to get them to give
up Milosevic and within two weeks of us starting to do that, they did.
And this is, so literally in the Pentagon, I'm sitting there in 2014 and I get this briefing
and I start to look at this, I'm like, wait a second,
this is going on in our society,
this influence of our corporate sector.
And it's the same thing that we did in Kosovo,
but I was doing it with 2,000 pound bombs,
they're just doing it.
It's the way they do business.
And you start to go around the government, as we did, like, who knows about this?
Who understands?
Nobody, because the businesses aren't going to talk to government.
They're afraid to tell government what's going on.
Then it gets announced to the public and it affects their evaluation, or in some way torpedoes
their business.
So they don't want to share that information with the government.
They want to cover it up, keep it quiet.
This is going on across the United States.
I mean, it's going on across every Western society,
this slow erosion of our industrial base, our capacity.
So, I mean, it's just, it is really, really effective
to wage war in this way, and you don't have to
create a whole lot of risk around it.
Let's move into the 5G stuff.
I don't, I am as green as it gets
when it comes to the 5G, 6G technology.
I hear oftentimes that we should be concerned about it.
What is it?
I don't even know where to start.
But I know you're the expert, so please inform me.
First of all, one of the things that people talk about
is it's gonna create disease or start cancer.
it's going to create disease or start cancer.
The spectrum, the frequency used are no different than 4G. So the radio part is not really what's different.
Although they do have a segment of the spectrum
that's up in the 24 to 40 gigahertz range,
really high frequency.
By the way, that stuff, that frequency is what,
when you get in the airport and somebody scans you,
it's the same type of frequency.
It doesn't penetrate your body.
Okay.
And so the carriers start to roll this stuff out very early
and they realize, okay, it doesn't penetrate your body,
which means if your hand is blocking the phone,
the phone can't pick up a signal,
and oh, by the way, it goes about 100 yards.
That's not good for user experience, right?
So they abandon building out.
So it's really not appropriate
except for very densely populated venues where they put
up a lot of antennas and they have a lot of people on their devices, so they need a lot
of bandwidth.
Otherwise, it's not effective for use for cellular.
So it's not a technology in terms of the radio that's going to cause cancer because it's
really not a different radio technology.
The physics of the radio don't change. The front
end of the radio, you still have to have analog to digital and digital analog converters and
you still have to radio energy. That stuff is all the same. What's different is all the
components that makes that a network used to be all hardware.
What 5G is, is really driving all of those components that used to be a specific piece
of equipment, design this particular way that goes at the base of a tower and more equipment
throughout the network.
Now that's all software components. And so what it does allow you to run,
particularly with a technology called OpenRAN
or Open Radio Access Network,
allow you to run that software on just a regular server.
So now it takes away the kind of the physical properties
of the network and put it all, instantiates it all in software.
That's the real evolution of 5G.
So as we started, in our company, we started to get into it like, okay, if you can take
all that hardware that things used to be spread out across the United States and you can collapse it and it's all code and code can be run on a server,
then why are we creating vulnerability by spreading
that code out in different geographic locations?
Why not put it all together so that if something happens,
it's still letter local and so the network can run?
So that to me, the real foundational difference
between 5G, not the radio, it's the fact that the network can run. So that, to me, the real foundational difference between 5G, not the radio, it's the fact that the network
itself is instantiated in software.
Okay.
When you get into your company.
So, if you're kind of thinking about,
let's look at what happened in Maui, right?
Let's look at what happened in Maui, right?
Big fire, networks go down, because pieces catch fire,
and you're not able to make calls.
Let's look at Hurricane Katrina.
This is really where,
even though I started looking at this at the White House
in 2017, it was really 2005 when I'm at Whiteman Air
Force Base, flying the B-2 as a major, and I look at Hurricane Katrina and the Louisiana
National Guard, we fly C-17s to Iraq to pick them up.
They're in combat.
We pull them out of combat, put them in jets, fly them to New Orleans, they land, and they get out on the ground, they're like,
I don't see a difference in where I just left, right? New Orleans is a war zone,
within just a couple of weeks. And you see how fast civil society can break down with the absence
of services, like one of the key things that brings us together
is communications.
And if you start to think about, you know,
our networks as being things that weren't meant
to survive natural disaster, like a hurricane,
like a fire, like in Nashville, here.
And it was two Christmases ago, somebody takes an RV
right outside the AT&T Switching Center, what happens?
Self-service is down for weeks.
Single location.
So a highly centralized system,
and this new technology is going from hardware
that has to be placed like it is today to software
and say, okay, well, if I can bring all this
into a single location, I can create
a much more decentralized architecture, right?
So now instead of being able to hit one place
and shut down Tennessee and surrounding states,
I can still do that because we have a centralized architecture here.
But if I can start to build attached devices
to all these towers that are more decentralized
and hardened, hardened against things like EMP and tamper
and all the things that you would want to do,
if I can do that, then I can start to create a network
that survives all these things that we're concerned about,
whether it be natural disasters,
or physical or cyber attacks.
And so, that's ultimately, when I was at the White House,
I got introduced to some technology that we were using
in DoD to process radar data on aircraft.
Very high performance compute, very low swap, low size weight and power.
So small enough to go on an aircraft, but it was really, really powerful computer.
At the time, I went to one of the senior technology leaders in DoD.
I said, hey, what if we take this and apply it to our telecom problem?
We've got this highly insecure, open, vulnerable technology.
Why don't we take that and apply it to there?
And so some of the things we were looking at there
is like, how can we encrypt the data
without inducing any latency on the network?
So super fast network, no latency.
Can we encrypt the data, decrypt the data?
So basically begin to secure it.
That's where it started when I was still in uniform.
And then I just said, okay, here's an opportunity for me
to go out in the private sector and do something
that's in line with my oath of office,
but that is related to something I really like,
which is technology.
And so we took that as a starting point and then began to build and think about how do we take it from a
clean sheet of paper, how do we make resilient and secure infrastructure in the country? And
quite frankly, the people that invested in the company, over $30 million invested to
develop the technology, didn't know what I was talking about when
I said this.
They mostly invested on the basis of they trusted me and they understood the problem,
the least of the way I articulated, don't know how it's going to work.
But we went and we set about to basically solve that problem and that's what we've
done in a little over five years, we've taken that idea
and we've created devices that you can insert
into the network that make it EMP hardened.
The first commercial cellular equipment ever
to be able to survive and operate through an EMP
and it's been tested by federal agencies and passed.
The first commercial equipment that can detect
if you try to open it up, cut a hole in it, right?
Most of the stuff is, as you know, military equipment.
This is commercial gear that the thing will know
if you try to open it up, you know,
however you try to do that.
That deploys autonomously.
So the other thing that I realized is
if we're gonna make this available to military people,
I don't have time, you don't have time to set up comm gear.
That often was the most frustrating thing for me
is I've got three or four different comm systems
I gotta put together and get running.
And so one of the things that we found out about cellular equipment is a very complicated
setup.
I can give you a radio and baseband unit and the core and hand it to you and you could
spend the rest of your natural born life and never get that thing to connect to a device
because it is that complicated in terms of the settings and everything else.
And so there's an entire business
in just building these networks for the carriers
that the OEMs charge them for engineers
after engineers after engineers.
And you're like, why is this so complicated?
Well, that's how, that's our business model, right?
It's very complicated.
Okay, so how do we take that,
and this is really the hardest thing that we had to do,
how do we take this very complicated system and make it,
so you can plug it in and it just works.
What does that sound like to you?
It sounds like a wifi router that you buy on Amazon, right?
You cannot take, sell your equipment today
and plug it in like a wifi router.
That doesn't work.
And you have it connect to and operate your device.
Can't do that.
So that's what we did.
That was the hardest thing to do
and we finally finished that last year.
So now we're starting to take it commercial
and within a few weeks it'll be available
for anybody to buy.
And if you're sitting out somewhere
and you don't have a cellular signal someplace,
it's affordable enough that you can likely
maybe get together with some of your neighbors
and put something up so that gives you cellular service.
So now the reason that we don't have cellular service
in rural communities or underserved urban communities
is because the population density isn't such
that the cost justifies investment in a very
big tower, which costs millions of dollars.
Making that affordable, making it easy to deploy, making it resilient, making it secure,
we did this for the military and we did it in partnership with the military, specifically
the Air Force, but now it's available and it's going to kind of transform
the way we grow the network and the way we grow capability.
So this is gonna be, this started with the military project,
then it went to the carriers and now it's gonna go,
now it's gonna be available to consumers?
It's gonna be available to, it's not,
our business model is not yet where I can just sell service.
That's not what we do.
We're an infrastructure company.
So we mostly help other companies provide this capability,
but we are gonna allow people to purchase it directly.
So that's our model.
And we think that's the way to go
because quite frankly, people need agency
and this, if you're sitting around
you don't have cellular service.
And oh, by the way, it comes with a data center, right?
Because you have to run all that software.
So by design, you need a data center.
And so now you can start to create your own mini
Silicon Valley right in your own backyard
is kind of like what we're going to enable.
What is the cost of that going to be?
Well, let's just say it's less than $5,000 a month to deploy one of these things somewhere.
And you will have cell service.
You'll have cell service and you'll have a data center.
Does that mean you control all the data?
It means that you can control all your data.
Yeah, you'll be able to control your infrastructure.
When is this going to be available?
We're actually revamping our website right now, so I think probably four to six weeks.
Four to six weeks?
Yeah.
So when you say you can control your data,
does that mean I'm able to protect my data from no shit?
It's your data center, it's your network.
I'm getting one.
That's what a lot of people have told me they want and and so we've been very working very hard
So that's what's coming out now at the end of this year
That thing is pretty big weighs about 300 pounds when it's fully kitted out in order to get the
in order to be able to get the
to get those prices you're gonna have to agree that you're gonna keep it powered on, plugged in,
because we wanna allow other customers to come onto it,
again, to protect their own data and have privacy.
And so that's our business model,
is to basically have shared infrastructure,
but instead of having more of a public network,
now you have a private network that you own.
So, Okay, so
Now I'm really interested in this so
Anybody so how far is the range of this?
With a spectrum that we're using it can vary but around three miles
Three miles. Yeah, so you can have an entire neighborhood invest into this, right? Yes
Can you control who can access it? Yeah, absolutely. How do you do that? have an entire neighborhood invest into this. Yes.
Can you control who can access it?
Yeah, absolutely.
How do you do that?
Well, so you know how a Wi-Fi network works, right?
You give the people the username and password.
In this case, you've got to give them a SIM, right?
So we allow you to basically create an eSIM.
And then you can just send that eSIM to a device that accepts an eSIM and then you can just send that eSIM to a device that accepts
an eSIM and boom, you can have that service.
Is this basically you are your own carrier?
You are your own Verizon, you are your own AT&T?
For your little piece of the world, yes.
Wow.
That's, wow, very interesting. for your little piece of the world, yes. Wow.
Wow. Very interesting.
But we also want to enable,
we have partners that are on public carrier,
so they want to grow their network
and they want to provide,
so if you are, for instance, a carrier customer
and you partnered with us
and it's kind of expensive
to deploy your infrastructure in places
where you don't have a lot of people.
This is a very cost effective way to do it.
And then all of a sudden, hey, we've got the most coverage
of any network in the world, right?
Because you can do it, our goal is to partner,
not just domestic carriers, global carriers,
so you have this ability to kind of extend
your network organically.
That's incredible.
Where do people find this?
What's the website?
Semper.ai.
Semper.ai.
Semper is actually an acronym.
It stands for secure EMP resistant edge.
So it's not a word, it's an acronym.
But Semper.ai is our website.
Very, very interesting.
Wow.
That's, I mean, that could change everything.
How long has that been in the making?
Over five years.
It is hard to EMP harden a commercial cellular network.
It's hard to create a data center that can detect if somebody drills a hole in it or
and there's a lot of things that we've had to develop in order to be able to detect that.
It's hard to get servers to operate at the extreme temperature ranges that cellular equipment is
designed to operate, right? They're typically in air conditioned buildings.
It's hard to then create the software
that allows this thing to be completely automated.
And so that you don't need to know anything
about cellular equipment, you can just plug it in
and connect.
So these are all the technologies we had to build in.
And in many ways, it's almost like the airplane
that I flew, right?
A very complicated machine that has all of these subsystems operating together to make
this thing.
Typically with a startup, you're creating a technology.
We created technologies, plural, to come together in a systems of systems to make this work.
It's kind of like what Steve Jobs did with the iPhone,
but we did it on the infrastructure side.
So consequently, what we found out in testing our nodes,
we call them nodes,
because I haven't figured out a way to describe them
other than that,
that you can go to Best Buy and get a smartphone,
and that would be perfectly fine,
survive and operate right through an EMP,
not even hiccup.
But it couldn't connect to anything
because that stuff was all taken out.
And so we took that same concept of a smartphone
and basically put all the software in a hardened box
and basically made it connect to the device.
And now the next one that comes out,
and this is really what's exciting,
is it will go from what it is right now, which
is 300 pound box, to a 15 pound box the size of an Xbox.
Same capability.
And that's really will be the kind of final instantiation
of what we tried to create.
The other thing that we did.
Hold on, is the thing that's,
I think you said four to six weeks,
is that the Xbox size?
No, no, that's gonna come later
and towards the end of the year.
So will that be more personalized and not community?
No, same thing.
Same thing just means that,
so it turns out that one of the big things
that kills cellular equipment is flooding, right?
It's on the ground, gets flooded, goes out.
Well, our goal here is a single four by eight solar panel,
mounted on your roof, connected to this thing,
gives your cellular network,
so even if your house is flooded with water,
your internet's not gonna go out, right?
And we can do this in the same manner.
And so our goal is to create highly resilient, highly secure, decentralized architecture
that supports our existing cellular networks by interoperating with them. them so you can basically have your cellular service continue to pay for it the way that
you've always have or you can have this very private secure service, they coexist.
That's really the secret of 5G.
It allows you to do these things because it's all in software.
Will the Xbox size one that's coming out
towards the end of the year,
will that be the same pricing as the?
Yes.
It will be.
Yeah.
Although our goal is really to drive the price down, right?
Yeah.
And so how do you do that?
You do it through volume, right?
And so as we ramp up to full rate production, we want that price to...
We want you to be able to acquire it.
Because ultimately, the ability to have private secure communication is very important, not
to the government, but also to people.
So that's our goal.
But yeah.
So nobody will be able to track what you're doing
if you have one of these.
You're no longer on a public network if you're using this.
Damn.
You're in a private network.
It's like you're on your own WiFi step.
Instead of going to a hundred feet, it goes miles.
And then you can start to string these things together and connect them.
So one of the things that we've done is enable them to be connected to Starlink terminals.
So one pops up over here, one pops up over here.
They locate each other and now you can make calls.
So it's not helpful when a Starlink terminal powered thing comes up over here
and one comes up over here, they have IP addresses that they can't discover each other.
So we've made them, we've made a whole other network about linking these things together.
So as soon as they come online, you can make a call, you know, so obviously the military
implications are, you know, unit brings it up,
you need to be able to call that unit.
So it needs to be able to,
they need to be able to find each other really quick.
That's part of the thing.
So you can create, you know, a decentralized architecture
that supports, again, supports the existing cellular networks
and is, you know, can act as an overlay
or an extension of them.
That's our goal.
So I think one of the things that it permits you to do
is create this hybrid where you have these highly
centralized public networks that are supported
by decentralized capabilities.
So now if you're a T-Mobile customer,
or an AT&T or Verizon customer,
and this node is connected
to your tower and service goes down, like, so we were just doing a demo of this capability
for the Air Force with Northrop out at Whiteman Air Force Base.
And while we're doing the demo, somebody cut the fiber to the existing space, or existing
base cellular infrastructure, right?
So everybody's cell phone goes out.
But ours keeps going, right?
Because we haven't separated the brains of the radio from the radio itself.
It's all self-contained.
So our stuff keeps riding, trucking doesn't ever stop.
And so when you think about it from a military perspective,
you can't have, hey, I have a service disruption,
I'm loading bombs on aircraft,
I'm relying on this network to be able to do that stuff.
So it's a very resilient,
it's made for the battlefield type network,
but now you have access to it.
So if everybody else goes down,
if you've got one of these things nearby,
you're gonna be able to communicate.
And really the space layer is how're going to be able to communicate.
And really the space layer is how you're going to be able to get outside the local area.
So if somebody's cut the fiber, however you were connected before, if you're connected
via a space link, then you can get out and you go.
So the way that as we were developing this, thinking about it. Every time I watch a movie with my wife about some kind of Armageddon-ish movie
where society collapses, she's in tears
at the end of the movie.
And she's like, and then I'm on Amazon
buying a road atlas because how are we gonna
communicate with our kids?
So intuitively you start to recognize,
and the federal government spent a lot of money
hardening AM radio stations
against things like EMP.
But do you have an AM radio?
I don't have an AM radio.
I don't really know many people that have AM radios.
And so we, and then we just did a nationwide alert on cell phones.
I mean, I do have an AM radio, but wouldn't it be destroyed if there was an AMP anyways?
Well if it's plugged into the wall, yes.
Okay. If it's not, it wouldn't it be destroyed if there was an EMP anyways? Well, if it's plugged into the wall, yes. Okay, if it's not, it wouldn't be?
If it's not, if it's on battery,
it may or may not survive, it depends.
It depends on which one you have.
But the stations themselves have been hardened,
the federal government paid to do that.
But your cell phone works just fine,
it just doesn't have anything to connect to and tell us.
We finally give you something to basically make
that connection.
And then if you have an ability to get outside,
you can not only communicate locally,
you can call anybody within range of that radio locally.
So if your police forces are within range, or fire,
or medical, you can do that.
Or if you're not, you can use a space to get out and make more distant calls.
And so, but over time, as you start to link
all these things together, you start to grow this resiliency.
And that's really our goal is to really make
not just the government mission go and be like,
as you know, none of the stuff that you use in your day-to-day life works very well when
you're on the battlefield.
The infrastructure is not supportive of that.
It's like LMR, some kind of radio that only talks to other radios like it.
What we wanted to create was an environment where you could bring in all these technologies
and link them together.
So that's one of the things that we're going to be doing for things like first responders.
Remember the guy in Yuvaldi, chief of police, runs into the school shooting, leaves his
two ray radio in the car, takes his smartphone.
Because of the way we've designed these, we can start to bridge between those 5G network radios and the LMR,
so that phone, he'd be able to call anybody on an LMR.
And then you have agencies that are on one brand development,
they may be on Motorola, another one's on Harris,
and they don't talk to each other.
So we can bring them both in to have them talk to phones
and talk to each other.
So it's creating all of these new capabilities,
like for instance, we're gonna demonstrate
how you can make an LMR call from one base
to another base.
So say like Whiteman Air Force Base
has guys stationed out at Guam.
They're gonna be able to make an LMR call
from Whiteman Air Force Base to Guam
over the same architecture.
So it gives you all of this flexibility for the military.
But in reality, what we want to do is have a dual use technology which supports the military,
supports first responders, supports medical and financial, but also supports the citizenry
in terms of having resilient communication.
So then if the government needs to send out
a nationwide alert, hey, we're getting ready
to have an EMP attack, stand by for further news,
like New York City did not too long ago,
and people are like, well, how are you gonna send me,
notice my phone's not gonna work,
now they can say, and your phone's gonna work.
Just don't plug it into the wall.
If it's plugged into the wall,
then that zap's gonna go right into your phone's gonna work. Just don't plug it into the wall. If it's plugged into the wall, then that zap's gonna go right into your phone.
So as long as it's unplugged,
set it on a Mag charger, you're fine.
Wow.
So, sorry, like I said,
I'm super grim with this technology,
so I have a lot of questions.
So what carriers are,
can I ask what carriers are you guys partnering with?
I can't publicly divulge that yet.
Okay.
But what I can tell you is the things that we are doing
are going to shock the industry.
Let's just put it that way.
Is this a public company?
No, it's still private, still,
actually we're still
in fundraising mode and yeah, it's been,
I can tell you it's been the hardest thing
I've ever done in my life.
It challenged me in so many ways that my military career
never prepared me for.
So I'm sure you've seen, had similar things
in your post-military career. I have, I'm a podcast, you I'm sure you've seen have had similar things and I have
You're developing an entire 5g network
But um, but I mean if you don't mind me asking how much of an investment are you guys needing?
so we're
Currently we're raising ten million dollars
And that's really gonna be to to ramp up growth of the company.
So when you, when we're talking about these protected networks that by the end of the
year, I'll be able to put on my roof, I mean, is that exactly how protected am I?
Is that they can't tell my location,
they don't have my advertising ID,
all the stuff we talk about with TikTok.
Yeah, so let's just go back to what I was telling you
about SDK data.
If you basically log into Google and Facebook
and all your accounts,
and you're allowing that data to go to them,
then yeah, you're gonna that data to go to them,
then yeah, you're gonna give away your stuff.
But the other way that they can track you is through your MZ, through identifying your mobile device
through the network.
So that's another way to basically track you
is understanding your MZ.
So now you control that, in a sense,
so it's gonna be a lot harder for them to find that.
Okay.
Wow, that is a lot cooler than,
I mean, that's just, that's amazing.
I've, one of the most innovative things
I've heard of lately, so.
Well, and I think people have,
the reason this hasn't been approached, I think,
you know, is probably the big reason
why we've struggled to raise money
is because it's complicated, it's hard,
and it's hard for people to understand
what we're talking about.
Because you see all these people that are advertising
that they've created this black phone.
Ultimately, when you connect to a public network,
it's very hard to then maintain anonymity when somebody else owns the network.
It's a lot easier if you own the network.
Obviously, federal government understands that, but I think the average person, the
idea that you could own a piece of the infrastructure has never really been something that was possible
prior to 5G.
Again, software.
So it really transformed the way that we can deploy these networks and make them available
to people.
If I had this on my roof and I'm, I mean, can I call other carriers?
So I can call my friends that are on Verizon because I would imagine it's going to take
a minute for this to spread and it's very expensive.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, it's less than what I was anticipating,
but it's still, I mean, it's gonna be hard
for the everyday American to afford 5,000.
Yeah, and I think the, you know, as I said,
as we're shrinking it in our minds that this idea
that you can't
afford to build your own infrastructure,
we're gonna make it affordable,
and it's gonna get, over time, get more affordable,
and the way that you can, what you can use it for.
So you think about your phone,
before the Apple could create the app store,
you had to get it in the hands of enough people.
One of the problems today in providing other types
of capabilities, automation, robotics,
is really because we lack the ability
to run those things in a local location.
There's no infrastructure to support that.
And by themselves, a single application
does not make that infrastructure a worthwhile investment.
In other words, if I'm just gonna run this algorithm
that runs on cameras that you've put on your property,
for example, It doesn't...
The service is not going to pay for that infrastructure.
It's not going to be enough.
But if you have the infrastructure, now I can start to layer these services on top of it.
And that's really our business.
It's really about providing that infrastructure to support all of these applications
and use cases in a secure way
so that they can actually be brought to market.
Wow, very interesting.
I can't wait to see this roll out.
When are whatever carriers you are working with, when are they going to adopt this type
of technology? technologies? So, I mean, it's already been approved by one, and now we're working on how do we price
this from their side.
We already know, but they have to figure out, this is not something the carriers do.
What I'm explaining is not something
that they would normally do.
And the attractiveness for them, obviously,
is the government customer, because the government needs.
So, I mean, when you think about it, what are we doing?
We're bringing the smartphone into the government customers,
so that they can take advantage of the economies of scale for
the chipsets that run those things.
They're already hardened.
You can drop in water.
You can throw them around.
You can zap them with the MP.
They take a beating and keep on going and start to get the military away from having
to use these bespoke technologies they don't like and they aren't easy to use.
They're hard to program. They don't talk to each other,
that's the worst problem.
And so we wanted to give that capability,
how do you give that capability to the military?
Well, you have to make it resilient and secure.
That's the bottom line.
And then they can start, now you can go down to Best Buy,
plug in your eSIM, and now you've got a secure connection
with other technologies that get brought in.
So other partners, for instance,
allow us to do classified communications on this capability.
It's not something we do, but our partners
allow you to do that.
And now all of a sudden you create this capability
that you can take on the battlefield
and you can bring your infrastructure with you.
And that's really what the small backpackable one is. Put in aircraft, put in ship, put it on the vehicle, put in your backpack, and now you can bring your infrastructure with you. And that's really what the small backpackable one is.
Put it in aircraft, put it in ship, put it on the vehicle,
put it in your backpack, and now you can take your
cell network and data center with you
so that you can be completely independent from
anything that's going on,
and it's resilient and secure as you need.
And oh, by the way, if you get overrun,
somebody grabs it, then they want to exploit it,
they're gonna get nothing.
They're going to get a brick because this thing's been designed to be lost in the battlefield.
Wow.
Wow.
Man, that's...
I mean, and then there's a lot of fear about an EMP attack, power grid going down.
I'd like to get into that with you here in a minute with what China's doing to our power
grid, supposedly.
But I mean, I would think all the carriers would and the government would want to subsidize
us somehow.
And I mean, it's an EMP-proof network.
Right.
I think when...
So there's a lot of misconceptions.
Number one, the first one that we heard was,
why don't I buy this?
The cell phone won't survive.
No, the smartphones actually survive quite well.
At least every single one that we got out of Best Buy
and tested survived.
So that's not a, it really is about the size.
It's really about the shielding
that's already designed into them.
So they're already, so that's not an argument.
The other argument is, my God,
this is gonna cost millions and millions of dollars.
No, it's not.
In fact, we just had a meeting
with one government representative
and they almost came out of their chair
when we told them how much it was gonna cost
because they're told that,
it's like the old adage of the gold-plated toilet seat.
This thing's going to be lots and lots of money.
No, it's not.
We've designed it to be commercial infrastructure so anybody can buy it because we feel strongly.
This company, this Semper, believes in the Constitution.
It believes in our republic. It believes the principles and values of our independent citizenry.
And it believes in the need for communications as a life-saving key component of a functioning
society.
And so we're on a mission, and I think it does shock people a little bit. And the implications are, so our hardest problem,
I would say, as a company,
is people just not believing that we've done it,
that we've built this thing.
And then they see it and they're like, oh.
Wow.
That's, I'm intrigued.
Let's take a quick break.
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Thank you.
Let's get back to the show.
All right, we're back from the break.
We just had a quick conversation about I have a question I think everybody would like to
know.
So to get if you were to invest in getting this network on the roof of your home or the
community one that's coming out four to six weeks to get the utmost, like the most possible privacy you can get.
How, I mean, I had mentioned, would you run a slick phone?
No apps, just calls and texts.
Right.
So, I mean, we, um, and as you're starting to think about the architecture,
um, invariably what you're, what you're, what you're creating is a local database,
right, so local data center.
And the vulnerability in your device
is based on the fact that you have data on your device,
you have apps that run on your device.
So like when I was living in China,
you know, somebody gets my device,
they plug something into it
and they pull the data down, right?
So what you don't wanna have is data on your device that somebody can hack and then...
Because the device gets hacked, then the data is vulnerable.
And so in our architecture, we felt that no data on the device is the most secure.
And so the next iteration of what we will do is create this ability to have essentially
a visual representation of your apps on your device,
but no actual processing or storage, right?
So you push a button and it opens an app in the node,
not on your phone.
So there's no data stored on your phone ever.
There's very little software running on your device.
So that, you know, somebody, so if you just,
and therefore the device itself is not very expensive,
right, most of it goes in all that processing power
that's in it.
So we get rid of that, get that off the device.
So now you just throw it away.
You know, if something happens and somebody tries to get it,
I'm going to exploit your device, no, you can't do that.
So you think about it from a battlefield perspective,
you're walking around your smartphone and you're fighting and you lose it,
you don't want that thing to get exploited.
And so in addition to having a tamper-proof,
autonomous data center that zero rises itself
and can destroy sub-components if needed,
you wanna have it tied to a device that you're using
that doesn't have any data on it.
And so somebody picks it up, they don't get anything.
And we really believe that's the most secure architecture
for doing things.
The other thing that we did that's unique about us
is we actually have, we run two networks.
In any network, there's what's called the control plane
and the data plane.
The data plane is kind of where all your interactions
happen when you're on a video call,
that's all happening on the data plane.
Setting up that call, controlling the network,
anything that's going on in terms of command and control
of your network, that's the control plane.
So we've basically physically separated those two.
That's part of our architecture.
So the data plane can be encrypted,
but in the control plane,
the problem today on networks is that the control plane
and the data plane run on the same path.
So if you're running through overseas,
you're running through whatever,
who's ever equipment, which you have,
they have the ability to basically interfere
with that control plane, the opportunity.
We take that, we put it in space,
we take that ability to have access to the control plane
out in our node, so that goes one path.
It's not latency sensitive, meaning,
like when you're making a call,
when you dial all this call setup,
that's all your control plane, once it gets
connected, it's the data plane.
So the goal here is to really create this very, very secure, hardened, decentralized
network that, you know...
So the best analogy to kind of the way that we operationalize this is how we protect nuclear
weapons.
In nuclear weapons, we have something called nuclear surety.
And that means that in terms of personnel, the material, and the procedures, we make
sure that nuclear weapons are safe, secure, and reliable.
Well, that's just concepts, right?
In terms of personnel, we want to make sure that anybody that touches a weapon has been
vetted.
In terms of material, we want to make sure that the weapons are fail safe.
In other words, they have to be sure that two people are doing the authorizing, right?
These are principles we adopted into our company.
So you want to do a software update.
Okay?
It's got to take two people, knowledgeable of the task, one to approve, first to approve,
and the second one to approve that approval.
And we think that's...
So when you look at our history working with nuclear weapons, never been a detonation.
And we've had airplane crashes where airplanes have fallen from 30,000 feet, weapons have
fallen out and not detonated.
So we've had accidents, we've had, you know, spills, we had a silo blow up
where the capsule went up and landed somewhere. That didn't go off. So we designed very safe
weapons and then we applied these principles to how we operated to make them safe, secure, and reliable.
So we said, okay, if you want to think of a way to design something that is similar
for what we believe to be the most dangerous weapon on the planet, which is not nuclear
weapons but the things that TikTok enables.
And that's really your data. So you think of, you know, highly enriched uranium,
plutonium as kind of the fuel of that nuclear weapon.
We think of data as a fuel of artificial intelligence,
which many would argue is the most dangerous thing
on the planet for humans.
And so we just took the same principles for how we make
nuclear weapons safe, secure, and reliable and apply that
to data and how we
design these things.
Everything that we think about is how do we ensure that only the person that has access
to that data and has a reason to use it is the person that's able to use it.
Just like I think Apple did in fighting the FBI and saying,
hey, I'm not going to design a device that you can break into.
Now, people have broken into it.
It's because an iPhone wasn't made tamper-proof, right?
It was made encrypted, but it wasn't made tamper-proof.
We made our nodes tamper-proof.
So if you try to break into it, you're not going to get anything.
But if they did, that's kind of the way that we, that's an approach that we took to the
infrastructure side of things.
And then by taking a device and making it, you know, not have any data storage on it,
and then having these very secure nodes that communicate to each other via encryption.
So it makes a very secure platform for protecting your data.
So how far could the device, once this rolls out, how far can the device be from the unit
or the node?
Well, it depends on the power and it depends on the frequency.
But I think a good one to three to five, depending on the frequency and the power that you put
out, miles.
We're not talking on Wi-Fi distances.
We're talking long distances.
Okay.
Man, very innovative and exciting stuff.
I wasn't expecting that much. So really, really neat.
But moving forward, I want to get back into China a little bit.
There's a lot of fear about the power grid and the EMP threat.
I've had a couple of gentlemen on to discuss how China has infiltrated the power grid system,
how we're not checking our transformers.
And I want your opinion on how vulnerable are we in our power grid system?
I mean, extremely. We don't do the high power transformers.
We don't build those. Very few of them, maybe 12% maybe now.
Certainly less than 25% of them are not built in the United States.
They take two to three years to build, like the high power transformers.
Most of them are built in China.
Obviously, that's a vulnerability because it takes so long to be built.
For example, if you're frying them, you're not getting that
high power transformer back in less than years, right?
So you're talking about, if you have a significant event,
you're not down where, you know, here if we have,
you're familiar with a storm where the power goes out
and they rush equipment,
that's not what we're talking about here.
We're talking with a storm where the power goes out and they rush equipment. That's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about a wholesale disruption that lasts not days, not weeks, not months,
but years because of how long it takes to build these things.
The other thing that you find out is that it used to be when the grid went down, as you start to bring
the grid back up, you have to balance the loads on separate parts of the grid so it
can come up.
And it used to be that engineers would get walkie talkies and then they would communicate
with each other and they would manually adjust at each of these locations so that then they would
work to get the grid to come back up. So what they did is automate all that, right?
And so this skill of using walkie talkies and manually adjusting the grid,
it's no longer a skill that anybody's taught and so we're depending on the
networks to be up and operating, running software that
automatically balances the grid.
So if you use a grid and you lose the network, you basically, you can't bring it back up,
right?
You got to get that network back up, that software operating before you can start to
think it back, get it back up.
And so that's another one. And then, of course, as we've seen recently with, I think it's a bolt hurricane, that
the Chinese are planting malware in things like Cisco routers that's waiting for an opportunity
to infiltrate SCADA systems which control things like the grid.
And that's going to be a problem for us.
So I mean, I think the thing is, and this is all from taking a view of national security
and saying what's more important.
And I think we began to think that fighting abroad
and spending money on fighting abroad
is more important than spending money here at home
to make our society resilient and safe
so that they could take an attack and continue to operate.
And this is, when I go back to that time in 2005,
when Hurricane Katrina happened, I saw this was going on.
I'm like, okay, what if this happens nationwide?
There's a book, One Second After, I think people have read about an EMP over the United
States.
The threat's real.
It's not just China or Russia that have a lot of nuclear weapons.
It's a country with one nuclear weapon like North Korea that can be a threat.
That creates an enormous vulnerability for the society.
Obviously, we can't do anything about that.
We're focused on communications.
I do think that if you lose the grid, but you're still able to communicate, you can
reassure the population.
You can start to create centers.
Like for instance, when we deploy node,
we deploy an EMP hard generator.
So if you do lose power, you know,
if the EMP does happen,
the generator will continue to keep you going.
And so I think one of the things that people have used
for resilience or for electricity have been these concepts
of microgrids, right?
So you have smaller capability.
A lot of people have solar in their homes and generators.
So to the extent that that survives,
then you start to create and you can communicate.
Then you can start to bring back some semblance
of civil society
where people are more kind of self-sustaining and they can begin to work together.
And I think the biggest thing if you lose the power grid is if you're able to still
communicate, government's still able to provide reassurance and hear distress calls, right?
So they need to be able to respond to distress calls,
whether it be first responders or medical.
And you can make a financial transaction,
which we would enable with our nodes.
Then you can start to, you can keep things going.
And that's what our, that's really the concept here
is that it would, yeah, it would be a huge inconvenience.
But at the same time, I think we could keep, if the society was able to kind of do some
of the things that they're able to do now and you're able to keep communication going,
then you would be able to prevent a lot of that mass hysteria and things from happening.
But there is no doubt that the grid is vulnerable.
Our water systems are vulnerable.
There's just a report that just came out about hacking of water systems.
We've seen people get in there and change the different chemicals that are going in.
We saw that in Florida.
People are shooting up substations.
And then you have the border issues, like who is here, what are they doing?
All the Chinese nationals, which I said are highly loyal to the Chinese Communist Party.
There's a lot of things that I think we've taken our eyes off the ball and just in terms
of making our own society safe.
Even for myself, being a B-2 pilot and having this most powerful weapon system in
the world that carries nuclear weapons and just recognizing that my family is completely
vulnerable.
Like, who's going to take care of them if we have all that war?
When I used to go fly missions, who's going to do that for us? That's the thing where I think we've just completely, we lost track of what's important
as a nation in terms of national security.
Yeah.
It's, I mean, on a scale of one to five, how concerned are you about our power grid?
Oh, six.
That bad.
Yeah, it is bad.
I mean, is it literally as easy as just flipping a switch. It is
Yeah, if you if you've planted malware, yes, it's as easy as flipping a switch and that's kind of the point
You know and what I recognize, you know like Kosovo, you know, we're taking out communications
Links with two thousand pound weapons from the b2 that you are gonna stop us if we want to take out a car target
We're gonna take it out.
But then I realized there's a whole other way
and just own it.
Either you build the technology for it
or you actually, the service provider,
which the Chinese have bought a bunch of grids
around the world that they operate, turn it off.
It's just kind of how, for me, it crystallized that the things that I was doing,
I mean, I could be the best of the best. And that was my commitment when I was in uniform,
to be the best of the best at doing, fulfilling you know, to support and defend the Constitution.
I can be the best of the best. I could go across the world, drop weapons, no problem,
anywhere that the president needed the weapons dropped, and then realizing that, you know,
at any second somebody could turn the lights off off and every single day, the Chinese Communist
Party was doing its damnedest to convert my kids to communism, slowly but surely.
Our system was failing in that way.
So it really kind of brought home to me that we need to take a step back as a society and
understand what's important, understand how we're vulnerable, and then begin to shore those things up.
It's not just the border,
it's not just our infrastructure,
it's how our entire socioeconomic system is vulnerable
because we kind of,
I think after when we won the Cold War,
we assumed that we were safe from everything.
And instead of that being true, what was true was
that no, there are still people that harbor ill will to the Constitution, to our federal republic,
and now they were just going to pursue that and then pursue it with us helping them. And that's,
I think, the part that we completely lost.
It is one thing for Church, Churchill came here
after World War II, and it was right outside St. Louis,
he gave this thing called the Iron Curtain speech.
He was Iron Curtain descending over Europe.
And he was riding back and forth to Truman
when he was coming to the United States, talking
about the speech that he was going to give.
And I think there was a sense of the threat that the Soviet Union could pose to our way
of life then by people like Churchill and Truman and Eisenhower.
And I think once that went away, once at the end of the Cold War,
I think we just assumed that our way of life
was the way of life that everybody wanted.
Well, no, there's others that have a different point of view
and that have waited and planned and plotted
and worked together with us, seemingly in friendship,
but in reality to get to the point
where they can begin to turn the tide.
And so I guess you could say the Cold War never ended
or we're in the middle of Cold War number two,
but either way, I think as opposed to where we were
during the first Cold War, which was at the end
of the World War II, we're the only ones with an industrial base.
And so we had to rebuild Europe.
That was the Marshall Plan.
We rebuilt their economies.
We rebuilt their industrial base.
In conjunction with that, we helped them build their civil society institutions.
And now we find ourselves in the second Cold War and China owns the industrial base
China has a Belt and Road initiative and China is building the world in its image and
We don't own the industrial base. In fact, you know our drugs come from China or microelectronics come from literally everything comes from China and
and
Yet we're not we don't have a sense,
for whatever reason, I don't understand
how vulnerable we really are as a nation.
I mean, why do you think they haven't made a,
why haven't they struck yet?
So the reason, so there's a couple.
During the first year of the Trump administration, Leo He, who was the chief economic advisor
to Xi Jinping, and Ambassador Lighthouser, who was the US trade representative, negotiated
a trade deal.
This kind of gets to the President Trump's comment about bringing Chinese auto manufacturing
plants here.
The same problem was going on with Japan in the 80s and 90s.
Our US trade representative went over and negotiated with their economic person and
they created a deal that really was more bilaterally healthy for both sides.
So Japan's kicking our ass, we go there.
And a lot of those trade deals, trade agreements and relationships were made on the basis of
we have the only industrial base, we're going to give you an industrial base, but we want you to be a democracy so that
we can make the world safe for democracies.
Japan was a democracy.
We're a democracy.
We go to Japan and say, hey, this is not sustainable.
You can't keep just basically rating, so we have to create a more equitable trade arrangement
around manufacturing.
And the Japanese, as opposed to what happened in China, and I'll tell you here in a second
what happened, they said, okay.
And so we have a great trading relationship with Japan.
But that's on the basis of we both agree that this democracy thing is important. Well, so in 2017, Ambassador Lighthizer, in fact, before that,
it actually was early 2017,
when I was still in Beijing as a defense attache,
and I had just been hired to go to the White House,
I asked to speak to Liu He personally.
And he declined and he sent his assistant to talk to the White House, I asked to speak to Leo Ha, personally.
And he declined and he sent his assistant to talk to me.
And I said, look, I said, here's what's coming.
You guys have been doing this thing for a long time, and there's going to be a reset
in the trading relationship.
And if you do not reset, there's going to be a break.
And that's not going to be good for you, right?
Because the reason you're successful is because you get our technology, talent, and capital.
But that is on the basis of a shared beneficial relationship, which we clearly do not have.
And so after I had already left, you know, I got messaged back from the embassy that,
hey, you know, Leo HUD apologized because he didn't meet with me
because he didn't realize I was going to the White House.
So anyway, we go back there,
I go back to the White House.
And when I was at the Joint Staff,
we had been working on this problem
as I worked for first Dempsey and then Dunford
and advising them on China.
And then we started to see these things.
And so we, I worked with the vice
chairman of the Joint Chiefs, who worked with the chief staff of the Air Force when we created an
office called the Office of Commercial and Economic Analysis. And that office, as I got back to the
White House, I reached into the office, I said, hey, can you provide help to the US trade
representative who was bringing this section 301 investigation.
So they did. If you read the section 301 investigation, it tells you
line and verse of what the Chinese are doing to our economy. It comes from, so they went out and
they interviewed business people and it's all there.
And so that's on the basis of that, Lighthizer created the tariffs.
The same time this was going on, Lighthizer and Leaha started negotiating a trade deal.
So now we're kind of doing the same thing that the US was doing with Japan back in the
80s and 90s.
And they negotiate this trade deal and it's about 150 pages.
And so Liu He, Ambassador Lighthizer shook hands and we think that we've basically kind
of saved the relationship.
Well Liu He goes back home, goes to Xi Jinping. Xi Jinping basically tears up the
agreement. That's when it says we're going to have a phase one and a phase two. No, he just tears up
the agreement. At that point, China was basically saying, we're preparing for war. We are not going to have a mutually beneficial trading relationship with you knowing that
the tariffs were going to come.
And so at that point, we had started to separate.
So that was late 2017.
And that's just been going on ever since.
And that's where we're at right now with regard to trade and the economic and the financial
relationship.
Meanwhile, they're being much more controlling over their own companies with regard to allowing
them to take investment from Wall Street.
There's a separation coming.
That separation is not done because we recognize the threat to us so much as the Chinese Communist Party recognized
that their ability to convince us to keep doing this had come to an end.
Okay, so why aren't they attacking?
Why haven't they been attacking Taiwan prior?
They hadn't been attacking Taiwan prior because they wanted the technology, talent, and capital
from us to drive their economy.
They knew that same thing that happened to Russia, when they invaded Ukraine, we cut
them off financially, that we're going to do the same thing the Chinese, except the
Chinese have been preparing for this.
So the Belt and Road Initiative, last April, they brought in bankers from around the world
to say, okay, I want you to emulate the sanctions that the United States put on Russia as an invasion of
Ukraine and tell us how we get out from under that. There are historical approximations of what I'm
telling you. A good book is the Memoirs of Ambassador Morgenthau.
He's a US ambassador to Turkey prior to
and at the start of World War I.
And he's friends with the German ambassador.
So the German ambassador confides in them in this memoir.
It's a very small book.
Highly recommend people read it.
And he tells Ambassador Morgenthau,
yeah, this is after the war starts.
He's prior to the war.
So the Kaiser called us all back
and we had a meeting and they went around,
you had the generals and the bankers
and everybody around the room.
And the Kaiser's like, are we ready for war?
Are we ready for war?
He got the bankers and the bankers said, and the guys are like, are we ready for war? Are we ready for war? You got the bankers and the bankers said,
no, we need to liquidate our assets.
We need to separate ourselves so that when that happens,
we don't, there's gonna be a fall in the stock market,
we're gonna lose our value.
We wanna sell those assets and then go to war.
So what the Chinese have been doing systematically
since that trade agreement was torn up is basically in
Securing themselves from any kind of economic or financial harm
meanwhile
So you can have all the money in the world, but if you don't produce your own drugs
You've got a problem so right so they've got the supply chain now they're separating themselves economically and financially. And now the reasons that war has been prevented, which were all kind of voluntary on the part
of China because they wanted to get our technology, talent, and capital are gone.
They're mostly gone.
Okay, so what's stopping them from attacking Taiwan?
It's not, as we like to say in the military,
it's not because we're much better
because they have much more weapons, like way more weapons.
They have the ability to take all of our space stuff down
right now.
If they take our space stuff down,
we're completely blind in the region, right?
We depend on space. They don't depend on space. We can take all their space assets down, we're completely blind in the region, right? We depend on space.
They don't depend on space.
We can take all their space assets down,
they're in the region, it's their backyard.
They can see, they can hear.
So we're vulnerable there.
And then just a mass amount of weapons,
it's overwhelming.
So we're in a bad place.
And the only thing that was keeping us from actually going to war were the Chinese thought
that they could get technology, talent, and capital out of us.
Now that they know that they can't, and they're getting less and less, less and less money
is being invested in China from America and other Western countries, then that motivation
to not go to war is no longer there.
So that's what is happening.
So we're getting closer and closer to war
and it'll happen, it'll happen at a timeline,
I believe, when the United States is distracted,
likely from some other,
it could be Cuba, it could be North Korea,
it could be, I mean, we've already got Hamas and Israel
and we've got Russia Ukraine
So we're already kind of distracted. I think it's gonna be you know in in being distracted
It's not just it's just not that worth attention is not focused there. Mm-hmm like cent com has forces, right?
You come has forces
You know, so those forces that would be there in Indo-Pacom to be ready, they're just not
there because we don't have them.
Man, it seems to me like they've got us from pretty much every angle.
Checkmate.
Checkmate. Checkmate.
So, I mean, what do we have remaining?
Well, you know, we have each other and we have our constitution.
And I think, you know, it's going to...
I feel like
we're in for some hard times as a country.
And I think if we stay true to our principles and values,
I don't think we're gonna lose,
I don't think the Chinese are gonna occupy us.
They're gonna cause a lot of chaos.
But as long as we keep our heads and we rebuild,
I think we can get through it.
It's only if we allow kind of what's been going
on here, which is this terrible hyper-partisanship, which by the way, they're feeding because
they benefit from it. And it's by valuing the principles that I think the founding fathers,
I think they were right. They looked at nearly every other society
that had been in existence with humankind
up until that point.
And I think they came up with a pretty good one.
Now, they weren't sure it was going to work,
but it has for 240 plus years.
But what they couldn't anticipate is the internet.
And I think that's the part that we have to figure out a way to be able to cut through what is a very
powerful controller of the narrative.
And I remember I told you that Confucius actually has a really good lesson as analytics about
the power of the narrative when he's asked, what's the first thing you'll do
if you were emperor, when he says,
I would rectify the names.
And what he means is what you say is what you think.
And if I can get you to say something,
you'll think that way.
And that's really essentially
what we're talking about here, right?
If I can control the way you speak,
then I control the way you think
and I can start to create the type of society
that has a patina of free speech,
but in reality, people are watching what they say,
and they're guarding themselves,
because it can be canceled or demonetized or whatever.
This is the power of the First Amendment, right?
This was why the Founding Fathers did it. And I think it was so
brilliant when you take a step back. But again, there's no internet.
And it's scary times.
It is.
Very scary times. You don't think they're going to occupy us. I don't think they could, right? I think that's where we're, I think they can occupy our minds.
They can occupy our hearts and they already partially do.
But I think there's something still, you know, as Americans that we share is this,
you know, we're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it.
We're not going to be able to do it. We're not going to be able to do it. We're not going to be able to do it. We're not going to be able to do it. We're not going to be able to do it. But I think there's something still, you know, as Americans that we share, I think there's still a spark of that in us.
And that is we do not go down without a fight.
And even in our original kind of founding of the country, it wasn't everybody that fought.
It's only a portion. In fact, kind of a shame to say one of my direct ancestors was on the other side.
And so the majority of people I think were on the other side, quite frankly,
in the country, which is kind of what you,
the feeling you get here. But I do think that there will be enough people that just
will resist that. Obviously, we have the military and they're there to defend the country, but
I don't think that they, the Chinese could successfully occupy the country. I do think
that if this thing had,
if we hadn't had that agreement
where it just kind of caused a fracture in 2017
where the Chinese decided, hey, we can't do this
and we're gonna prepare for war,
I think at that point, if we would have kept going,
I think they can occupy our hearts and minds
using this system that we created, this globalized financial trade and internet controlled system that is very tightly linked together,
which allows for global narrative to kind of establish and perpetuate itself. I think that is what's terrifying. As we become more fragmented
and more decentralized and more local, I think local is hugely important.
Local resiliency communities that the community understands the constitution and
the community understands the constitution and is supportive of it. I think we have that still within our midst. And so whatever happens, I think we can still kind of recreate those
conditions. At least I'm hopeful we can. I mean, one of the cool things that I think people don't
recognize is when you go and live abroad, like when I went to live in China, it was very easy to see a foreigner in China.
If you didn't look like that, if you didn't speak like that, boom, our kids would be,
they were young and blonde and people would crowd around us.
But America, when you come here, you've got all of these different races and all of these
different backgrounds.
And for the most part, prior to kind of all these people that have come across the southern
border recently, for the most part, they all came here for similar reasons, right?
They were escaping oppression or whatever.
They wanted opportunity. And nearly every friend I've ever had whose family is like first generation and they were born here and raised here,
their family teaches a very strong support of the country and the Constitution.
It's just kind of ingrained in them.
And I think, as I was saying, I think that's part of how our society continues to renew itself.
We have immigrants that come in that appreciate, they come from, or at least did, come from disadvantage.
They come in, they adopt our society, they adopt our language, they adopt these principles and values
that our founding fathers believed were universal because they weren't all of the same type.
I mean, Alexander Hamilton was different
than somebody else that was in the leadership.
So they were different backgrounds,
but really believed in some fundamental human rights.
Those people that come in,
which form the bedrock of our working class,
I think are the ones that then their kids go to school
and become part of the white collar class.
I think that's how we renew as a society constantly.
And that's the thing that's magical about us.
We're all tied together by this single document
that you can carry around in your pocket
and everybody understands, everybody knows what it means. I think that's hard to break if we stay true to it. But when it's all connected, it's all
centralized, it's all kind of fed to you and you're not willing to ask questions about what's fed to
you, then yeah, that's easy. I've seen it. That's easy to break us down, divide us, make us hate each other.
And that's exactly what I see going on.
Are you concerned about the collapse of the US dollar with BRICS?
I am not concerned about the collapse of the US dollar in terms of there would be a competing
currency for the US dollar.
And the reason is because it's not just our economy,
it's really the strength of our society, at least right now.
So if we, as long as the United States continues
to be the United States, the dollar will continue to be
the method of kind of the backstop of all trade.
The Chinese Yuan would never do that, right?
There's a second biggest economy that's kind of a sense.
Europe can't do that because they're not really
a federal public like we are, right?
So we have a single monetary system,
they have a single monetary system,
but they also have different countries under that single monetary system, they have a single monetary system, but they also have different countries under that single monetary system, which have their own unique cultures
and societies. We have a fairly homogenous culture and society, although there are differences
between the states, but ultimately, there's no place like the United States for a currency.
like the United States for a currency. First of all, in order for the Chinese Yuan to become a reserve currency, they would have
to allow the Yuan to float.
They would have to allow it to be freely traded.
Today, the only entity in the world that can exchange the Chinese Yuan is the People's
Bank of China. Anybody can freely trade the dollar.
And the dollar has value in so much as the United States
continues to exist as a sovereign nation.
So I think at least the way the world is organized today,
I don't see a single entity that would come up in China.
Now, if China was all of a sudden to become a democracy and the Yuan was to float, then
yeah, I think you could see the Yuan be the reserve currency, but not in the current instantiation
and the Euro is not going to do it either. Right? It requires, I think, a somewhat cohesive society supporting that currency that really
makes it attractive for, I mean, it's ultimately to trust the United States as an institution to
survive and thrive more so than it is, you know, the power of China's economy.
And the reason the Chinese won't allow the yuan to float, because as soon as you allow
the yuan to float, then they can have a run on their banks.
Right?
So what do we got now?
We got a bunch of money invested in China that everybody's trying to figure out how
to pull out, and the Chinese don't let it come out.
And so as the economy in China tanks,
if the yuan was free,
and this is why they didn't do it by the way,
this is one of the things they did.
In fact, in Under Shipped Warfare,
they talk about one of their biggest terrorists
are George Soros, right?
Because they say he orchestrated the Asian financial, Asian currency collapse, and therefore
he's a financial terrorist.
And so one of the things that they wanted to make sure is that that couldn't happen
to them, right?
You can't have a run on their banks because they weren't going to allow their currency
to float.
Now, the mistake that we made, and I still don't understand why, is that we allowed that to be freely part of the IMF's basket of currencies.
Why?
It's not freely tradable.
There's literally no other country on earth that's part of the international exchange,
and you can't freely trade their currency.
That's ridiculous that we would have allowed that,
but we did.
And so I don't believe any of these things.
The United States will cease to exist,
functionally exist as a politically independent
and sovereign entity prior to the dollar,
people going off the dollar as a reserve currency.
Now there's other problems that come because we have the dollar as a reserve currency.
One of them is if you have a strong dollar, it's hard to trade American goods abroad.
So we actually pay a penalty in terms of manufacturing.
And that's why it's incumbent upon us to have a policy, an industrial policy that compensates
for that.
Because otherwise, all the manufacturing is going to leave the United States, which for
the most part has done.
And so we have to basically compensate for that because having a strong dollar is not
conducive to a good trading regime for you.
And the other one obviously is,
we can't just keep printing money to pay the debt.
I think getting our fiscal house in order,
no, there was one caveat to that.
And the caveat is if your GDP,
if your GDP year over year is growing faster,
then you're printing, then you're accumulating debt,
then you're able to absorb it
and your interest rates are low, right?
So as your interest rates rise
and your GDP is not growing fast enough,
and this is what's happening now,
is the payments on the debt become more
than you're actually spending in the federal budget.
And I think they've already gone past
what the DOD annual budget is, right?
So we're paying more, I think, right now,
and somebody has to check this,
on the annual debt because of the recent rise
in interest rates, because we printed all this money
due to COVID, then we're paying for national security in
the United States, which is crazy if you think about it.
But that's the word.
But if our economy is growing faster than that debt is growing, then we can sustain
that almost indefinitely.
But obviously, there's going to be a time when that comes down.
So I think that's we've kind of, what we did is we lived off the fat that comes down. So I think that's we've kind of what we did is we lived off the fat
that we had. So during the Cold War, we were organized right, we were structured right,
we were postured right from a strategic perspective. And we and and that gained us all
kinds of advantages in the world. And I think we just kind of just through the, you know, it's like, you know, you work out
and you eat healthy and you rest and everything.
And all of a sudden, one day you come home
and like, I'm gonna drink and I'm gonna smoke
and I'm gonna stop working out.
And that's what the United States did
after the end of the cold war.
Like, hey, I don't have to do it anymore.
And that's now the bill is gonna come do.
But I think, you know think as we start to rebuild our manufacturing, as we start to rebuild our infrastructure,
as we start to make ourselves more resilient and secure from outside attack, that will
have a knock on effect.
When we went to China originally, and China entered the WTO, their economy was hugely, hugely underutilized.
So they had all this latent labor and productivity that as soon as you threw some technology,
talent, and capital, and it's like a fire, it blew up.
Well, since the end of the Cold War, we've basically accumulated the same, what I would
call latent productivity
because we haven't really been investing here in the United States.
And I do believe as we start to invest in infrastructure and manufacturing, and we start
to stop sending technology, talent, and capital in China, and we start to invest in our own
communities that you're going to see this latent productivity really take off.
And so I think that's the part that, and as a consequence, you're also see this latent productivity really take off. Right, and so I think that's the part that,
as a consequence, you're also gonna see
a strengthening of the working class,
it's gonna be more healthy for them,
they're gonna be more hopeful, not hopeless,
and I think you're gonna start to see a lot of the things
that this hyper-partisanship kind of begin to decline.
So, I am optimistic of the future,
but it requires us to actually look inward.
It requires us to invest in our own people,
invest in our own society, invest in our own communities,
not invest everywhere else.
We've done that for 30 years.
We need to invest here in our people.
You know, during the Cold War,
we were sending people to college on free scholarships,
and they were called Education for National Security.
We want you to become a scientist or an engineer.
Stuff like that.
These are things that we were doing in the Cold War.
We built the National Highway System.
We poured money into science and technology, 2% of GDP, the space race, all these things
we took advantage of for the
last 30 years that we're going to have to start, we're going to have to rebuild now.
I hope that starts happening soon.
It'd be real nice to see the government invest into our own country again.
And man, it's just, I hope you're right. Gives me some positivity that you're thinking that way.
Well, I pray, right?
I pray, I pray every day that that's what's going to happen.
I have to have faith.
If you don't have faith, I don't know what you do,
because we're in a very bad spot.
We're in a very bad spot.
But we've been in bad spots before,
but it does require that we look inward.
We have to look inward, and we have to question the things that we're doing.
There is nothing wrong with any American standing up and say, this doesn't smell right.
That person should be celebrated.
If they question the government, why are you doing this?
And then somebody comes and knocks on their door and starts to investigate.
That's not okay.
That's the kind of stuff that's going on that I think is really, really bad for our society.
We want to encourage dissent.
I'm with you, 100%. But, well General, I just want an honor to have you sitting
here and very informative interview and and man I appreciate it. I wish you the
best of luck and I hope to see you again. Thank you. report say 60% of US pork production comes from one company owned by the Chinese and their hogs are giving something called ractopenine which is banned in 160 countries to
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