The Tim Dillon Show - 310 - The Acid Story with Curtis Yarvin
Episode Date: August 7, 2022Tim has on Curtis Yarvin (aka Mencius Moldbug, executive producer of the film "Alex's War", Gray Mirror on Substack) is a software engineer, internet entrepreneur, and blogger. They discuss taking aci...d as a precocious young man, the historical inaccuracies from Caesar to the American Revolution, the early days of the internet, what tech people really want, the three types of government, and the actual deep state. His substack: https://graymirror.substack.com/ The movie he exec produced: https://twitter.com/alexswarmovie SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS: HELIX BED ▶▶ https://www.helixsleep.com/timd for 200 dollars off Mattress orders and two free pillows WATCHES ▶▶ for 20% off go to https://www.vincerocollective.com/timdillon 🔒 VPN: Get three months free ▶▶ https://www.expressvpn.com/timdillon 📦 BOX OF AWESOME ▶▶ http://boxofawesome.com use code TIMDILLON at checkout for 20% off CRYPTO ▶▶ http://exodus.com/tim to start free. Over 4 million people trust Exodus to manage their crypto. Join the movement away from traditional finance by downloading Exodus. ONNIT ▶▶ Go to http://onnit.com/tim for 10% off EVERY MAN JACK ▶▶ https://www.everymanjack.com to get 20% off your first purchase use code DILLON 🎧 HEADPHONES: For 15% off! ▶▶ https://www.buyraycon.com/tim 👨🦱 HAIR LOSS: ▶▶ https://www.keeps.com/TimDillon 💆THERAPY ▶▶ https://www.betterhelp.com/TIMD BIRD DOGS! ▶▶ https://www.birddogs.com/ use code TIMDILLON ATHLETIC GREENS ▶▶ https://athleticgreens.com/timdillon MASTERWORKS ▶▶ https://masterworks.art/tim SIMPLI SAFE ▶▶ https://simplisafe.com/timdillon to save 20% MUD\WTR ▶▶ https://mudwtr.com/tim use code TIM for $5 off STARTMAIL: start securing email privacy! ▶▶ https://startmail.com/timd for 50% off your first year! Watch SteveWillDoIt's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC55JghDUfUatuLc1wp4uGoA ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 𝐆𝐄𝐓 𝐂𝐎𝐍𝐍𝐄𝐂𝐓𝐄𝐃: 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/timjdillon/ 🐦 Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/TimJDillon 🌍 Tim Dillon Live Dates!: http://timdilloncomedy.com/#shows 📹 Subscribe to the channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4woSp8ITBoYDmjkukhEhxg Listen on Spotify! https://open.spotify.com/show/2gRd1woKiAazAKPWPkHjds ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ ▶▶ Ed McMahon benavery33@gmail.com https://www.instagram.com/benaveryisgood/ https://twitter.com/benaveryisgood ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ #TheTimDillonShow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
And I think you're gonna be loud enough.
How's my hair?
Perfect.
Everything's great.
You need a hair and makeup girl.
You don't have one.
We don't have one.
We can't afford that.
I've heard that shit before.
We're doing it.
We actually could, but you know,
I mean, when you go over what you pay them.
I know, I know, I know, I know, I know.
And you just get used, when you're really bootstrapping.
Yeah.
You get used to not fucking wasting fucking money.
That's the whole thing.
And I know so many people who actually spend more money
to feel more legitimate.
Yeah. Oh yeah.
That's called, in the startup industry,
that's called playing house.
And it's everyone, including us,
does it with the first money they get.
Right.
So.
And they go, let me feel,
let's feel more legitimate.
Yeah.
Because we're spending the money.
Exactly.
All right, let's get this.
We're in.
We're in.
We're in.
We don't tell you when we're in.
Oh, we don't.
We just go in.
Excellent.
Yeah, it's better that way.
So I can tell my acid story.
I'd love to hear it.
All right.
Let's hear it.
That's brilliant.
That's a brilliant trick.
And all right.
So Tim wanted me to humanize myself a little bit.
Yes.
Because it's good to be human.
And so one of the best ways to humanize yourself,
besides wearing an authentic Shae shirt,
this is actually made in Cuba, by the way.
It was given to me by my friend,
Sam Frank, who visited that country.
So.
I love that.
I can't prove it, but I believe you.
It is absolutely true.
Amazing.
You can inspect the label later.
But anyway, so acid.
So I guess my acid story is from 1997.
Do you remember where were you in 1997, Tim?
I was 12, but also starting to do.
My first acid drop was 13.
Wow.
Okay, that's very early.
So I was just to set the stage.
I was precocious in a number of things
and actually skipped three grades before high school.
I grew up as a foreign service brat.
And when I was 10 and 11,
I was three grades ahead in the English school,
Nicosia Cyprus, which was a little British public school
where we wore uniforms and had houses just like in Harry Potter.
I love that.
And should I look at the camera?
No.
Okay, okay.
And then my parents, as diplomats do,
moved back to Washington.
And I was sent to Wild Lake High School
in Columbia, Maryland, a distant suburb of DC,
as a 12-year-old sophomore.
So basically, I've just...
So you were a 12-year-old?
A 12-year-old sophomore in a public school in Maryland.
Did the kids think that was cool or did they hate you?
Well, I think the thing is, that's an excellent question.
And I think that basically, that was...
In my head, I'm like, which movie is it?
Exactly, which movie is it, right?
And so, when you look back at that, you basically...
If you're in that role, kids,
and I hope young people aren't watching this
because we're about to talk about drugs,
but the...
And worse, politics.
And worse politics, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's just the segue, right?
You know, nobody really cares about acid,
but what we're gonna do after that?
That's the real trap.
It's not DMD either, right?
But in any case,
it really depends on the behavior of the kid
and how he sort of behaves
in the context of the people around him.
If he's just like really sweet and funny,
it's one kind of movie,
but if he's a little arrogant asshole,
it's gonna be the other.
And which one were you?
It was the other.
Okay.
So...
So, so...
Yeah.
In any case, that led me going to college.
I went to Johns Hopkins
because that's where they had CTY,
which now, since the summer,
will be known as the Fire Festival of Nerd Camps,
but we won't get into that catastrophe.
Is that when you're a young person
and you're going to learn...
And you get like good test scores.
They do like advanced, you know,
you'll sit, you'll do like algebra in like a week and a half
by sitting and doing algebra all day for like six hours.
Gotcha.
By yourself.
By your fucking self.
Right, so this is like, you know,
this is like intellectual, like fucking boot camp.
My daughter was supposed to go to it,
but it got canceled two days before the event this year.
Thank you, Johns Hopkins.
Anyway, so I went to Johns Hopkins as a freshman
because it was there.
You know, no respect to Johns Hopkins, but it sucked.
So I transferred to Brown.
So I graduated from Brown in 92.
And then I went to grad school in computer science at Berkeley.
And I lasted for about a year and a half at Berkeley
before I decided that academia sucks.
Even in computer science, and it's a lot of results where,
it was just a bad run of systems professors at Berkeley too.
So anyway, I was like, I've got a dropout
and like seek my fortune in the new multimedia boom,
the multimedia bubble of the early nineties,
which CD-ROMs, fiber panels, like, you know,
you experienced this as retro, but for me, it was real.
Right, right.
And I lived it, right?
You know, in any case, basically I got a job in that bubble
and then I also basically got into the early,
so the early internet in its capacity.
Which you talk about, which is amazing,
because you talk about it was like decentralized.
It was a decentralized social network.
It actually worked.
It had no central government.
It was not censored.
It fucking worked.
It was called Usenet.
That's right.
And, you know, let me, you know, we're gonna get, you know,
I know everyone wants to get to the acid,
but let's talk about Usenet for a second.
Yeah, please.
So Usenet was actually,
it was a decentralized social network that worked.
It was utterly amazing.
It was like, if Reddit was decentralized
and had an ontology, which means like an actual map
of its content rather than like,
and it had like a democratic governance structure.
It was republic.
It was not a dictatorship like Reddit.
And it was utterly amazing.
And here was the problem with Usenet.
Basically, we were on this thing.
Nobody knew about it.
I remember the first time I read about the internet
in the New York Times.
It was like seeing your cousin in the New York Times in 1988.
And it was about a worm that was on the internet.
It was just like, wow,
the New York Times is writing about the internet, right?
So Usenet basically, the reason that Usenet worked,
we all thought was that
because it was a decentralized social network
and the future of humanity.
That's what we all just naturally assumed
is that we were part new.
We didn't believe it.
We knew it.
It turned out that actually what made Usenet special
was that to get onto Usenet,
you had to be a college student or work at a tech company.
Interesting.
So you didn't, it wasn't.
It was, yes.
It wasn't everybody.
It wasn't everybody.
It was basically, it had a quality filter,
which was a human filter, which was an elitist filter.
It's like, if you go to Burning Man,
have you been to Burning Man?
I haven't.
You haven't.
I haven't either.
I feel like I want to go, but I'm sober and I feel like,
is that, I've always talked on the show
about missing something in life
and then not being able to go back to it.
Like being able to be like,
some very sick adults wanted to replicate summer camp
because they had never gone and you go,
this is, you look at it and you go,
this is, it makes me feel physically ill.
I don't know if being a sober guy at Burning Man
is a good thing or is it,
am I trying to recapture something that?
I really, I really, you know, I couldn't tell you,
I'm a widower, my wife had gone to Burning Man
a couple of times, I never have,
and my fiance is a burner.
Oh, okay.
And so basically this gives me, you know, certain,
you know, we'll get back, we'll get back to the acid trip.
I promise.
But it's interesting to compare Burning Man as a community
to use it as a community because both of them have a sense
that in certain senses they're superior
to everything else in the world.
Right.
And in certain senses they are superior
to everything else in the world.
And other senses, like if you look at, for example,
the total fertility rate of burners,
you're gonna find a very low number.
Right.
And so, you know, or, you know, that sort of,
a community that exists by sort of almost,
that reproduces itself that lasts over time
because Burning Man is not super young
that sort of reproduces itself by intake
rather than by fertility.
Right.
There's something slightly imperfect about that.
And both communities have a barrier to entry.
And the barrier to entry.
Yes.
So the barrier to entry is what I was about to talk about.
It's basically the barrier to entry,
you know, that sort of creates a filter.
You know, I was talking to, you know,
I'm gonna protect his name and intellectual,
you know, who knows the Burning Man organizers well.
And I was asking him to-
Steve Bannett, I'm kidding.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm kidding.
No, Steve is that, Steve Bruntz, Steve Bruntz,
nevermind.
You know, but Steve, you know, Steve actually found,
you know, but I'm sorry, you know,
but the-
Talking to the guy at Burning Man.
Yeah, talking to the guy at Burning Man.
And I'm like, why does Burning Man have, you know,
if you go to Burning Man,
to me, from what I've heard of Burning Man,
not being a burner, not wanting to embarrass myself.
But I think that what makes Burning Man special
is the feeling that everyone at Burning Man has
that anyone you meet there will be like an old friend
you haven't met yet.
Right.
And that's an incredible feeling in a community.
And that's an attitude, right?
That's an attitude, that's an ethos.
There's all this public ethos that sort of comes
with the end of the 12 principles of Burning Man,
one of which is radical inclusion, everyone is welcome.
Is that similar?
Would you say Bohemian Grove is the same thing?
You know, yes.
Bohemian Grove has a much more explicit barrier to entry.
Anyway, I'm talking to this guy,
you know, very, very intelligent, interesting individual.
And I'm basically like, what is it about Burning Man
that causes, you know, this feeling of togetherness, right?
And, you know, he's like, well, you know,
he's money, you know, there's a number of principles
of Burning Man, you know.
And I'm like, you know, well, basically my perspective
is the reason that this is the case
is that pretty much everyone at Burning Man
is like pretty much everyone else is at Burning Man
as a person.
Moreover, what accomplishes this is a principle
that you might call radical exclusion,
which is that it really sucks to get to Burning Man.
It's really hard to be at Burning Man.
You're basically punishing yourself,
you know, this fucking playa is like hell.
Right.
And you're punishing yourself to get there.
It's hard to get a ticket.
It's hard to find a camp.
It's basically, it is, as you say,
essentially the same thing as Bohemian Grove.
It has a slightly different community.
Actually Bohemian Grove, I was just hearing someone
who's talking to someone who's,
I guess he's a guest at Bohemian Grove
because his father is a member.
Bohemian Grove basically actually started out
as literally Bohemian.
Originally it was like an artsy-fartsy club
very much like Burning Man.
And that served a similar, you know,
kind of community people who would have found Bohemians
who would have found themselves very, very welcome
and felt really completely right at Burning Man.
And so in both of these cases,
what's creating the feeling,
just this incredible social feeling of togetherness
is like a policy, an effective policy of radical exclusion.
And when this policy breaks down,
as it did in the internet,
in the event that is known as Eternal September,
it's called Eternal September
because every year in September,
a bunch of clueless newbies,
a lot of internet slang like newbie
was invented on Usenet,
a lot of clueless internet newbies
who were freshmen would descend.
And then AOL that sent the little disks in the mail
or remember that?
AOL basically gave all AOL users access to Usenet,
which was basically sort of, you know,
as if you let, you know,
the entire 25 million population of Lagos, Nigeria
into Brooklyn.
Right.
So then what happens to Usenet after?
What happens to Usenet is that it simply becomes unusable
without being an aristocracy.
That's right.
Without being elitist, without basically,
it's passive filter, it's just unlivable.
And, you know, what precedes its death,
and this is sort of only a symptom in a way.
Some people think this caused it,
is basically it started developing binary news groups
in which people used Usenet to trade like wares.
And so that got everyone's, you know,
like the result was that all ISPs
basically pulled Usenet access.
Anyway, it imploded and it died.
And it was basically because
it was essentially a high trust network.
And, you know, I don't know if you know the work
of Robert Putnam, you know,
he's a sociology at Harvard, right?
So, you know, he did this famous thing called
Bowling Alone in which he examined
the decline of high trust social networks.
It's a great book.
He follows it up with, I forget the title of his,
it may have just been a paper.
He does this paper in which he found
that basically the more variety it is,
and I'm using that word very intentionally,
the more variety there is in a community,
the lower trust it is.
And so if you have like Chinatown
where it's basically all Chinese people,
there's a lot of trust, you know, and as soon as-
Why is that looked at today as something that's bad?
Because variety is a synonym for diversity.
Okay, and see, when I was looking at it,
I grew up in Long Island and-
Long Island.
Long Island and-
Like my grandparents were from Great Neck.
So, you know-
Okay, yeah.
Now, and that's a great point, right?
So Great Neck, you have Persian restaurants
and a lot of Sephardic Jews that live there.
And in other towns,
you would have Irish and Italian people.
And nobody, there was, of course,
Long Island was racist and people made jokes and whatever,
but there was no violence.
There was absolutely, there were no riots.
There's no Persian on Italian riots.
Like the Italians don't take it up with the Persians.
There was none of that.
Like the Buddhists and the Tamils and Sri Lanka, right?
You know, yeah.
Yeah, there was no like, you know,
there was no West Side Story happening.
So to me, I always go,
you have different groups of people that choose to live
within some in-group preference, right?
Right.
And they, they, you can date other groups,
they, why is that, why is that a bad thing?
I think it depends on whether in certain cases,
you might sort of develop a function where you say,
okay, if you examine the kind of conventional narrative
that for example, everyone at least pretends to believe
on their college application essay,
sort of a nice randomization
because who is the admissions officer?
We don't know, but we're pretty sure of what they believe.
And you'll notice that this person,
basically that feeling of ingroupness,
what the great Arab historian even called Kaldun,
called Asabiyah, the feeling of, you know,
it's us against the world.
There's this old Somali proverb,
actually a number of countries claim it, you know,
me, me and my country against the world,
me and my clan against my country,
me and my tribe against my family.
I have that tattooed on my lower back.
I have a tramp stamp of that Somali.
Holy shit.
And of course it ends with me against my brother, right?
You know, right?
And, you know, that's a little, you know,
that's a little Somali,
but you know, that's like,
that's not exclusive to Somalia,
but many countries claim that proverb in a way.
So what you'll notice is, for example,
imagine you were in a world, you know,
let's take the like, nascent Persian,
I Italian, is that wrestler, I Italian?
Can I say I Italian?
No, no, Italians we abuse on this show constantly.
Awesome, awesome, awesome.
Actually, can I tell you a joke relating to that?
Yes, absolutely.
Are you familiar with the work of Garibaldi?
A slightly, like not, you know, not even to Midland.
And have you ever been to Italy?
I've never been yet.
Which part, where in Italy would you like to go?
If you want to go to Italy?
I'd love to go to Rome.
You'd love to go to Rome.
That's right.
Well, Rome, yeah, Rome is around the middle of Italy.
Yes.
So, you know, Garibaldi, of course, you know,
well, you know, you probably,
I can't really tell the joke
if you don't know the story of Garibaldi,
but if in case you do, in case you do,
there's something very that they say
about Garibaldi in parts of Italy,
but only parts of Italy.
I think they say it in Rome,
which is that Garibaldi didn't unify Italy.
He divided Africa.
Right.
Right, right, right.
So sure.
So, I mean, there's Italians in the Italians.
Anyway, anyway, so let's take for example,
let's take for example,
suppose you have two groups in a society,
you have Persians and I Italians.
I don't know any racial slurs for Persians,
but I know they're there.
Can we, what about, what about Dune Coon?
Let's just say Persians.
Okay, whatever.
Our friends Persian, and we're calling that, but go on.
All right, sorry.
Are we still on YouTube?
Anyway.
Thank you, too.
You know, yeah, that's, I mean.
Right, we're fine.
Frankly, I'm not even sure that's accurate.
We've got a funnel on you.
I'm not even sure that's accurate,
but you know, in any case,
it's not usually what I think of when it went in.
Right, of course.
You know, the, I mean, rugs,
anyway, more rugs than Dunes, I think.
But the, let's not go there.
Anyway, we've got Persians and I Italians,
and let's examine basically one of the ways
we can understand there is a potential conflict
between any two groups with in group status.
So, you know, as the great German political philosopher,
Carl Schmidt once said,
the essential political distinction
is that between friend and enemy.
So to a Persian, all Persians are friends.
To an I Italian, all Italians north or south are friends.
Okay, now within the I Italian community,
it's like the proverb, right?
But, you know, the thing is when I Italians
think about Persians, basically,
they just, you know, they don't even think about them.
Right.
You know, actually, I think it's the other way.
But you know, in any case, basically,
so there's a couple of things you can say about this.
First and foremost, basically,
one of the questions you can ask about the narrative
is does the narrative promote Asa Bia among Persians
or I Italians?
Are I Italians, for example, taught in the schools
to think, you know, all I Italians must act together.
Right.
Ever since the Persian attacks, in fact, on Rome,
you may recall, did you know that there was a Roman emperor
that was captured by the Persians?
And then, you know, I forget, later Roman Empire,
he's captured by the Persians
and he's basically used as a footstool
for the Persian emperor to mount his fucking horse.
Amazing.
Amazing.
He dies like his skin is stuffed with straw and preserved.
Right.
Didn't last to this day.
Right.
A lot of things have gone up.
But you know, but in any case, you know,
so this is what assholes, these fucking Persians are.
Right.
You know, and so if you go over to the Persians then,
you know, so you have all of these stories,
there's sort of a group litigation.
It's like the basically, the I Italians have this brief
against Valerian.
It was Valerian.
The I Italians have a grief.
Thank you.
Jesus Christ.
That's great.
The I Italians have a brief against the Persians.
Right.
They've been victimized by the Persians
since the days of Valerian who was just not treated
like war crime.
Right.
Look at that shit.
It's war crime.
Right.
You know, and the thing is that's like typical,
you know, frankly, that's typical Persian behavior.
Right.
You know, whereas the I Italians, of course,
founded fucking civilization.
Right.
You know, and so then you go over to the Persian side
and you know, do they have a brief against the Italians
or does the narrative teach them to be like,
you know, we Persians, you know, came down from the hills
in the time of Darius, you know,
and like basically the Italians have been calling his names,
you know, and sort of all of this stuff.
And like we never set out to attack Rome, you know,
like yes, Valerian himself or criminal.
Right.
Right.
You know, and so what's the narrative there?
Whereas basically, and the thing is from sort of
a kind of natural pattern of human history,
the narrative there that you would expect,
that's the narrative you would expect.
Right.
The narrative among the Persians is, you know,
we Persians, you know, committing wrongs for many years,
you know, we founded an empire.
Who do you think we conquered to find that empire?
Right.
Who became our slaves?
You know, look at what we did with the Jews.
We did something with the Jews.
Right.
You know, not good, right?
You know, that's in the Bible, but it's true, right?
You know, and you're basically like, you know,
like we Persians ourselves, you know,
we're like modern Germans.
Like we have to take it, we have to be accountable
for our actions over the centuries.
It's like the thing of two different movies, you said.
Right.
So the thing is basically,
once you imagine one of these movies,
you can imagine sort of the other movie.
And then your basic question is like,
what you're looking at here sort of in one case or another
is what the great Italian political scientist,
Daito Namusca, who's best accessed
in the Machiavellians by James Burnham,
a book I've been promoting for like 10 years.
Great book.
Great.
Have you read that?
Fucking awesome.
The first, like, you know, like,
imagine it's like first chapter, you're learning boxing.
Like your first chapter, you're like,
I'm going to take out Muhammad Ali.
Burnham is like, I'm going to take out Dante.
Yeah, that was an amazing book.
He's like, I'm just going to fucking deconstruct your ass,
Dante, right?
You know, and, and, and amazing fucking books.
So Mosca has this concept of the political formula.
The political formula is basically something
that you believe whose practical effect on your behavior
is to cause you to support the government,
is to support whatever is the regime,
or the powers that they,
so basically we can assume that within this narrative
where basically the Italians are all like super,
like Assabia, like I Italian pride,
and the Persians are like, yeah, we Persians, we did it.
Like, you know, I've committed Persian crimes, right?
Or my ancestors committed Persian crimes, right?
You know, and so if you see basically,
I'm not going to like try to translate that into today
because you probably have an IQ of over 90 out there.
But the, you know, both of those things
for the communities in which they are believed
will turn out to be basically political formulas.
They will turn out to be things that are believed
that basically strengthens the state.
They're also kind of pathologies.
Yeah, they're also kind of pathologies.
So the thing is that basically, you know, sort of the sum.
This is a smart episode, folks.
If you can't handle it really, you know.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
We do enough dumb stuff here.
So basically, you have these memes, these ideas
that are political formulas
that basically strengthen the regime, whatever it is.
And so, you know, sort of the essence of my like,
I'm sorry, we will get to the acid story.
No, that's fine.
No, no, it's okay.
We're close.
As a close, we're close to the acid story.
Okay, so in any case, where these political formulas,
and have you heard of the marketplace of ideas, Tim?
Are we in that marketplace right now?
Are we selling shit in that?
We're in the bizarre.
We're in the bizarre, you know.
You're like the world war so fucking.
This is not the cathedral.
It's the bizarre.
It's the bizarre.
Now Spotify wants to call us.
We can be the cathedral tomorrow.
We will walk right into the cathedral.
That's a good question.
They spot, you know, let's get some hits on this.
Spotify, the cathedral.
That's an interesting question.
That is an interesting.
Okay, let's table that one.
I don't want to get that deep.
Okay, I want to keep this shallow, you know,
for your, I want to bottom out at like 95 IQ,
like Matt Damon, like Jenner, is at Harvard, right?
You know, and so anyway, so, you know,
in the marketplace of ideas,
we entrust a lot of things to that marketplace.
We say, for example, of virology.
We say, hey, who should make decisions about virology?
And our answer is the virologist.
Right.
How's that, how's that working out for you?
Yeah.
Right.
And so, you know, the, you know,
the conclusion is that basically, you know,
those systems were put in place to basically take power
out of the hands of politics and politicians.
That was the early progressive movement
under TR Woodrow Wilson.
And the thing is when I say take power out of the hands
of politics and politicians,
what I really mean is take power out of the hands
of democracy.
Right.
And so basically, we sort of kept this form
of government in name, the way Britain is nominally
like a monarchy or something,
because it has this ground Kardashian, you know.
But we moved it to these marketplace,
these specialized marketplaces of ideas
in the world of experts.
And we said, you know what?
This world of experts is a marketplace of ideas.
And this is a world in which ideas are competing
with each other.
And, you know, people may be right, they may be wrong.
There's a lot of biases, a lot of sellers.
The things that are good and cheap and efficient
are gonna beat the things that suck.
Right.
We encompass every time we fly in an airplane.
I've been on a lot of airplanes recently.
We encompass that to a marketplace of,
to an actual marketplace.
Sure.
The marketplace of ideas is analogous to that.
It should work and the truth will compete fiction.
And I think truth overall in these marketplaces
does outcompete fiction.
The problem is that power also, it competes weakness.
And so we have these ideas that are basically empowering
or self-empowering that basically sort of, you know,
like dominate these markets and become basically,
there's totally unaccountable
and there's no power that can remove them.
So for example, you know, one of the things that...
So for example, just for the experts, right?
Yeah.
These experts, counsel on foreign relations,
are those the experts?
Those are definitely the experts.
International Monetary Fund, are those the experts?
Sure, but here's another example.
Here's another example.
Basically, you know, Peter Dazak and his friends.
Yes, yes.
You may have covered that.
Yeah, well, we haven't covered it,
but I know what you're talking about.
Yeah, you know what I'm talking about.
So the best place to read about Peter Dazak and his friends
is in all places, one of my favorite magazines.
It's called Vanity Fair.
And for some reason, Vanity Fair has done
some very good articles lately.
I'm not sure what happened there.
Maybe they took acid.
I don't know, we'll get to the acid soon.
But they did two really excellent articles
about the birth of COVID that were not, you know,
basically beholden to the virology industry.
And I think that basically, probably the previous industry
that it has done as much damage as the virology industry
to human health is probably the tobacco industry.
And so basically, when you sort of look at what happened
in virology, it's sort of as good a case
against the American system as Chernobyl is
against the Russian system.
The difference is it killed about a thousand times
as many people, maybe 10,000, I'm sure, a lot more.
And, you know, essentially what happened here is,
you know, there's a funny way to tell the story
about COVID, which is a kid.
I remember I grew up as a kid.
And you were one of the first people on the internet
to say, this is gonna be a problem.
Yes, yes.
I was saying, I was, I started writing a piece
in the middle of January.
Actually started investing in COVID.
I bought like deep out of the money puts.
It was insane to be betting on COVID
because you can't become like pro COVID.
You start fucking your book, that was really weird.
That really bias my coverage, by the way.
Of course.
I'll admit that.
And that's sort of, in a way, that's the same effect
as the effect that corrupts these systems.
So what happened in the case of,
here's my narrative of COVID.
So when I was a kid, I was in the Commonwealth world
and like Cyprus, and it was very easy
to get like British books.
One very common form of British books
were these books by Gerald Durell,
brother of Lawrence Durell,
HBO where someone had the, you know,
the Durells in Corfu had this beautiful, you know,
why not show that was basically made
out of his wonderful memoirs.
Absolutely great to read when I was 12.
And Durell was a zoologist.
And he went around collecting little fluffy animals
from like imperiled Commonwealth countries
in which, you know, barbarians were at the gates, right?
It was just a crazy times, like the 50s and 60s,
like everything is falling apart, right?
And he's collecting beautiful fluffy animals
for his little zoo back in England.
And he does well with us,
and he does well with his books.
He founds a zoo in Jersey, not New Jersey, but Jersey.
And he basically, you know,
creates this organization called the Wildlife Trust,
which is dedicated to, you know,
getting rich old ladies to give money
to go and collect little fluffy animals.
Sounds like a win.
Along comes this guy, Peter Dazak,
who has some like bullshit degree from somewhere,
but is really a science administrator.
And he decides, and he becomes the administrator
of the Wildlife Trust.
And he decides that he can start getting grants,
bigger grants, better grants,
by changing the mission of the Wildlife Trust slightly
to have it go around instead of collect little fluffy animals,
collect viruses, specifically bat coronaviruses.
So he turns the Wildlife Trust
into something called Echo Health Alliance,
if you've heard the name,
which is an organization that basically
kind of gets massive grants
and redistributes them to scientists
to basically find and study bat coronaviruses.
And some of this work is done in China.
This is not really a thing about Chinese science.
Maybe it's something about how like sloppy things
are in China, but like, there's a word for like,
I'm gonna butcher the Chinese.
This is what Chinese word you were saying.
Chow Dua.
Chow Dua.
Yes, no, you did it right.
I speak Mandarin.
Oh, awesome, awesome.
My daughter speaks Mandarin.
Fluent Mandarin.
I was like, wow, you just fixed that.
Yeah, no, it's fine.
Fluent Mandarin.
Awesome, awesome, awesome, awesome.
So basically, so this research into bat coronaviruses
is subcontracted, you know,
which is to like biosafety level to, you know,
research facilities in like the boondocks of China.
Right, you know.
Wuhan.
Wuhan.
Right, right, right.
You know, it's not Shanghai.
Yeah.
Right, you know, and it's like,
what would be the American equivalent of Wuhan?
Detroit.
Detroit.
Right, okay.
If we heard that you were doing the most important
or any kind of important virus research in Detroit,
we would be scared.
We would be asking more questions.
Right, right, right, right.
So this research is basically subcontracted to Detroit.
Now, two things about this research.
One is its justification is to quote,
predict the emergence of, you know, novel coronaviruses.
The cause of this research
was the original outbreak of SARS.
Right.
And in fact, one of the people involved
in like virology governance is a technical advisor
to the Steven Soderbergh film Contagion,
which is well worth watching,
which is a, from the mid aughts, I think,
which is basically explicitly about a bat coronavirus.
Yes.
So because this happened,
basically bat coronaviruses are a problem.
So because it's a problem.
Yeah.
So we're getting, we're popping the stack now.
So, so getting back to this problem.
So, okay, bat coronaviruses are a problem.
Therefore, they're important.
Therefore, you can get grants to study them.
You don't have to rely on little old ladies anymore.
Instead of collecting animals,
you're collecting bat viruses,
which means you collect bats.
So basically the same thing, right?
Right.
You're getting all these grants
to study bat coronaviruses.
The more important your work is,
the more money it will get.
Makes sense.
We allocate money by importance.
Yes.
The more dangerous bat coronaviruses are,
the more money you will get.
Now, bat coronaviruses are bat viruses.
To operate in humans, they have to mutate.
They have to be changed.
They have to be mutate either naturally through pathogens.
Or they have to be mutated.
Or artificially.
In a lab.
In the lab.
Right.
And we know that was going on.
And we know that basically,
in the course of like four days,
the like ahead virologists of the world
changed their minds,
which they'd come into like,
this looks like a lab leak to,
this doesn't look like a lab leak.
There will never be any accountability
for these motherfuckers.
Never.
And there's no power that's gonna say,
hey, science, you're fucked.
And the way in which science is fucked is like,
this is a good example case.
Because basically, here is this problem
of like bat coronaviruses.
It's a real problem.
No one disputes that.
It's SARS really emerged from animals.
It was not a weird Soviet experiment that escaped, right?
So it is possible for this to be a threat.
Because it is possible for it to be a threat is a problem.
Therefore, one can get grants to study this.
The worse the problem it seems to be,
the more grants you're gonna get.
So you have basically a feedback loop
in the marketplace of ideas,
in which this idea basically brings power to that market.
So if you're basically a bat coronavirus researcher
and you're like, you know what,
what are we gonna do if we predict an outbreak?
It's like predicting,
I predict there will be an earthquake in the Bay Area.
Okay, let's build our houses a little stronger.
Right, you know, what have you actually done here?
Like, was any of this research useful
in solving the actual outbreak?
Absolutely not.
The profit motive in the marketplace of ideas can corrupt.
Right, but it's not specifically,
it's sort of when you think of a profit motive,
that's not really the way academics think.
They think of like an empire building motive.
They think of like,
my career is more successful if this is a bigger problem.
Yes.
And so they basically play Pokemon
with bat coronaviruses.
And then they like mutate their fucking Pokemon
to make them as dangerous as possible
in like basically low rent Walmart tier labs in Detroit.
And then they're basically like,
and you know, when you step back,
the important thing is when you pull the camera back
and you look at this behavior, okay?
This is absolutely-
So we've kind of been blaming China for this.
No, but China, we're letting China off the,
and we are a fan of China on this show
and we believe in one China.
We don't even know what Taiwan is.
So incredibly based.
Incredibly based, but this isn't a China problem.
This is a US problem.
This is a problem with the way we do shit.
And we basically said, we're gonna take the experts.
You know, who's gonna watch the watchdogs?
Ancient political question.
And they're like, well,
why don't the experts watch the watchdogs?
Excellent answer.
And then the question is, who watches the experts?
And they're like, well, you know,
I guess they could watch themselves, right?
And when they watch themselves,
they do shit like this,
which is every bit as dumb as like,
what it was done in fucking Chernobyl,
where they're like, let's turn off the backup,
backup, backup safety systems.
The proof that our reactor is safe
if we turn off the safety systems.
That breakdown of COVID was the best I've ever heard.
Thank you.
I have never heard it anywhere else.
Thank you.
And will I hear it anywhere else?
Who the fuck knows?
And that's the problem.
Because by the way, you just did,
in a few minutes, in the most succinct way,
I've ever heard, and I read and listen to stuff
all the time, you literally broke down
not only the problem, but what incubates the problem
and why the problem won't go away.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, in fact, these motherfuckers
are getting even more funding.
That's right.
Because there shit is important.
Because there shit is important.
The funding is gonna be out of control.
Right, I mean, because it's off the fucking charts.
You know?
Right, I mean, the things they're gonna be making now?
Yeah, yeah.
No, no.
And just, you know, there's more research for,
I mean, everything involved in this, right?
And so, inevitably, there's a little skepticism
around gain of function, you know?
It's like, you don't wanna call it that, you know?
But this is everywhere.
You know, it's like, I have a, you know, friend
who is, I'm gonna disguise his identity.
He's a leading figure in a film,
in a field that is related to physics.
Okay.
And it's related enough
that he knows physics quite well.
And I was talking about him,
talking about this problem with him.
And he was like, oh yeah, you know,
in physics, it's so bad
that there are entire workshops about string theory
that aren't about string theory.
They just have to actually pretend
to be about string theory
because the string theorists are in command of the funding
because physics is funded by physics.
So the thing is, when that starts to happen
in like the US occupation of Afghanistan, right?
You're basically just like the idiots are in charge
and doing idiotic things.
And there is no accountability for them anywhere
in any possible way, shape, or form.
Right.
So let's get back to the acid.
So I think motherfuckers deserve a break after that.
Yes.
Anyway, so.
Digesting it.
Because I mean that, by the way,
and not even to just be overly complimentary,
but like it's amazing that not only
has that not been talked about more broadly,
but it hasn't been put in a context
that people can understand.
Well.
And not only understand that this is a huge problem,
but that it is by design
and the design continue itself perpetuates.
Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
Thank you. Thank you.
Well, thank you.
And this is poverty.
This is everything, right?
Right.
This is poverty.
This is homelessness.
I was in San Francisco.
There are guys with like devil horns on all fours,
on fentanyl.
You weren't door street.
You weren't door street.
No, where was I?
I was in the tenderloin.
This was the piss orgy.
I was in El Feralito eating a quesadilla.
I'm in the mission and I'm watching all this stuff go on.
And I love that city, but it has problems.
It has issues.
And I'm going and I'm looking at these.
I lived there for 20 years.
And I'm looking at these compassion centers,
homeless centers. Navigation centers.
On every street.
The navigation centers.
And no one's in them and no one cares.
No, it's insane.
And it has nothing to do with anything.
And it's run by the homeless industrial complex.
That's right.
You know, like and like the chief executive,
I'm not giving too much away,
but like the chief like expert
of the San Francisco homeless complex.
Yeah.
Was actually my girlfriend 20 years ago.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
So it's you did it.
Yeah.
Yeah, right.
So, so, you know,
and that really informed me a lot
about this kind of mentality, right?
Yeah.
Anyway, like, yeah, it's it's it's sort of everything.
I've had this sore in my mouth
on the right side of my mouth forever.
And I keep biting my cheek and any
because I keep biting my cheek,
which makes it like it's like inflamed.
And then I keep biting it again.
Yeah.
You know, thank you for helping me make my
paked smooth brain just because you look
like a hockey coach from the 70s.
And it's it's it's it's such a comforting form.
Do you use do you use?
Let me here's a question.
Yes.
Do you ever use the accent?
You talk in the New York accent.
I don't I just whatever accent I have,
which is kind of I guess east coast vaguely racist.
Right.
That's just what I was in New York
and I was hearing, you know,
people talk the way my grandfather talked.
And yeah, and I can kind of do that.
But I also feel like I'm kind of ripping off
the Sopranos or something.
I mean, it feels kind of fake.
I have a Long Island accent,
which I think is it's in a weird way.
It's subtler. It's subtler.
It's kind of has a little hint of Boston, New England.
So let's get to the back to that.
How long do we have here?
As long as you want.
OK, OK, OK, OK, you're you're you're you're a dynamo anyway.
Anyway, you know, this is just a lead up from my biography.
So I dropped out of grad school in 1994
and I'm also really have a social life again
after really not having a social life in high school and college
because I was like totally the wrong fucking age.
Right. But I start grad school.
I mean, it was a crime to go on a date with you.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, that's true.
That's right. I wasn't really thinking about that.
But you know, it's very true.
It's wild. Right.
So so, you know, you know, but as you see, I'm a normal human being,
of course, you know, but, you know,
I know you're laughing deep down inside me like never mind.
But the in any case, I drop out of grad school.
I'm like, here's here's my plan.
I'm going to drop out of grad school.
I'm going to go succeed in the new CDROM and multimedia bubble.
And I'm going to make what year is this?
Nineteen ninety four. OK.
I'm going to make a pile of money.
I'm, by the way, going to move my very sophisticated girlfriend,
who is, you know, seven years older than me and has issues who I met on the Internet
because we're both little rock stars in this little fucking literary group.
Unused net. Unused net.
Fuck yeah.
Talk Bazaar if you're out there listening.
Fuck. Fuck yeah.
You know, I was on talk.bazaar and alt.peves.
I have like juvenilia all over these.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And and and really quality people.
I used to like on alt.peves, I used to flame Charlie Strauss,
the well-known science fiction writer all the time.
He now hates me.
All these people hate me. It's really sad.
It's crazy that the people's idea of you is radically different, really,
from from what I find.
All right, all right, all right, let's get the acid.
Let's get the acid, right?
Flattery shit later, you know, acid, right?
So in any case,
a dropout to work at this funky little like Hollywood associated company
called Chaos Tools.
We actually ever see the VR film Lawn Mower Man.
Yeah. Lawn Mower Man.
Oh, that's when they made good things.
Oh, that was fucking amazing.
Chaos Tools did the graphics for Lawn Mower Man.
I love it.
So I'm working at Chaos Tools.
Show people that.
I'm working on XAOS, Chaos Tools, you know, are also known as Chaos Inc.
And they did, you know, Photoshop plugins.
And they also like they needed like they basically did this project
that was like way above their britches.
It was sort of like in the end, the thing that I did
that actually kind of worked later.
Right.
But that was that's my like future career.
This was my present one.
It was actually a shit show and a disaster and like an insane experience.
So this in 1997, like this collapses, like, you know,
my whole social group has collapsed in a series of like insane infighting
because we're basically like, you know, I'm maybe more
asocial than some of these other people, but they're all sort of doing this thing
where they're well outside high school, but they behave like high school kids.
You know, and I thought I was doing something different,
but I was actually doing the same thing.
And many such cases as our president has said.
And the and, you know, this explodes.
My relationship with this troubled woman explodes.
And basically all I have is a job offer from a company in Berkeley,
a lease on an apartment and a company and, you know, in Berkeley
and some family back on the East Coast. Right.
So, you know, what do you do in a situation like that?
So basically, my feeling was that the right thing to do
was to take a shit ton of acid and go see the new John Woo film.
I think that's correct.
I think that was absolutely the right thing to do.
Yes. In a way, that was kind of the birth.
I mean, and when I say like, like I'm, you know,
I was reasonably experienced dropping acid by myself as one should be.
I mean, when a full grown man, don't don't try this when you're 13.
But like, you know, you can sit and like in the closet,
you know, for eight hours on acid. Yes, you're a man, right?
You know, and there's I mean, it's not the only thing can make you man.
It's just one of them, right?
You know, so it's a Native American ritual.
It's a Native American ritual. Exactly. Exactly.
Exactly. Well, I didn't have any payout, payouty,
and I couldn't sit in the smoke shop, but smokehouse.
But I could go see and see the new John Woo film,
which I knew nothing about, which was, in fact,
if you're familiar with the film, it's called
it's with Nicholas Cage and John Travolta.
Yes. It's called Face Off.
That's right.
And, you know, it has this wonderful signature move where he's like,
I'm going to take his face and and absolutely brilliant.
And again, and, you know, so to see this with no expectations,
no spoilers, no nothing on just like, you know,
oh, and it was also my birthday.
And I forget that part.
It was 1997, so I was turning 24 and I was like, OK,
why not do this? And I was like, wow, you know,
we were talking about this earlier on the show or perhaps before the show.
I'm not sure when you started filming.
And, you know, it really is an important part of a certain kind of experience.
And, you know, that experience should be as intense and disturbing as possible.
Yes. And and and and and you know, knowing that that, you know,
and now I'm going to describe, you know, OK, we're getting into the difficult.
I guess we covered some difficult political stuff earlier.
Sure. You know, we'll get to harder stuff later, maybe.
But let's go, you know, so.
But the next thing I did, which really I think it
honestly only lasted that's that this company are the same are the same people
in Silicon Valley, Silicon. I love that you say Silicon.
That's so like, I know it's like Silicon.
It's so great. Keep saying no, no, no, never change.
A friend of mine does that and it's like perfect.
Yeah. It are they the same people because when I look at the ruling class,
I feel like the people that are there, if you look at the campaign
contributions from Google, they're about 99 percent blue.
Right. But we know the least about like we know what motivates
Wall Street, guys, it's a lust for gargantuan sums of money.
Yes. What motivates these tech
utopians? Are they going to surprise you?
I'm going to surprise you.
It's a lust for gargantuan sums of money. Wow.
OK. And so.
There you go.
There it is.
God damn it.
So so not to be too shocking or anything, right?
You know, but I'm not that I may.
Is Marin County expensive?
I had no idea.
Not, you know, and and so, you know, I never actually have really succeeded
entirely in Silicon Valley.
I've sort of like semi non-failed.
It was my next.
So I lasted like nine months of this company.
I sort of never quite clicked with them socially.
I think I was just a little too weird.
Yeah, only the only one who ended up with like weird politics.
Very apolitical time, though.
But, you know, they were they were great.
The nineties was great.
They were they were great political time.
And then I then I worked at the then I actually made some money in the dot com
bubble, which became my like nest egg to do this insane thing that I did later.
Well, let's go back to the start of this company.
We're not going to talk about.
So I arrived at this company and I start there and I was like, wow,
this is an insane experience.
We're not going to talk about acid anymore.
This is just a mushrooms.
We're also not going to talk about the time I smuggled mushrooms back
from Japan after 9 11 in a jar of miso.
We're not going to talk about that.
That's amazing.
And so, yeah, we're not going that's a crime.
I think the statute of limitations is back.
But, you know, they will come for you.
Exactly. They'll probably use that as their excuse.
That'll be vanity fairs next.
Exactly. After the man who drove America crazy with his money.
You know, anyway, so the miso wasn't very good for them, is during, you know,
in any case, so I have a bag of mushrooms and I find basically,
you know, the coolest person, like the hippest hippie dude who's wearing
like tie dye at there.
And I noticed that the UC theater, the repertory theater right around
the block from her office is playing a film that I wanted to see.
And so I suggested this guy.
His name was Jimmy. Hi, if you're out there, Jimmy.
He's like, I want to go see.
Why don't we take some mushrooms?
Just perfect kind of timing for mushrooms is shorter.
Yeah.
Short of trip.
Why don't we go take some mushrooms and go see the film that's showing
at the UC and he's like, what's the film?
I'm like, it's called Das Boot.
He's like, what's it about?
I'm like, I'm like, I don't know, footwear or something.
Yeah, I don't know if I actually said that.
But have you seen Das Boot?
Yes. Have you seen it on acid?
Not yet.
It has to be the director.
You've seen the director's cut, right?
The three hour version.
I've seen the really long one.
The real. Yeah, that's the director's cut.
That's the director's cut.
You know, imagine like you're there, right?
You're watching the movie in the theater, like big, big, big sound.
Yeah.
Big sound, big sound, big screen, big picture.
You're like, you know, basically, you know,
500 feet under the Strait of Gibraltar and like British
destroyers are trying to like crush you in an instant by
throwing garbage cans of TNT right into the water.
Yeah.
For about 45 minutes.
It's living in that in that acne explosion of a cartoon.
Right. Right. Right.
I mean, it's not really claustrophobic.
Well, it is called claustrophobic, right?
You know, but, um, um, yeah, he was, I think he was OK with me
after the relationship never really became warm.
You know, and when did you leave tech?
When did I leave tech?
So when were you when were you just like, I'm gone.
So basically twice you've been writing under Manchester small bug.
I was writing.
So let's let you let me like finish my stupid ass biography.
So because I've told it in the hopefully a non-boring way.
So it's great.
So the in any case, so I worked at this company called
it first had this cool name of Unwired Planet,
which was a cool. That's a cool name, right?
Love it. Unwired Planet.
And we did smartphones before the smartphone.
We were doing smartphones in the nineties.
Wow. Smartphones in the fucking nineties.
We had this modified version of HTML called WML.
Some of you assholes out here are sold.
You actually work with WML.
We shipped about a billion WAP browsers and I was the browser guy.
I wrote the rewrote the browser course.
So technically about a billion units of my code were shipped for which
we were paid nothing at all.
And about like 30,000 people use the thing actually.
And it was a terrible fucking user experience.
One time I was actually actually tried to use it to get directions.
And like, you know, like 1999, I'm like trying to drive somewhere.
And I'm like, wow, this is your own car. You're using your own car.
Yeah, I'm using my own car.
I tried to avoid using it because it was just too embarrassing.
I mean, the thing is we didn't control the end to end experience.
Right. Like this is how crazy it was at the firm in Berkeley.
You know, OK, I named KS tools as GeoWorks.
And basically we did the Japanese were the people that had smartphones first.
And the Japanese, you know, these Japanese hardware companies
that we were working with had this idea about how to build smartphone software,
which was very simple, which is that they would design the experience
and we would they would send us screenshots and we would write code
that looked like the screenshots.
You will notice that, for example, Windows is not developed this way.
Right. Right.
This was basically doing software in the way a Japanese hardware company
thought you should do software.
Right. You know, software is one of the things
the Japanese are notoriously worst at.
And and so, you know, this is a sort of very painful experience, kind of like,
you want to, you know, this is the future, you want to do it,
but you're basically working in this just like completely retarded way.
And then I moved to Unwired Planet, which was in the same industry,
which was trying to solve the same problem, but they were like more sophisticated.
And so they were building like relationships.
And so they hired, for example, this guy who is the former
like secretary of the interior under Carter or some shit like that.
And they knew how to schmooze and their basic principle was like,
we're going to schmooze it up with the carriers and basically get the carriers
to ask for this product and and tell them about the wonders of the internet.
And I don't want to descend too deep into like business speak here for sure.
But, you know, this company was run by one of these types you find
in Silicon Valley named Alain Rossman and Alain Rossman.
I'd heard like really bad things about Alain Rossman from the GeoWorks people
because a lot of them worked with him at this AT&T attempt to do mobile phones
in like 1991, early 90s, which got like blown apart by this guy.
Anyway, he was sort of one of these like Steve Jobs wannabes.
And so, you know, I sort of imagine him like flanking the halls
like Jeff Goldblum in Steve's a suit.
You know, like, right?
He was basically talked about as if he was Jeff Goldblum and Steve's a suit.
I forget it's the name. Yeah, the underwater.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. There you go.
There was accent underwater, underwater.
And and so anyway, so, you know, I moved to his company
because they seem to actually be getting shit done in like,
you know, Europe and America and, you know, meet this guy.
I never worked directly for him or anywhere close,
but he looks like a homeless chess player.
But anyway, he has and is very, very nice and Belgian, you know.
Anyway, so we have this plan of basically
creating this alternate world of like self the cell phone internet.
And I was lucky enough to be one of those,
you know, there's sort of three kinds of people in Silicon Valley.
There's people who don't make any money.
There's people who make money off of shit that doesn't end up working.
And then there's people who make real money off of shit that works.
So it's very lucky to be someone who made a little bit of money
off of shit that doesn't work. Right.
Anyway, sort of the the world conquering attitude of phone.com,
which we changed our name to, which is sort of the CTO was like phone.com.
Horrible. So we went to the dorkiest name ever.
Unwired planet, much better.
I know, I know, but it was the day of the portal.
And our CTO was like browsing the dominium registries.
Like, I can buy phone.com for fifty thousand dollars.
He should have just kept it and and and does this.
And then we become phone.com.
And then we go public as phone.com as phone.com.
And there was a little contest within the company
to choose the stock symbol that we would go public under. Yeah.
And one of my friends, don't tell me it's like a phone, like an actual.
No, no, no, it's a four letter symbol, right?
You know, all that. Right.
Yeah, not a logo. It's a stock symbol. Right.
So a friend of mine was talking, my like officemate was talking to me later.
He's like, well, you know, I was going to send in the suggesting it for phone.com.
It should be PHCM, which could be pronounced fuck them.
Right. And then he was like, no, that would be unprofessional.
So we go public. And of course, not only is our stock symbol
fuck them, but we later merged with software.com, whose stock symbol was SWCM.
Everybody fuck them and suck them.
Fuck them exactly. Exactly. Exactly. You said it. Right.
You know, I thought, you know, you'd never get it.
But, you know, the the in any case, basically needless to say,
if you bought fuck them at the IPO, you know, at its peak,
it became like a ten billion dollar company. Right.
If you bought in hell, you know, it became worthless. Right.
So if you bought and you sold when you you made a lot of you made a lot of money.
And if you were employed as a pre IPO employee, you know, stock.
You got stock. This is the day of the classic stock option.
So I basically wound up with, I think, you know, you know, in terms of the problem
was I sold the stock and then I bought other technology companies
because I was convinced that the future was happening.
The future was in fact happening. It wasn't happening quite yet. Right.
So, you know, if you bought like Webvan stock, because you believe
that online grocery delivery was the future, which I did.
And it was. Yeah. 20 years later.
You still got fucked in that. Right.
So, you know, with the and other people got fucked in that's worse.
Other people ended up with actual like tax liabilities.
Anyway, the bubble explodes, I switch companies, you know, then I'm like, OK,
wow, you know, I had this plan when I dropped out of school,
like that I was going to do like independent computer research, science research.
I just met my wife at that point.
And, you know, the company I was working for,
which was like a Japanese owned company that used to be.
Remember the Palm Pilot? Yes.
Like they bought the code for that. It was it was a show.
And it was on its way down and everything was on its way down.
And it was early two, you know, 2002.
And I just met my wife and she didn't get married for eight years,
but she was like, go for it. Right.
So I quit my job and I was like, OK, I'm going to do the thing
that I wanted to do when I drop out of grad school.
I'm going to basically do effectively and, you know,
unsupervised PhD thesis in computer science.
And so that's kind of what I spent from 2002 to 2013.
I spent doing and by like 2011 or 2010,
I had two kids and was completely out of money.
And I also was depending on the kindness of my wife and my mother,
neither of whom was rich, my wife just had a day job as a tech writer.
And they basically were like, hey, you know,
you got to actually fund this and make this a thing or get a fucking job.
Because basically like heroes for the last 10 years is a parent with kids.
Basically no income to speak of, no savings.
And what am I doing?
I'm doing these insane fucking projects.
One of them is just this weird ass blog, right?
You know, right.
And the other was unqualified reservations.
Unqualified reservations, right?
Which someone has, you know, extracted from blog spot
and which would have banned it long ago and put it up on unqualified
reservations dot org, by the way, my current blog is the gray mirror.
Gray mirror, that's gray within the American way.
And and the and you're writing this as a hobby.
Yeah, I'm writing it as a hobby.
It's not there's nobody's blogging as a profession in fucking 2010.
Right. So, you know, by 2030, not even in 2013, right?
So by 2013, basically, like, you know, notice the readership growing.
Yeah, the readership definitely grown, right?
You know, there was definitely a real readership.
I was definitely like a nano celebrity in a way.
I was already used to being a nano celebrity on the Internet.
I was a nano celebrity when I was 19 on the Internet,
but it was a much smaller like Internet.
It was. And it was not.
It was used that I was not for any kind.
It was just in this for shaming that writer.
And it was it was just in this weird ass literary work, you know.
And which is actually like a lot of that early use in this stuff
became foundational and became sort of part of core Internet culture.
Right. Like through like a lot of it went to like something awful.
Right. Right. You know, in any case,
you know, so I basically stopped blogging in 2013
because I had to turn this thing into a company.
This is called Urban.
This is still exists out there.
Please don't look into it.
It's not cool at all.
And I mean that it's also too complicated to use.
And remember our talk about barriers earlier?
Yes, you do.
If you have an IQ of over, you know, one 10, if you don't never mind.
It doesn't matter. Right.
You know, let's get some jokes, drugs, right.
In any case, so so I started this thing.
And then, you know, of course,
because I have this interesting like checkered reputation,
the association of my checkered reputation
and having this like cool insane
because basically what I was doing for those 11 years was I was saying,
OK, here's how we normally build computing systems.
This way that we do it comes is very accidental and came out of history.
And if you have literally if you're wearing an Apple watch,
it works the way it does because it's basically a structural copy
of an IBM mini computer from or not digital
for a mini computer from like 1975.
And because that's the way computers worked in 1975,
certain decisions have been taken that can't be untaken.
It's the way like evolution can't design like a human with six arms.
Right. You know, right.
You just can't have a mutation that does that.
And so you're sort of locked into this one kind of way of doing things.
And so what I was trying to answer was the question of if you rethought this
from scratch, like imagine you get like a USB drive
with like the operating system from an alien spaceship.
Right. And it's got it doesn't have anything that reminds you of like,
you know, they didn't have a digital equipment corporation
that made a machine called the VAX in 1976. Right.
So, you know, how's it going to work?
It's going to be sort of completely structurally different.
And so like my thing is so different.
This was stupid, actually.
But I was like, this is going to be so different that zero means true and one means false.
Right. That's actually just mathematically more beautiful.
You know, for stupid reasons, it causes all kinds of stupid bugs.
But in any case, this is still this is still a thing.
This is still a thing in, you know, 2022.
You won't look it up because it's too complicated.
It's too complicated and you want to understand it and it's not cool.
So, you know, in any case, in any case, basically.
So I basically quit, you know, I ejected myself.
I have actually no association with the project at all now.
I do have some urban real estate, but I have no stock in the company.
I have no power and I'm not involved.
I don't I'm not.
I can't even tell you how to use this thing.
Right. Actually, it's probably too complicated for me.
Founders farewell.
There you go.
There you go.
He's out.
Um, um, server A, right.
Now, did you leave?
Was it amicable?
Were you like, I'm out?
Oh, yeah, I pushed myself out.
I was, I was always completely in control of the company.
So, um, the, um, um, the it was more than amicable and I'm good friends
with the founder, but again, not very cool.
You know, what's cool is that picture there.
That's a still from Godard's contempt.
Yeah, I was just about to say, did you recreate?
No, no, no, that's not me.
That's, that's Bernardo, you know, that's some famous, some famous
Italian actor.
Yeah, it's actually an Italian.
That's actually the, um, that is the via, um, God.
When we see you enjoyed anonymity for a long time.
Here's actually, no, actually, I doxed myself fairly early in the block.
Here's a funny story about the way I doxed myself.
What are you laughing at?
Like a lunatic?
Just the it's just a look because you said you like, you like the
anonymity goes, no, I doxed myself very early.
It's just a funny, quick.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's, that's a villa by the author of Kapoot.
Kapoot with two T's.
Look that up.
Um, he designed this villa.
He was a fascist novelist.
Um, he designed this great novelist.
He designed this villa himself.
I'll just look up, uh, Kapoot with two T's villa.
Um, and great having this guy.
I love real estate.
Yeah, yeah, this is amazing.
If I could afford this, if it takes over the world.
Oh my God, this is Kapoot with a K.
Oh, with a K with a K, with a K, of course, it's a K.
Gotcha.
Their Villa, um, look for the Jesus.
Curzio Malaparte.
Look up Curzio Malaparte.
Curzio Malaparte.
God, he's just dominated by like ad searches, right?
You know, the Internet is fucked.
There it is.
You know, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's the, that's the stunningly beautiful.
That's the via Malaparte, stunningly beautiful.
And like this modernist fascist Italian.
Right there.
Exactly.
Exactly.
As I always say, the art is the best part of fascism.
Yes.
And, and the, um, um, especially in fucking Italy.
Right.
You can argue with that about Germany.
Italy.
There's no case, you know, in any case, um, um, where were we?
So yeah.
So, um, I docked yourself early.
Yeah, I docked myself early on.
So in the way in which I docked myself is somebody read my blog.
This is a funny story, actually, with no point to it.
But, you know, I basically, somebody contacted me and was like,
hey, the way you posted about computer science is like sufficient,
I, you know, to identify you.
He mails me, um, and I'm like, ah, shit, you know, anyone can tell.
And then this is like 2008, nine or whatever.
And, you know, in at the start of COVID, I moved to a small town in Nevada.
You know, the Nevada, excuse me, if you say Nevada in Nevada,
you're going to have problems.
Right.
Um, and it's like Persons and Italians, right?
You know, and, um,
I just call the whole state Vegas.
Yeah, exactly.
So, so, so I moved to, you know, kind of a northern suburb of Vegas,
which has a French.
I prefer to think of it by the French name, you know, the actor
who was in the professional, yeah, John, um, did you write the part two?
No, no, no, John, John, John, you know, you know, so exactly.
If you know, yeah, yeah, yeah, if you, you know, it's a much
you know, you're going to Target, right?
You're going to Target and you know, right?
You know, and, um, anyway, um, so I moved to Reno or Hema, and, um,
and I've become friends with this, um, guy L who also from, you know,
same general vague community, rationalist or whatever in Hema,
and it turns out, and I've become very good friends with them.
And then he's like, you know, Curtis, did you know that like in 2009,
I was the one who sent that email.
And he was like, you know, it was actually pretty hard to figure out who you were.
I'm sure someone would have done it, right?
And so actually like operating out of the closet has had a couple of different
effects. It's had the effect of making sure that my like technical work,
like my other career, um, in like complicated computer science shit, um,
will always sort of be like basically in computer science and systems,
at least you're trying to establish like a standard.
And so having this, um, sort of baggage around your neck,
for example, there's a Linux file system called Riser FS,
which is very innovative, interesting file system,
and was really one of the leaders to become the future of Linux.
You've heard of Linux. This is a nerd thing, you know, and, um,
file systems, like a nerd part of it,
like the liver, the liver of the operating system is the file system.
And you can kind of swap them out,
which I wish you could do with livers, frankly, and, um,
you can kind of swap them out. And Riser FS was the leading one.
And then Hans Riser, that like autistic weirdo who developed and designed
this very innovative file system, murdered his wife. Right. Um, and, um,
the, uh, you know, let's get Hans Riser up here. Okay. Uh, and so, you know,
I didn't murder my wife. She buy of completely natural causes in the hospital.
Yeah. Sorry.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Um,
and you can go to my website and, you know, read my poetry about it. Uh, you know,
and, um, the, um, in any case, um, you know, that,
that crippled, you know, his adoption as a standard, right? You know,
on the other hand, it's basically like having this, um, yeah, exactly.
Looks just like me. Here's a bit shorter, you know, um, and say,
didn't write same expression in his eyes. Right. Yeah. Exactly. You know, and, um,
um, the, uh,
so he kills his wife and it hurts the adoption of his technology. That's right.
Even though it's actually genuinely brilliant technology that hasn't committed
any murders at all, hasn't committed any murders at all. But in any case,
basically, but it's also like not a sort of social network that like people are
on. And so, you know, in a way, however, so that's sort of a negative effect,
but there's also kind of a positive effect in that.
Remember how we were talking about burning man? Yes. Like the playa is not
the Caribbean, you know, imagine if they held burning man in like, you know,
what, what a deal. Right. You know, like it would turn into like, you know,
freak Nick, right? And it would not be an environment in which anyone you meet
is an old friend you've never met. Right. So, and, and, and so, you know,
operating out of the shadows has kind of created operating out of the shadows,
creates this barrier to entry where you're like, okay,
but there's something funky and weird about his, the founder,
he didn't kill his wife. Maybe he was canceled in some way. Do I dare to use
this? And the thing is, if you're a person who's answered that question is,
yes, bear in mind, this is like not something cool that you should look into.
Right. Okay. Right. And it's too complicated for you to use. And frankly,
it doesn't work very well. You know, I'm just, you know,
I'm not sure from what I hear about the engineering since I left, you know,
it's really, it's just like, you shouldn't go there. But the thing is basically,
like, like, like, um, you know,
having those barriers to entry is a crucial part of like quality
control. Now the problem is, of course, it's sort of also like in the McCull to
growth, like clubhouse is another good example of that. Do you remember clubhouse?
I was big on it. Yeah. I was in the clubhouse too. Right. And then I was in the club.
And then, and then separate quality. It had an eternal September.
It had a real problem. Yeah. And, uh, it was very fun in the very well,
technically, because it was, it was a small group of people that,
and it was very interesting because they would bring on like people every now and
then like, I was a comedian. So like,
I would just sit in these rooms and listen to tech guys talk.
Mark Andreessen is on there like all the fucking time to go.
This guy, now we need someone to be funny. Yeah. And then I'd be funny.
Right. And you, you should have Mark and, you know, go and see if it all works.
Do you want to see, like,
you should go and see if Mark Andreessen will do your show. But then, you know,
yeah, but then they, there was like,
they started to do like struggle sessions in the, in the rooms.
And then there was one room called Saudis and Jews. That room got wild.
And I go in there every now and then it's half Saudi.
You got to get us back to the persons in the Italian degenerated so rapidly.
Right. Right. Right.
And it just became this like toxic fucking jungle. Right.
And this is what's happening in America kind of in a lot of ways.
In your estimation, we have, because it's not a democracy.
It is more of an oligarchy. Yeah.
And that that's been proven for Columbia review or Princeton review.
One of the Columbia did a study where they went by any
rational standard measure here. This is not a democracy.
It's not like barely a republic.
You know, who are the people who even matter, right?
You know, but yeah, it's it's like it's a shit show.
And it's basically like, you know, these are sort of to the corruption
by like power that we talked about in virology and the sort of like
corruption by like low quality, which isn't really happening.
Imagine if just like there was like virology inflation.
So like anyone could call themselves a virologist, right?
You know, or like you could basically like Harvard like lowers its standards.
So you're basically like, you know, Harvard is selling, you know,
Harvard virology PhDs for four ninety nine. Right.
You know, what happens to the virology right then?
And what do they start to believe? Right.
Well, we just in my whole life,
all we've ever seen is political scandals and disasters
with absolutely no accountability.
Yeah. And so and it's like.
Combinating with that.
Here is in all the stuff.
And here is here was sort of the like the thing is normally when you say,
let's take power, you're like, OK, you have, you know,
let's get back to like political.
Basically, we get back to political theory here.
We were having an interesting conversation, but it was too fun.
And, you know, I want to get people back to like things
that are hard to understand to drive the stupid people away.
Yes, I want actually your viewership to go down.
Because let's get keep because let's get keep because barriers to entry are really important.
In any case, so to get keep a little let's go.
You basically what you, you know,
the sort of the first conclusion to like jump to when you're in
sort of a problematic situation is you're like, OK,
I'm in a problematic situation instead of like trying to solve this.
It's like debugging is sort of the art for this.
You know, if you're if you're a coder and you you fix bugs,
you have the mentality that the bug will never defeat you.
If you're beaten once by a bug, it like changes you,
like honestly, as a man or a woman or a person.
And and so you never let that happen.
Right. And so you have to have like.
You know, in order to basically step back to a place
where you know that you are right about everything, you have to say,
let me start by assuming that I know nothing.
And so I'm living in the year 2022 and like stuff is a little weird.
Right. Like the narrative is weird.
And maybe it's weird, like in the same way that like the narrative was weird
in like the Soviet Union and you're just like, can I really, you know,
the Soviet Union actually is funny.
There was, you know, I'd love an English translation of this.
If like you're a rich person out there,
there was something called the Great Soviet Encyclopedia
that was basically produced in like the 1960s.
It was like Soviet like Wikipedia, except it was done by the, you know,
right, Supreme Soviet, right.
And so basically it was like the Soviet line on everything,
the Soviet line in literature, the Soviet line on biology,
the Soviet line on history.
And so it would have an entry first, say the English Civil War,
which would be a Soviet interpretation of the English Civil War.
It would have a section on the Revolutionary War, the American Revolution,
that was a Soviet interpretation of the American Revolution.
And if you think there's only one way to interpret the American Revolution,
well, like when was that ever true? Right.
You know, and and there's just like the view that like one.
You smashed the American Revolution. Can you do it very quickly in 10 minutes?
I can do it very quickly in like 15 seconds.
The American Revolution is the Vietnam War in the 18th century.
It's essentially a civil war between two British political factions by proxy.
And that's why the sort of violent events in it
don't really seem to make sense in the same way that you look at the Vietnam War.
And you're like, how is this not like World War Two? Right.
You know, and that's the that's the that's the American Revolution.
And a great way to read about it is you just go to Google
and you type in true history of the American Revolution works fine.
And you'll actually get a book that was written in 1903.
Just go there.
So that's actually kind of cool.
See, the Internet sometimes fulfills its promise.
It has its perks.
Like, you know, you know, when Brynn and Paige were like,
we're going to digitize all the books like right before 1923, all the books that are free.
They're like they weren't thinking like what's the average
like political opinion before 1923. Right.
Where is it in the Overton window?
It's not even in the Overton fucking building. Right.
Right. Right.
Even relating it to the Overton window.
It was hard. Right.
You know, and so in any case, when you see this like problematic situation,
what you want to do is to go back to like where you know nothing.
And one way to do that is to go way back in time
and look at basically the first person
whoever wrote coherently about political science,
assuming that nobody knew anything is Aristotle.
And so if you go back to Aristotle's system of political science,
first of all, in the same spirit as James Burnham's, the Machiavellians,
you don't actually need to read the politics.
You should just read the Machiavellians.
But, you know, it certainly doesn't hurt.
And Aristotle points out that there are basically three forms of government,
monarchy, oligarchy and democracy, government of the one,
government of the few, government of the many.
When you're identifying an oligarchy or aristocracy,
your question is always who matters, who is in the loop, right?
There's actually this great Armando Yanucci film called In the Loop.
Like there's this whole like little mini genre of like how the government
actually works, which is like the British show Yes, Minister in the thick of it.
All of Yanucci's films are actually kind of like realistic.
They're like more realistic than they're not completely real,
but they're like more realistic than like CNN. Right.
And so if you want to look at how things work,
well, the Chronicles of Narnia is more realistic than CNN.
That may very well be.
That has, you know, the same initiatives as well, right?
You know, and the in any case.
So there's three kinds of government.
There's monarchy, oligarchy and democracy, the government of the one,
the government of the few, the government of the many.
And when you look at the way things work now,
it's essentially an oligarchy of prestigious institutions.
One way to ask the question of like, who's in power?
Like, how does power actually work?
Not like what's written, you know, in this piece of paper.
But like who actually matters is to say, imagine and you can see,
you have to be able to say this for any regime, any kind of government.
So imagine that you're like a Nazi from outer space.
Remember that film, Iron Sky?
You're a Nazi from outer space.
And your goal is to like turn the world Nazi.
Your goal is to get as much Nazi power as possible.
So the question is, and you can you can take over a certain number of people
of brains, you can like attach a little like Nazi unit to their brain
that turns them into like secret Nazis. Right.
So without revealing themselves, they try to kind of guide everything
in a Nazi direction.
Right. They might be like, you know, writing a story about Epstein.
They might kind of emphasize his Semitic background, you know.
And so they kind of try and and sort of tilt reality.
And so and I'm skipping, you know, ahead because the question is,
who would they take over? Who would answer would be I'm not sure
which institution they would want more, whether it's Harvard or the New York Times.
Right. I don't know.
It's kind of doesn't matter or it's hard to tell because they agree with each other completely.
Like Harvard, the State Department and the New York Times,
like, you know, they're like peas in a pod.
They never fight with each other.
This is your this is the cathedral where you have all these, you know,
supposedly independent institutions that all agree with each other.
They come to the same conclusions and those conclusions.
And why do they come to the same conclusions?
Why do they let me let me finish for a second.
Why do they come to the same conclusions?
They become to the same conclusions because those conclusions act as political
formulas for exactly this system.
They cause people to think basically, you know, experts should be in charge
and we should give them a lot of money. Right.
And so basically like nobody's in charge of this.
Right. And the thing is, when you talk to people, the more important they get,
the more they will be like, people are locally in charge.
You have these little emperors like the Peter Dazaks of the world.
Right. But overall, nobody's in charge of this thing.
And that's what makes it an oligarchy.
And one thing that you've said that's very interesting is an oligarchy
tends to produce a very uneven, disjointed strategy for governance.
Yes, because nobody's in charge. Right.
You know, and so because nobody's in charge in just, you know, like there's no accountability,
like there's no organization that can be like, you know,
that's sort of superior to Peter Dazak that can say, besides taking like a vote
of Congress that says this guy will not get any more funding.
Moreover, if he doesn't get funding, all of his people will still keep getting
funding. So when you there's no way to cut off that to amputate that
poisonous arm. Right. And so, you know, you have the same
critiques of society or you share some critiques with people on the left,
like a Chris Hedges or right. Absolutely. Absolutely.
It's very easy to see like pieces of this system and a lot of people see it very clearly.
And it's your like, like foreign policy, like Chris Hedges.
I think there's like a very similar take of this is like a self-licking.
But his his take would be strength in public institutions, more unionizing, more labor,
which is like giving more money to Peter Dazak, right?
You know, and so my take, basically, as a foreign policy take is just shut it all down.
Right. Close all the bases, all the embassies.
You know what? If you want to deal with the government of France, send an email.
If it's really complicated, maybe you can zoom.
So it's unwinding the empire. It's unwinding the empire.
It's an American, like Gorbachev, doctor.
And so the argument or the question is what happens in that power vacuum is to Russia and China?
Sure.
But let's let's let's, you know, let's, well, that's a pretty deep hole.
OK, well, out of that hole. Sorry.
And it's a deep, fun hole.
But let's pull back to the basic like the basic political theory.
Yes. So what you're looking at here is basically when you look at democracy as a form of government,
basically, where power is actually broadly spread across the population and power in the sense
that the population is constantly sort of making actual choices, like any actual power figure
who's not symbolic, like, you know, let's execute Socrates would be an example of like a democratic
right, right, you know.
And so literally they executed the greatest philosopher in history based on an internet poll.
OK, that's democracy, right?
So, you know, more generally, the equation of democracy and politics is interesting.
This is something you can find people uttering the same rhetoric in the early 20th century,
where they basically condemn, you'll notice that in the English political language as it stands,
the word politics has a negative connotation.
If you're politicizing anything, you're going to politicize you as foreign policy is very bad.
But democracy has a positive connection.
Right. Right.
So what gives, right?
You know, and it's like, then you're like, basically, you look around the world and you
notice, you know, weird anomalous things like, for example, you ever heard of North Korea?
Like, do you know the official name of North Korea?
What's the official name of North Korea?
I don't know. The DPRK.
It stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
So that's one place name and three synonyms for democracy.
Yeah, sounds good.
So basically what democratic means today is just legitimate in some abstract sense.
Right. And so, you know, basically, that's how like the European Commission,
which is basically about as accountable to like the like voters of Europe as like Kim Jong-un is to
like my right, right, you know, is basically represents democratic democracy and like civil
society. That's another euphemism for oligarchy that you'll hear, you know, respected institutions,
how are they respected? You know, it's like, if you go to Wikipedia, Wikipedia has the policy
of reliable sources, which are prestigious institutions.
Yeah.
And like, ostensibly, that's sort of an objective like thing in a way.
But if you go to like the page for that, and, you know, with a question like, what is a reliable
source? Basically, what you'll find is that a reliable source is a source that is reliable.
Are these consolidations, are these consolidations of power and influence among elites inevitable?
They are inevitable in an oligarchy.
And so, basically, they're sort of an inevitable part of oligarchical governance.
What happens in a monarchy?
And so, the way they evolved, which is sort of useful to know is that basically, if you look at
the U.S., this is like short, simple U.S. political history as quickly as I can give it.
So, basically, in the 1890s, the U.S. is in what's called the Gilded Age.
And power in that age is sort of relatively decentralized, and it's kind of in the hands of
sort of corrupt politicians who are easily bribed by like large companies.
And it's the Gilded Age, it's the robber barons, sort of all these stereotypes are basically kind
of true. And government is basically, you know, the effect is like China.
Like, you'll notice there's a lot of shit that was built then.
They seem to have been able to do things very, very quickly.
Empire State Building, 12 months.
Empire fucking State Building is like, you know, being built faster than like my friends
like Vacation House. Like, there's like some kind of capacity in that society that has vanished.
It's also like very corrupt, which no one thinks is a good thing.
And like, it's like fucked in a lot of ways, right?
And the thing is that the power is not in the hands of the sort of most socially dominant
classes at the time. Power is not in the hands of the smartest people.
The idea of a professor telling what the government, the government, what to do
would be like having like a, you know, programmer tell the government what to do.
It would be like, what? Like, why?
It would be insane.
It would be insane, right?
And the thing is, but basically, there's a kind of a sort of like a thermal inversion of power
whenever like the best and the smartest people are not the people running the show.
And so the old intellectual classes, sort of where this movement starts in America,
at least in Britain, it's the Fabians. In America, it's the Mughwamps, the literal
Republicans, people like Charles Francis Adams, Jr., who's like one of my favorite
writers ever, his brother Henry Adams, who wrote the education of Henry Adams.
They're kind of doyens of this very aristocratic.
Imagine if like, you know, David Foster Wallace was also a Kennedy.
That's like the level of status that these motherfuckers have.
They were bloods.
Total blue bloods, you know, and very sophisticated and also the best intellectuals of their time.
Adams is the editor of the North American Review, which is like the New Yorker of its time,
or rather the Vanity Fair of its time. And so basically, you have the intellectual elites
who are realizing the power of like science and thought who are like the head of this revolution.
And then they look at the most important function in the world, government,
and it's being run by these like corrupt, like boss tweed motherfuckers and just like
fucking Irishmen, I mean, Italians, you know, and like people of just like no class and civilization,
right, you know, and who are stealing, who are in fact corrupt and who have no vision whatsoever,
and are just like letting shit happen. And why did the Empire State be yielding,
you know, you know, get built in 12 months because like, you know, some WAP made a million
dollars on the permits, right, you know, and just like this is unacceptable.
Like this is not a way we can live, right.
And so basically, that turns into this philosophy of like contempt for politics and
politicians, and the idea that this should be the sort of cosmetic process, and then real
policy should be made by experts. And so experts who are people who have university
education, we can't build any affordable house. So basically, here's here's like the biggest
mistake in a way that was made with this, you know, and you go sort of very, very far back.
They're like, okay, democracy doesn't work. Democracy doesn't work because basically,
the people will just have their votes stolen by these like clowns. The people do not vote for
philosopher kings. They do not like philosopher kings. They vote for like thieves and clowns.
It's like, imagine, you know, think about elections and what about George W. Bush,
think about elections and some, you know, America at the time, you got to remember America at the
time is a third world country. It's a rising third world country, right. And so you're like,
basically, you know, let's think about a random third world country, let's say Paraguay,
do you know anything about Paraguay? Not a ton. Do you think the citizens of Paraguay are
entitled to, you know, are actually capable of like devising the right policies for the future
of Paraguay? Not at this time. Not at this time. That is an excellent answer. Not at this time.
You know, and, and, and, and, you know, that leaves the possibility. Okay. That leaves open
the possibility that the citizens of Paraguay could be educated, you know, the brains could
be extended with additional lobes, you know, they could become like citizen philosophers,
like the citizens of Athens who executed Socrates, you know, right. I'm not saying this couldn't
work. And, you know, one of the things you see is that as systems become smaller and more like
democracy at Burning Man, it's not a democracy, but you could imagine it being democracy. It
would still probably be fucked. Right. Like, you know, currently it's some kind of oligarchy or,
you know, it's a complete autocratic despotism. Yeah. Right. You know, you could imagine it
as a democracy. And maybe that would not be fucked. Right. But if you try to imagine, say,
let's make say, since we mentioned it, Detroit is going to be democracy. Yes. And then the citizens
of Detroit will elect a king of Detroit, who is actually has absolute an emperor of Detroit,
who has absolute power over Detroit. Right. You know, are they going to like, or that? No,
even better, let's say direct democracy, they will decide the laws of Detroit themselves,
and they will execute people by internet polls that like work, if you're only geolocated to
Detroit, you know, right. Yeah. You know, like, you're just imagining an insane shit.
Did anyone ever believe in democracy? So democracy basically, you know, if it's funny,
if you go to the Wikipedia page on Athenian democracy, right, there's an interesting line
from a modern scholar, which is like, you know, it's interesting that so many cultures have tried
to copy this system of government, all we have, all the writing, all the writing from its own
period was just like, this was the worst shit show ever devised. Right. You know, and so even
in kind of this best case scenario, basically, like what you're seeing is like, it had a really
checkered reputation, and it was considered basically, you know, between, you know, until
essentially the like 18th or maybe even early 19th century, it's generally considered a slur.
It's like saying fascism or communism, right. It's basically democracy is like mob rule,
and everyone knows that's bad. And so it was, you know, then in school, when we were being
taught about democracy, they would, they would always say, we are a republic, right, because we
don't want mob right. And so and that was what that reflects is basically the original foundation
of the constitution, which is basically the constitution is a right-wing coup. And it's a
right-wing coup because the articles of confederation, which are much more democratic and much more
robruly, mobruly and much more Jacobin, as they would have said in those days, because remember
the fucking French Revolution is fucking going down. That's right. Right. You know, and it's a
fucking shit show. And like Thomas Jefferson is over there basically being like the Jane Fonda of
the French Revolution. Right. You know, and he's like, Oh, yeah, you know, we got to kill some
aristocrats, you know, the blood of the, you know, the tree of liberty, right? You know,
you know, Thomas Paine is even worse. Thomas Paine basically goes over there and he's like
those Americans who like went to China and like Mao, you know, and you know,
he gets someone to French politics, he gets himself in fucking trouble, right? You know,
and so the Americans who created the constitution, notice that you don't know anything about the
articles of confederation period except that it happened. Interesting. And complete historical
blackout. It's a complete, you don't need names of the people involved in events, 13 years of
American history, right? You know, like counting the, the, like, I mean, the cons, it has continuity
with the whole revolution. There's a Congress during that whole period, right? It's an utter
shit show. And states are like almost going to war with each other, like Rhode Island basically
has to almost be convinced to join the constitution by a fucking blockade, right? You know, crazy ass
shit, right? You know, and I mean, crazy ass shit goes like American history before the revolution
is like, that's a period of like over 150 years. You've never heard of like Eliza
rebellion and shit, like insane, the regulator war never heard of it, right? You know, insane
historical blackout shit just because I'm a public school kid, literally history started with Lizzo.
Yeah, history started with Lizzo. So basically the constitution, you know, which they did
mention a couple of times, you know, as like it was, you know, printed by God, you know, as they
say in Utah. And the constitution is a right wing coup, right? That basically intends to install
this like dual very Silicon Valley structure. It's like, you know, Eric Schmidt and Larry Page.
No, no, what it's actually installing is basically a monarchy with George Washington as the like
figurative monarch and Alexander Hamilton as like the startup CEO dude who actually does everything.
Right, right, right. And Alexander Hamilton, by the way, was a black man. Let's just go with let's
don't don't don't quest. Don't know. Stay off the fucking internet. Don't go on the fucking internet.
You'll be fine. Alexander Hamilton was a black man. Okay. He may not have been a black man,
but how much do you like your job? Alexander Hamilton was a black man. Is that what is good?
Is that really the going thing now? Okay, no, it will be Alexander Hamilton. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
An African American gentleman. Yes, was the first king of America. Okay. And so, you know,
basically he is running the US government like a startup. Right. Completely in charge of it.
He's like fucking Elon Musk and nominally is the secretary of the treasury. Jefferson is the
secretary of state. He's just like this Hamilton motherfucker is running everything. Right. What
the fuck, right? You know, of course he is because he's basically Thomas Jefferson is a
wonderful eccentric guy, just kind of a blowhard. And like Hamilton actually knows how to get
things done. He's getting things done. Yeah, he's getting shit done. Right. And so if you look
basically at American history, as again, pulling the camera away the fuck back, it's this Constitution
is this really cool design because it basically has structures that are designed to be stand-ins for
all three forms. Originally, it was designed for the house to be very democratic, which is why
like the mob power now, of course, the house has a 98% incumbency rate and
right and seniority rules that were basically a period who have been copied from the most Serene
Republic of Venice. Right. And so it's this amazing bulwark against democracy and it creates
like the Nancy Pelosi's of the world that make the Supreme Soviet look like the Baltimore Orioles.
But you know, in any case, the original design is like you take all three
forces in government, the force of democracy, the force of absolute power, aristocracy in the
Senate. The Senate was supposed to be aristocratic and it was for a while before like the 15th,
whatever the gas amendment, the directional direct election of senators. And then the presidency was
the focus of monarchy. Right. And the Supreme Court was originally supposed to just be like
digital organ. But again, that's another structure of oligarchy and that's a very,
very low frequency oligarchy, which has very slow turnover. Right. And then the like power dynamic
between all of these institutions is left entirely unspecified. This is how basically,
in a way, it's sort of Hamiltonian government is like killed with Marbury versus Madison,
which you probably wrote about in public school, where the Supreme Court is like, no,
actually I read the Constitution and it doesn't say this, but they meant we're in charge.
Right. And so what's neat about this system and what has made it like survive a lot of
crises that really probably should have killed it is that basically about every 75 or 80 years,
you have a regime change in the United States, you have a replacement of like the whole actual
structural forces of government under the same name, which is very common thing in history.
And it leads to like, go into this more and it leads to like a different structure of forces.
So basic and and it centers around a president who is actually a monarch, not in that they call
themselves king, as you know, the Roman emperor is never called. FDR is an example. FDR is an
example. And who else? Lincoln. Lincoln. There you go. So basically what you have in all three
cases is you have basically this startup regime and the startup regime. In Lincoln's case, one of
the interesting things about things about Lincoln from a Silicon Valley, I'm just going to start
saying Silicon Valley sounds better. It sounds better, right? You know, and it has all these
like salacious overtones. Yes. You know, and you know, one of these Silicon Valley things
is that you look at the Lincoln administration and you notice that the Lincoln administration is
run by this like weirdo, self-educated, wild, genius, political talent. Abraham Lincoln,
really the first great American politician. And some might say Jackson, some might say Van Buren,
like Lincoln is like a combination of Jackson and Van Buren, you know, and he's like a Machiavellian
genius. And he's also like a genius order. And he really convinces people to this day, like,
think that Lincoln had like some kind of like philosophy. Lincoln's philosophy was whatever
is good for Abraham Lincoln. And, you know, and he was a master politician. And basically FDR's
philosophy is also whatever is good for FDR. I think I want to think Washington and Hamilton are
like pure. Right. But the thing is, even with this level of like, you know, I don't really approve
of Lincoln and FDR. I don't approve of a lot of things that went on in their regimes. However,
one notices a couple of things about them. One is that basically, if you look, for example,
at the Lincoln administration, you'll see that a lot of it, the government that Lincoln controls,
mainly focusing on the war effort, is controlled by these young 20-something guys,
Nicolay and Hay. Hay later becomes the secretary of state and like the McKinley administration.
And you're just like, aha, I see an organization run absolutely from the top down by a pair of
guys in their 20s. Right. Where have I fucking seen this before? Right. You know, and where have I
fucking seen this before? And they win, right? You know, and they win because they're awesome. And
then you basically see that these regimes are created as this, these monarchical structures,
then kind of central power kind of decays and they become oligarchies. And it's like,
once there were like wires going up to the wheelhouse and the wires are cut.
Why does central power decay? It's central power decays because everything, you know,
it's like, that's asking why do people die? People all die for a different reason. They die in
different ways. Let's get forward to the FDR regime. So the FDR regime is this quintessence of this
like university-driven revolution, because either university is 400 years ago for the fucking upper
class. They're from, you know, for the like 500 families, like the people that actually matter
in this country. Right. Like and the, you know, this is a revolution of the university class.
FDR himself personally, like Lincoln, I guess, is not really a manager. FDR is actually in some ways
a lot like Trump. He's a very vain person. He's quite intelligent. He's like not really into books.
He's like totally dominates a room when he comes into it. He's like the most charming person in
the world, very shallow. But there's a huge difference between FDR and Trump, which is that
FDR is from a super, like one of the most aristocratic American families. Roosevelt.
The Roosevelt's is huge confidence. And he knows how to delegate because every time Trump tries to
delegate, he's like, can I trust this person? Right. What if he's trying to become bigger than me?
You know, what if he's banning is trying to exceed me? And like, he's like the worst fucking,
you know, anyway, I don't want to say I hate saying bad things about people, even if they're
Donald Trump. Right. You know, I think Donald Trump would make an excellent chairman of the board.
And that is the right job for him. He should be promoted. It's a promotion. It's a more
important job being chairman of the board than being CEO. And so Donald, if you're listening,
you know, stay off of her bit, but also he's going on her. He's on his way to say off of her
bit. Yeah. And start thinking of yourself as like the like CEO emeritus. And you've made
so anyway, so getting back to FDR and like this is sort of the birth of what we call the deep
state. Right. Originally a Turkish word, I think first popular. I was one of my friends, Steve
Saylor and Peter Dill Scott had deep politics. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's close. This is the same
basic thing. Yeah. Right. You know, you know, Scott was very familiar with like the sort of,
you know, foreign, you know, like the eight industrial complex, you know, which my father
worked for, you know, and the whole foreign policy insanity apparatus. Yeah. The whole apparatus,
you know, that's just one arm of this deep state that was created by trusting the experts.
Right. You know, nobody even knows what it's fucking for. Right. Right. Nobody even knows
what it's fucking for. And people just like make up reasons like we got to predict all the viruses.
Right. You know, that is the level of like top level geostrategic thinking in US foreign policy
is at the level of let's collect all the viruses. Right. You know, but going back to sort of the,
you know, the birth of this system, like there's a couple of things that I say to describe like the
New Deal and the New Deal era. One is I was pretty literally struck by a book in Theodore
White's making the president 1960 very famous political book in which he's talking to one of
the Kennedy people or one of the older people who's kind of involved in like the New Frontier.
And we think when we think about the New Frontier, we think about the Kennedy world and there's
this kind of edge of monarchy to like Kennedy world because this is a big family and right,
you know, Roosevelt had kids as well, but they were just like incredibly corrupt, incompetent
fucks. Right. And there was no way to take them seriously as politicians, you know,
and like, say, Ted and Kennedy. Right. Maybe it was a more serious time as well.
But the thing is you see all of these monarchical complex complexes developing. Right. And so you
see that when you have someone like FDR, who I encourage like all of my fans, but especially
the Libs to think of when they think of monarchy, when you see someone like FDR basically like,
you know, and you see that, OK, he's not technically a hereditary monarch, but like
the sort of attributes of hereditary monarchy that are like hereditary succession start forming
as they have formed for thousands of years throughout human history. So like, you know,
you start to from this perspective, you start to lose your kind of temporal exceptionalism,
you're like histories and ending at all. And like government is kind of the same thing it's
always been. Right. Right. And and, you know, if government is the same thing it's always been,
it's easy to look at FDR's world and see a couple of different things. One is remember,
I was talking, there was a guy like T. H. White, T. E. White, something why I forget his name,
author of Making the President, Making the President 1960 is, yes. Yeah.
He's talking to someone who remembers the New Deal era. And he's basically in the New Frontier.
And when we think of like the New Frontier in Camelot, this is like the most exciting time ever.
This is like, my God, like being a frontiersman, like, you know, like, you know, Kennedy has
Robert Frost read it as inauguration, Biden has Amanda Gorman, one of these things, maybe not
quite like the other. Right. You know, like, and so, you know, that's like, you know, excellence,
right? Yeah. At the top and the sense of like heredity sort of forming. And you're just like,
what is this, what is this like Kennedy cult of the Kennedys have to do with like the American
Revolution, right? Right. And so you're seeing all of these things develop. Those things are
way more intense in the Roosevelt era. This guy who remembers the New Deal is like, oh yeah,
you know, everything seems kind of dull and drab in the New Frontier to anyone who remembers the
New Deal. That's how like how much fucking startup energy the New Deal has like working at Google
in 2003. Right. Basically, you know, here is, you know, let's say you graduate from Harvard in like
1936 versus 2016. If you graduate from Harvard in 1936, with a degree in this new field of economics,
a field that has basically been completely reinvented in the last 20 years, you're like, oh,
you know, I'm a Harvard man. I'm really smart. And I know somebody who knows somebody who knows
Tommy Corcoran, Felix Frankfurter or someone like that. And somebody calls somebody and I get a phone
call. And they're like, would you like to come to DC? Yeah. Yeah. Concealing your excitement,
you're like, sure, okay, I'm not doing anything else this time of year. And you come to and but
what would I be doing? And, you know, the voice on the phone is like, we don't know. And it doesn't
matter. Come to DC, right? And you come to DC and somebody puts you in an office and is like, okay,
your job is to go, here's $5 million. Your job is to go electrify Arkansas. Like, you know,
that's the New Deal experience. That's a fucking startup experience. And you're like 21, right?
And you're like, okay, and you get a fucking done in like nine months, right? And like that is what
created the enormous faith in like the powers of the US government that people had at that time.
It actually the New Deal actually got shit done. And I'm ever driven on route one. Yeah,
deal project. Of course, imagine that happening now. Imagine, you know, right? It is the laugh,
right? You know, and so it's this amazingly effective thing. It's full of the best people
in society. And it's like incredibly dynamic. It gives you incredible levels of like personal
responsibility at incredibly young ages. Now, imagine you graduate from Harvard in 2016 with
a degree in economics, you're like, okay, I'm going to apply for an unpaid internship on the
Hill. Are they by their interns? I don't know. Who knows, right? You know, in any case, you really
should have family that can help you out because you got to spend $1,300 on a room the size of a
shoebox. And then you're on somebody's staff, you're answering letters from Pork Pie, Iowa.
And then, you know, like, do they ever write, you know, even when you after 20 years, you're not
even writing legislation. Certainly the senators, like the, you know, the congressmen never write
any legislation. They barely look at it. They pass these bills. They haven't even read the staff
doesn't even write the legislation. They get they collect, they edit the legislation, they get lines
from like lobbyists and activists, which are the kind of two real sides of Congress. Right.
And you're just like, this is like this insane thing. And like as a young person, there's just
no like joy in it. So as a young person, your mind naturally turns after 75 or 80 years. And by the
way, let me finish it, finish explaining what happens at the top. So FDR is a not a brilliant
manager. He's a brilliant collector of talents. He's like more like Peter Teal than Elon Musk.
And so he basically correct collects his entire talents at the head of these or this organization
and does all these like completely unethical things about World War Two. I always recommend
Nicholson Baker's book, Human Smoke. It's sort of one of the few, it sort of gives you the right
mood of World War Two, which is not a Marvel movie. And that's, you know, as much as I want,
it is not a Marvel movie. Right. You know, and, and, and so FDR in 44
realizes that he's dying. Anyone who's in the know knows he's dying. Remember,
the fucking people out there are so brainwashed by the cathedral of that time,
they don't even know he's paralyzed. Interesting. They don't even know he's right.
They don't even know he's fucking paralyzed. They don't know he's had like a private subway
station in New York. Like, you know, it's like this is a level at which like if you look at the
distance at the level, how easy it is to like contain the truth from the perspective of the media
at that time, it's just like this. Amazing. Right. You know, it's amazing. Right. You know,
it's Orwellian. Like Orwell worked for the BBC. Right. He knew this. Right. You know, and so
Roosevelt in 44, he's dying. He knows he's dying. Everybody's in the know knows he's dying. The
public has informed that he's in the best of health fit as a fiddle. Right. And anyone who looks at
him can see he's dying. And so his previous, you know, Vice President has been Henry Wallace.
Now, one thing to understand about the 30s, which was sometimes called the Red Decade,
is that in the 30s, everyone who was cool was a communist. Yeah. Right. Okay. Just read a book
by Eugene Lyons called The Red Decade. And you'll see that clearly. Communist or a communist
sympathizer. My grandparents were actually communists. Right. This is a non debatable
historical fact. Right. So, you know, but basically, the communists are at this time,
they're showing like one or two percent of the population. If you look at the people who voted
for the same guy, Henry Wallace in 48, when he ran on the progressive party ticket, note that word
progressive. Yeah. That's also what my grandparents called themselves. In fact, they were card
carrying communists. Right. You've heard that word somewhere else progressive. Right. And it's
meaning has never changed. It's just like most people who call themselves progressives don't
even know the history of the word. Right. They're like those people in like New Mexico who still
practice like the Jewish rituals, you know, but don't have any other Jews, you know. And but
that's where, you know, the like even cancellation, that's a that's a communist practice that comes
from an internal like like internal. If you read a book called The Romance of American Communism,
there are all these like cancellation memoirs from like the 50s. Right. From inside the party.
Yes. And so anyway, but FDR realizes that he intends to found a regime. He intends to
found something that is his that will last for many years, certainly into the 2020s
after him. And therefore, America must no longer be a monarchy. What must happen is that basically
all of these bright, amazing people like the best and the brightest, right? You know,
in the 60s, it's still kind of the best and the brightest. You can use that without like
joking like nobody nobody would describe like Susan Rice is the best and the brightest. Right.
You know, and she's not dumb. Right. You know, actually, her son is like a famous
based Stanford person. Yeah. Susan Rice is not dumb. This is public. Right. And Susan Rice is
not dumb. For sure. She's not dumb. She's not dumb, but she's not fucking Dean Atchison. Correct.
John Bolton is also not Dean Atchison. You know, I read fucking John Bolton's book,
and he's like basically he's like I am the second coming of Dean Atchison. Yeah, he's not.
We have the same muscles. He's not. Dean Atchison avoided wars.
Yeah. Well, you know, I can say some things about Dean Atchison. Sure. But I mean,
John Bolton loves you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. In any case,
basically like these are pygmies, right? You know, and and so, you know, what you see is basically
FDR does this fairy on a thing where as a successor and vice president in 1944,
he picks Harry Truman. And who the fuck is Harry Truman? Harry Truman is a nobody.
So what? And like he's a nobody of like very limited intelligence, very limited. He's not
really prominent. He's a member of like the Pendergast boss faction. He's not even a
progressive Democrat. He's not even a new dealer. Right. And so basically, by by picking someone
who's not even a new dealer, which is a master stroke, it was FDR finest stroke,
because he's basically saying, who is going to succeed me? The answer is a nobody. Right. And
it's immediately reminiscent of Alexander the Great when he was dying. I don't know if this
is the story is true. The story I've read, it's a cool story. He's dying and all of his like henchmen,
he's like 30 or something, all of his henchmen are gathered around him. And they're like,
who shall inherit the empire of Alexander? Who shall be the next? You know,
who shall the kingdom go to? Who shall the empire go to? And his last two words are
Tokratos, which means to the strongest. And so, you know, it's almost these people almost like
figured of like, like pull out their fucking swords and like the funeral robes, right? You know,
and so, but FDR is doing something slightly different by saying power should go to nobody.
He ensures that Harry Truman does not have the gravitas or power to actually command the deep
state. That's right. And so, he basically lets the deep state command him and give him little
teleprompter scripts to read. He's not like demented and he doesn't start reading the directions on
the teleprompter, but he basically is like inaugurates the era of the kind of semi figurehead
president president and power has a vacancy. And by the time you get to Eisenhower, Eisenhower
is openly saying, yeah, I don't really know what goes on. I don't really know what goes on.
And since then Nixon does this thing, Nixon does this thing where he's like, no, I will
really be the president and try to regain command of the bureaucracy. This is the way Bolton and
Barr also think. Right. Bolton and Barr also have this thing of like, let's actually try to,
we're the grownups in the room, we will actually make the U.S. government work. No, you won't,
you fucks, you know, and like go like shave your mustache and retire, right? You know, and so,
that basically sort of brings us to the like political structure of today. That's how we got
to the oligarchy we're in today. If you pull back from that story of like where the deep state is
the New Deal. It is the personal regime of FDR without the person of FDR. The New Deal comes
into play. All of the people, the architects of the New Deal become the heads of all these
institutions. All of these institutions are now more powerful than Harry Truman. The Great
Foundations. The Great Foundations. You know, like Carnegie Rockefeller Ford. There's a whole
philanthropic industrial complex. And they all have exactly the same fucking ideas. And these ideas
are like dumber than a post and smell like shit. Does this, does this structure work at all? Does
it work at all? No, no, it has to be completely ripped out. And here is basically the problem
is that it has to be completely ripped out. And the only sort of form of government
that can rip it out is the same form of government that the U.S. goes through every 75 or 80 years.
Which is the monarchy. Which is basically, and so-
Is the worry, because a lot of people that say, that read your work and say it's very interesting,
but they go, the people that really also seem to like it are people that love or seem to flirt
with the idea of theocracy. So, yeah. So, you know, it's funny you should use the word theocracy,
Tim, you know, because have you ever seen signs on people's lawns that tell you what to think?
That's another kind of theocracy. So, in a way, it's like, it's an interesting
point because in a sense, like, you conclude when looking at history that sort of the libertarian
kind of freedom of speech world has never exactly been a thing. And so, your question of how to
sort of do something like that is like, basically, what you have to realize is that most human beings
will sort of always believe what they're taught to think. And therefore, control of what they're
taught to think is sort of always in the hands of someone. And it should be in the hands of someone
responsible who has no need to tell anything but the truth. Who has an incentive to tell the truth.
And that's not the religious right. And it's not the world class.
No, it's no one. It's like, basically, and here's the thing, you know, you get into like this like
culture war like bullshit, like, okay, like, and, and I'm just like, I have less and less
patience. I'm sorry, I have less and less patience for this shit. Yeah, right. You know, and when we
go back to like Roman history, you know, and one of the things we see in, again, pulling the camera
way the fuck back on the history of the Roman Republic. What we see is that for like 400 years,
there's something called the conflict of the orders. And at first, it's patricians versus plebeians.
Later, I'm going to butcher the Latin, it's optimates versus populars. It's basically, you
know, optimates are the aristocracy, the blue state, populars are the red state, you know,
the populace, right? You know, and so even now you can, you can just sort of discern right and
left. And so in the late Roman Republic, basically, this political conflict degenerates into actual
civil war, because these people had like, they had like balls and like normal testosterone levels.
They like, you know, had to like fight each other. And they were like normal human beings.
They also didn't have postmates. They also didn't have postmates, right? Nor Dordache.
All the things also Dordache Uber, right? You know, life was a lot harder. They were a lot
harder. Yeah, you know, we can go into the whole anti technology thing. This is getting a little
long. So maybe in a different episode. Yes. But I hope you're having fun.
Listen, this is fascinating, amazing stuff. All right. Really? All right. All right. I'm gonna,
I'm gonna run out of steam soon. My caffeine is going to wear off. So let me talk and your brain
is probably full, which I mean, it's, it is full, but it's, it's really, this is really interesting
stuff. And again, the, the, I think the, yeah, let me, let me, let me finish, let me finish with
a little bit of Roman political. Okay. And let's, we'll get off of political science and we can
have a little chill area, you know, when we talk about sports or something, you know, and,
you know, because you're probably an Islander's fan. Are you an Islander's fan?
I don't care. Okay. I mean, I, I've left Long Island. That's fine. That's fine. I have Beverly
Hills. I'm Persian now. I'm a Persian. I'm an Arab. The way, the way, if you want to like get,
as I call it, like clear pill, the way to basically get your head out of this culture war
bullshit is to take that attitude toward the Islanders and apply it to the Republicans and
the Democrats. That's right. I agree with you. It was incredibly refreshing. I believe a chunk
of neurons in your head that is the size of a fucking baseball free to think about other things.
That's right. Okay. So, um, um, you know, and, um, and there are many, like, I'm not even saying
don't think about political science. I'm saying take a break. Yeah. From thinking about political
science. Yeah. And, um, you'll have that baseball free. And then maybe that baseball can come back
with like Aristotle and James Burnham and stuff, but just let it rest, let it chill out, let it
become like, like, like soft, like Kobe beef. Yes. Okay. So, you know, um, um, the, um,
because it needs a fucking break after these last few years, you know, and, and in any case,
in Rome, you had, um, you know, the conflict of the orders, you know, in like 80, 90 BC or whatever,
it becomes a civil war and it becomes a civil war between these two tyrants, Marius and Sulla,
who are kind of the Hitler and Stalin of the ancient Roman world. And they're the Hitler and
the Stalin of the ancient Roman world because they sort of, they are monarchs and they rule as
monarchs as effectively kings. But even when they become de facto, and they never claim the title
of king, the Caesar's never did, right? And Rex, which means king is never used, you know, by,
you know, the emperors. Imperator just means commander. In any case, both of these cats, um,
you know, are, um, they're, they're leading a faction in the civil war. And when their faction
wins and dominates all of Rome, they basically govern from one side. So when you're talking
about like the religious right, you know, or the woke left, and you're imagining a,
imagining a dictator who really believes all of these things with like the power of the religious
right and the woke left, the religious right, you know, as Michael Anton calls it, the red
Caesar comes to power, you know, and he's basically like, um, band's birth control and the woke left,
you know, comes to power and basically makes everyone gay. Makes men take birth control. Makes
men take, exactly. Makes men take birth control. Yes. Fucking genius commuter line. Uh, you know,
and, um, makes men take birth control. And you're just like, no, right. And so, you know,
what each of these individuals specifically in do is when they come to power, they do this thing
that's called proscription. That's like prescription, like you're at oral prescription, but with an O.
And what proscription means is that basically you take your prominent enemies, you kill them,
and you give the money to your friends. So imagine if like Donald Trump is like, now we're going to
execute Steve Bannon and like, we're going to give the money, uh, you know, we're going to execute,
sorry, George Soros, and we're going to give the money to like Steve Bannon and his friends. Right.
Right. And then, you know, um, then Barack Obama, you know, after being like chased through the
swamps, the stories of these individuals are incredible. Barack Obama takes power and he's
like, now we're going to take all of Peter Teal's money and we're going to give it to the
underprivileged, you know, and also to George Soros. Right. And also the underprivileged,
but as well like George Soros. Right. You know, and, um, you know, of course, by far, I'm sure,
you know, this by far most billionaires and especially old money is blue. Um, and, and the,
but it's not all of them, not all of it, but most of it. Right. You know, and in the size of like,
you know, progressive philanthropy is compared to the size of conservative philanthropy is like
comparing a Burger King to In-N-Out Burger. Right. Um, and I also think the definition of blue
has changed because if you look at the military industrial complex, some of those people are,
they're identifying as blue, but even that the blue is seeping. Yeah. It's no longer Hillary
Clinton doesn't feel blue. She doesn't feel blue to me. I mean, I know she's blue. Yeah. It depends.
It's no longer the age of general Jack D Ripper. That's right. Right. You know, um, and so in any
case, basically like these civil wars are like a very bloody time. Right. And so, you know, you
have this reaction to these civil wars, like Sula wins in the end. And he's like, I am Sula,
I will restore the Republic, but he can't really restore the Republic because the Republic at a
certain level, you know, it's like Paraguay. Right. Not at this time. Not at this time. Not at this
time. Right. And so, you know, the only question is sort of who's basically going to rule. And I
have two stories about that. One is, um, Caesar and Augustus. The Caesars basically
sort of find this kind of different pattern, which works. They're not red or blue. They're,
this is the most unoriginal metaphor ever. They're purple. And they're purple, not in that they're
centrist, that they want to diffuse power between both of these groups. Oh, no, they're monarchs.
Right. But they're purple monarchs. They're not, there is no red Caesar. Red Caesar is
Marius. Blue Caesar is Sula. Right. But Caesar is purple Caesar, which is also, of course, the
color of, of empire. Right. As well as, you know, traditionally associated with homosexuality and
many of these emperors. Right. And in fact, what's called, I have this other theory that's what's
called the five good emperors. Yeah. Was actually this like sort of little in gay ring that was
going on. So we need a gay monarch to kill people. Right. I'm like, some say we need a red, in fact,
Tim, I'm not, anyway. Um, um, you know, some say we need a red Caesar. Some say we need a blue
Caesar. Yeah. It's possible that following the example of, you know, piacentinine is what we
really need is a gay Caesar. But, um, the, um, but also Hitler was gay, but, um, I don't want to go
down that rabbit hole, but Hillary's gay. But, um, in any case, um, sort of disappoint so many of his
fans. What I know, I know, I actually had this argument on a podcast with like a real white
nationalist podcaster and, you know, like some people were very mad about this gay thing. Uh,
you know, I think it's very, but Libs could be mad about it too. I think it's very clear. Yeah.
You know, um, and, you know, if a major leader is not surrounded by like woman that he's like
banging, right, there's a reason for that. For sure. What is the most obvious reason for that?
What about American recent American president? Never mind. You know, in any case, and I really
don't want to go there, but, um, you know, in any case, um, the, um, so Caesar, here's this anecdote
about Caesar. Caesar is, is, comes from the popularis. Yeah. He starts as a, he starts as a red state
politician. Imagine him as like the Santas, also a military man. Right. Um, and he's basically
like fights in the civil wars. I'm not saying to Santas is as cool as Caesar. That's a ridiculous
comparison. Of course. Um, you know, but, um, the, I mean, Caesar is also a great literary man.
You know, right? He writes the best prose of his age. Um, he fucks. Right. Um, you know,
like, um, a lot of amazing things about Caesar. Um, but, um, the most amazing thing in some ways
about Caesar is what he does when he wins the civil war. Right. So there's this incident
after, I forget the name of the battle, a battle in Africa. There's this incident and the last
senatorial force in office is led by Kato. And Kato is like the Bernie Sanders of his time.
He's like completely authentic. Everybody respects Kato. Everybody knows the Kato spirit
is the spirit of the old republic. But the thing is the old republic, you know, it's like Senator
Palpatine said, the old republic doesn't work anymore. Right. You know, and it just doesn't,
you know, and I'm sorry, but it doesn't. And that will be the subject of my next story.
Um, it just doesn't. And, um, so Caesar, you know, defeats, you know, the last blue state army.
He's sort of the red state army. And then he defeats Kato and Kato does this thing. Bernie
Sanders would never do this. Uh, he commits harakiri. He actually cuts his belly open with a
fucking sword. Wow. Yeah. Right. Incredibly based. Right. So you have to respect Kato.
But, you know, here's the thing in Kato is 10, which sees a captures is a big chest
full of letters from back home. And the thing is knowing about this prescription thing,
knowing about this prescription thing, you're like, imagine you're like a rich guy in Rome.
You're not rich, but imagine you were rich. You're in Rome and you want to like protect
your like villa. Frankly, you got a pretty nice villa. Right. You know, one thing that you might
think of doing is writing a letter to both sides and being like, Hey, you know, my friend Kato,
you know, I love your policies, you know, your faith in the old republic is like, you know,
and then you would be like Caesar, you know, your new ways, you know, right, you know,
and then, you know, the problem is that basically if Kato's tent gets captured, right, there's your
letter, right. Caesar's like, you know, right, you know, I'm not feeling too good about your
right now. Right. And so Caesar's guys, you know, being very practical individuals are like, this
is amazing. What do we do? How do we, you know, do we start with A? Do we start with Z? Like,
what do we do with these guys? And Caesar being an imaginative strategic visionary whose name would be
synonym for the word king for the next 2000 years plus is like, oh, here's what you do.
Take this chest, put it on a bunch of logs of wood, pour olive oil all over it and set it on fire.
These guys are like, what the fuck? And Caesar's like, you don't fucking get it. We fucking won.
Right. For all our people now. Right. And so, you know, sort of Caesar's like genius in saying that
basically he's the monarch of like all the fucking people. Right. Is like, you know,
and here's what happens. And you know, Caesar, you know, if you do this, like,
Caesar could have taken a little more care with his personal security.
Okay. So if you're right there listening, you know, you're probably the next American
Caesar, like, you know, don't mess with that stuff. All of my audiences, little Caesars.
All, you know, they're all literally eating little, they're eating it right now. You know,
so if you're going to do this, like, you know, you know, just like be sensible, you know,
um, um, you know, but Caesar was amazing. But his nephew, Octavian, who becomes Augustus, the next
Caesar, also amazing, basically follows Caesar's position. The whole conflict of the orders,
red state versus blue state, never heard from again. It disappears. Imagine an America
in which the red versus blue, like distinction doesn't matter. Neither side. You know, most
people, when they vote in elections today, they have a single reason for why they want to vote.
It's like fucking Persians versus Italians. The Persians vote because they want to defend
themselves against the Italians. The Italians vote because basically they're like, these Persian
motherfuckers are going to do to us with what we did to Valerian. Beyond that, nobody's like,
it's not Norman Rockwell, it's like, oh, we need to guide here. My ideas have been nuclear policy
that like, fuck that. That's all gone. It's just self-defense out there. And so if you can get to
a point where the self-defense is no longer needed, you should really be comfortable saying,
I'm not going to engage in this ridiculous spectacle again. That is the way the Romans
felled after a few years of the early Roman Empire. The last Roman Empire that actually
tried to hold elections in the street, where people could vote Caligula, and it was a fucking joke.
And everybody knew it was a joke, and nobody tried it again thereafter. And so, you know,
basically, you know, that's sort of the way that politics ends. The way that politics ends is
basically people are like, this is just a system. The system of the conflict of the orders created
Caesar. Caesar couldn't come out any other way than through the Civil War. The next Caesar will
somehow come out of the next president who's an FDR, who's a Kennedy, will somehow come out of an
American election. That's the only way you get to be president. Right, right. And they will just be
like, you know what, I just got elected president. It says in the Constitution, I just read it. I
read it on the bathroom. I read it a couple of times. I don't know if it was really long, difficult
shits. So I read it over again. It says that the president is a chief executive of the executive
branch. To my mind, that's pretty clear. It says the Supreme Court can write opinions and
Congress can pass laws. And it is the president's, you know, understanding that he's here to execute
the supreme law of the land. I as president, but I as president will treat the opinions and the
laws passed by Congress with as much respect as they deserve. There's a great deal of expertise
there. I'll listen with great interest. I'm now sending the Secret Service to the Fed. They're
taking over the Fed. We're going to fund an entirely new government directly from the Fed.
And the power of the purse, which is... And is that constitutional? Yes, it's completely constitutional.
In fact, you would describe this new monarchical presidency as a constitutional presidency. It's
actually a restoration of the real constitution to put the chief executive in charge of the
executive branch. But then all the guys at Bohemian Grove kill you. Or try, unless you have
someone on your side. Okay, okay. Let's go into that. Yeah. Let's go into that. First of all,
it's not the guys in Bohemian Grove. Maybe not. It's more the guys at the New York Times. Yeah.
It's the guys at Harvard. It's the guy at the Bohemian Grove. Yeah. Those are like old, rich
people who don't matter. They're not... They got there maybe by mattering at a certain level,
but they're not the nexus. Yeah, yeah, yeah. They're not the nexus. We're not even... It's just
Georgetown. If you go back to Kennedy, Kennedy wanted to govern like a monarch, right? Yeah.
Kennedy, and he kind of did to some extent. He did to the extent. But it's like the successors
of like the Georgetown world. Right. But so Kennedy, they take Kennedy out. In any case,
yeah, sure. Nixon's removes. I don't fucking know what happens with Kennedy. Okay, let's just guess.
Like, I am a Kennedy agnostic. Let's just guess he's taken out.
I am a Kennedy agnostic. In any case, we have this deep state. So basically,
you have a new president who comes in. Yeah. This is the... Now, we got out of the past.
We spent a while talking about the past. Yeah. Actually, let me talk a little bit more about
the past. Okay. Most people don't know the name of Pompey, P-O-M-P-E-Y. Pompey was called Pompey the
Great. He was kind of a proto-ceaser in some ways. The reason they called him Pompey the Great is
that he solved the big problem that Rome had, which was a problem with pirates. Right. Rome,
in basically his day, it was like Mexico with fucking drug lords. You had these like pirate
organizations, pirate armies, pirate kingdoms, whatever. And Rome gets all of its like food from,
you know, it's starting to get more and more at least at the time of its food from North Africa.
It's got to get there over the sea. Right. Pirates can just rob that shit. Yeah. And they do. And
it's becoming a problem. And the way that the Republic deals with pirates is just not fucking
working. It's like the way that like Mexico deals with drug lords. Whatever they're doing,
it's not working. Right. You know. And so, but Rome basically has two forms of like governance.
It has the civilian Republican way of doing things, which is basically like a lot of people
with names like Biggest Dick has written letters to each other. And it has the military way of
doing things. Right. And the military way of doing things has like been like testing its
ass against the Gauls, you know, for the last like 50 years. Right. And it's just like ruthlessly
completely effective. It basically is like comparing Tesla to the Department of Energy.
Right. Or, you know, maybe SpaceX to the United Launch Alliance, which is a good comparison because
like the United Launch Alliance is like private companies too. But they're not run like a startup
where SpaceX is. And SpaceX is just like we can do amazing shit for like one 20th of the money.
Right. You know, 20 times faster. And so, the same thing happens. And, you know, one of the
creaky fun examples of this is remember the Obama healthcare sign up site, where they were like,
they tried to do it the DC way and they spent $500 million or something and like nothing worked.
And then they've got a bunch of people go in, come in and do it the Silicon Valley way. And
they like finish it in a month in like, you know, for like, you know, 75 cents. Right. You know,
it wasn't that they all these people are progressives. Right. And there's no fucking Republicans on this
team, but they're operating the Silicon Valley way. And the Silicon Valley way is a monarchy.
All startups are monarchies. All companies are monarchies. You know, if you drive a car, it was
built by a monarchy. If you watch a movie, it was directed as a monarchy. If you go to a restaurant,
the chef is a monarch. Right. Monarchs are everywhere once you see them. Monarchies are
everywhere once you see them because all effective organizations operate as a monarchy. And this was
also true of the Roman military structure. And so, what they do is they basically take this guy
Pompey. And at the time, Rome was such a healthy place that to be a politician, you had to go and
serve in the army. So Pompey has political ambitions. But he's also a military guy. And
this is like the destruction of Rome in the late Imperial days, the separation between bureaucrats
and military guys. And in other words, the State Department versus DUD. And Pompey, basically,
they take this guy Pompey. I'm not really sure why they chose him. I'm not an expert,
like a generalist. And I don't know why they chose him. The Senate is like, okay,
we're going to do this the military way. We're going to say Pompey, you have absolute command,
you have like CEO level control of the whole fucking Mediterranean. Anything that involves the sea,
you can do get rid of the fucking pirates. And Pompey is like, okay. And without any computers,
without any internet, without any telephones, without any typewriters, without any guns,
without any of this shit, in three months, he builds a fucking fleet and basically clears
the Mediterranean of pirates. And motherfuckers in Rome are just like, fuck. Because what they've
seen is that a completely different way of running a railroad where it's way the fuck
better than the one that they're all used to, that they're all invested in. That's like all
basically the normal way of doing. So it's really about the person, right? It's about the person
and the organization structure. When he when he looks at the when he when he says, let's burn
the letters, they're all our people. Let's retire. He has to make the right call. These are how to
choice to be another Marius. He basically was like, no, I'm going to be purple. Because I'm
going to basically govern, you know, you said before a monarchy was some form of accountability.
Yeah, right. And that that vague, that was that was something that the Romans never developed.
And most systems never. So the accountable monarchy is something that genuinely hasn't been done
before. And is that your is that your idea or is your idea the monarchy monarchy or the accountable
monarchy? My idea is like anything but what we have now. It's like, first of all, you have to
establish, go back to the basic thing. oligarchy is fucked. Politics is fucked, which means
democracy is fucked. Right. You cannot basically if you like draw a quadrant of like people who
believe America is democracy, people who believe it should be a democracy, right? I'm in the corner
of it's not and it should Hitler would be worse than what we have Hitler would be worse. Right.
Right. Right. The thing is, you know, the trains would probably, you know, work a little better.
But other things would be worse. Hitler is like Marius. Right. Hitler is like Marius.
He's basically governing from one side. And so Hitler is the enemy of the German intelligentsia,
which happens to include the German, German Jews. Right. And then because he's a, you know,
he's a fucking idiot. He's like the Jews. And it would be hard to have a Trump who's very vain and
petty and vindictive because Trump would have been like, give me the letters. Yeah. Trump would
have been like, give me the letters. Trump's not like, let's burn the letters. Trump is like,
give me the letters. You know, Trump doesn't even get the point of give me the letters.
Trump doesn't even win the war. You know, your point is so correct about there is efficiency
to a centralized thing, but the person is the wild card. Yeah. So the person, so basically
there are two, there are two risks in basically, there's just like no alternatives.
Is Britain still a monarchy now? No, no, no. Like compare Elizabeth the first to Elizabeth the
second. You can't. Right. You know, and Elizabeth the first is a real monarch. Elizabeth the second
is like a Kardashian with a crown. Right. So, you know, you basically, if you basically are like,
okay, how do you get the next American monarch? First of all, like the only way that isn't totally
fucking scary is like electing a constitutional president and having this president basically
rebuild the executive branch from scratch. Right. There was some recent writing about this plan
that some like Trump associates have of like, maybe if we can like fire bureaucrats,
it'll never work. And I'll tell you why both of them. By the way, my parents and my stepfather
all worked in like the deep state for a total of like 80 years. Right. The reason why is that
if you're used to operating in the private sector, you're used to an org chart which runs from the
top down. So it's like in like, you know, like the platonic ideal of a big company that's run
from the top down would be any company run by Elon Musk. And like, you know, it doesn't matter
what the engine engineers fuel the engine engineers, it's like SpaceX think that like, you know,
the rocket should use, they could think it should use hydrazine, Elon thinks it should use methane,
Elon, Elon wins. Right. It's a real fucking monarchy. It operates from the top down.
When something becomes a bureaucracy, and by the way, government organizations can operate
this way, the Manhattan Project ran the same fucking way as SpaceX. Right. Right. Government
organization United Launch Alliance works the same way as the Department of Energy,
private company. Right. You know, and so when you're a bureaucracy, everyone's job is a process.
When you go to work as like the most junior employee of the State Department, your job
is not to get something done. Your job is to go through a process. You have a boss. The reason
you have a boss is not that your boss has like a higher level mission to accomplish. Oh no. Your
boss is basically who you kick exceptions up to. If the process doesn't handle something, it has
what we call in computer science an exception, your boss has a decision to make. If it doesn't fit
inside his process, which is broader, he kicks it up. Eventually, it will land on the desk of the
president. Right. Who is making decisions all day long. But if you replace the White House with
a magic eight ball, like no American would notice the difference. Right. Right. It's just like, you
know, it's rebuilding an executive branch. Right. So what FDR did to solve this problem, FDR was
already, you know, the executive branch at his time was much, much smaller and much, much more
elite and much, much more somewhat top down. He went around it. He created all these alphabet
soup agencies. He created new agencies and it took him a lot of time to take over like the
army and the State Department. He had four terms. Yeah. Right. Right. You know, well,
three in a little bit. Three in a little bit. And, but he was going to rule for life. Right.
You know, that's another thing that you see with him longs. The only one who actually retires is
Washington. And, you know, the, I think Lincoln would have been forever. Who the fuck? Perhaps.
And there was certainly no law barring him, you know, and people passed that law after that
amendment, 25th or whatever after FDR kicks it. Right. And so basically the idea that like,
oh, what's wrong with this organization is that it doesn't listen to the president
is sort of true enough, but it doesn't capture the sort of real need to like completely restructure
these organizations. If you look at, for example, state, the State Department's 30,000 employees
is some of the most elite people in the world. It's hard to get those jobs. You have to pass.
It's one of the last, you know, one of the great reforms that created the deep state was like
competitive examinations for like government offices. Right. That created the meritocracy.
Carter did away with most of them in 1980. And the rest are sort of being done away with now.
When people hear this and say, when you say run like Tesla company, it sounds, what is the
difference between your ideal version of a monarchy and a fascist state? The ideal, the
difference between the ideal version of the monarchy and the fascist state is two things.
One is that fascism is again like Marius and Sola. Fascism basically is sort of an imperfect
monarchy and that it's sort of the victory of kind of one faction in a civil war. The fascists
who sort of came to power, whether they're in Italy, Spain, Germany or whatever, are sort of
always coming to power against the like Marius's of their day. They're always, you know, they're
very late and they're fighting against like very late Bolshevism that does like, and sort of neither
of those things exist today, which is sort of very, very good. Like people like compare all the
restrict violence in 2016 and also in like, you know, 1932, I'm like, in 1932, like five people
a day are getting stabbed to death in Berlin, right? You know, and like the Communists are giving
as good as they get, right? You know, it's just crazy. And so you have all of this at that
era, you have all of this kind of locked up potential for violence in the society because
full of people have gone through World War one, right? You know, these people just like kill you
as soon as they look at you after you've been in the trenches for like a fucking week, you have no
respect for life. Is there a country where you see an example of this? A better example. So a
better, you know, Singapore is a good example of like, you know, Singapore is a multi ethnic
country, right? It has, it doesn't have Persons and I Italians, but it has Asian, it has Indians
and Chinese. And, you know, basically, actually, Lee Kuan Yew comes to power, you know, the Caesar
of Singapore comes to power in very similar ways, original Caesar, the ruling party of
Singapore is still called the People's Action Party. It was like this like violent anti-colonialist
basically quasi-communist party. And basically, it puts forth this guy, Lee Kuan Yew, who becomes
like establishes like William Gibson famously called Singapore Disneyland with a death penalty.
Right. You know, I like the Disneyland part. You know, there are definitely ways in which
Singapore could be like more fun, but you can certainly walk around in any part of Singapore
at any time of day or night. Try that in LA, you know, and don't actually, but the kids out there
don't try this at home. Don't try San Francisco. Don't try it in San Francisco either.
You know, you might be able to get away with it in Kuan Yew, right? You know, and in any case,
got to do this callback. Do you think that, so can I let me finish answering your question for
a second? So that sense of basically like I'm courage, sort of all the libs and even the cons
out there, like, you know, conservatives kind of love FDR, right? You know, conservatives love
the Kennedys, right? Don't think in terms of Hitler. Think about FDR and the Kennedys.
Right. That's your sort of first point. Like basically, and, and, and, you know, if you have to
choose, honestly, if you have to choose between a dictator who's on the side of the aristocracy
and a dictator who's on the side of the middle classes, it's a really fucking hard choice,
but I as a born aristocrat, I'm going to choose the blue Caesar just because, you know,
when a populist movement becomes anti-aristocratic, people are really right to notice that like
Trump's voter base is the same as Hitler's voter base, right? You know, they're really correct
to notice that the way that I like it. We've we've oscillated. Yeah, I'm just making so many
different people mad. I'm losing the red people. No, I love it. I'm sorry. It's just a fact. It's
just a fact, right? It doesn't mean that Trump is Hitler, right? You know, Hitler would fucking
laugh at Trump, right? You know, right? And, and the, um, um, you know, um, are you all in for
DeSantis then because he's Yale? You know, I can't. Florida's fun. He's so, you know, and that's
problems. The thing that's nice about the thing that I really love about Trump,
is that he breaks the frame. I don't sort of feel DeSantis like breaking the frame.
DeSantis has no interest in breaking the frame. Yeah. And I, and I can't get hot on for him.
You know, I mean, you know, and, and so that's the sort of the, the genius and a lot of the guys
that you advise their campaigns or unofficially, because I don't know what you, but I'm not,
I have no role. Look, I'm not a player. Right. Okay. So, so, so people listen to you.
Sometimes, sometimes, you know, um, you know, the, um, um, but really mostly just because I'm
funny, you know, and what do you think the guy like Peter Thiel is interested in politics is?
Do you think he's a, is it from a business perspective? No, no, absolutely not. Absolutely
not. From a social perspective. Absolutely not. Absolutely not. Um, you know, and, and this is
true of almost like there's no one who wants everyone's interest, whether you're George Soros
or Peter Thiel is not from a mercenary perspective. Like, you know, once you have billions of dollars,
like another billion or two, who cares? Doesn't fucking matter. Like, you know, the only thing
that you can buy with your money at that level is power. And the only thing that you're interested
in using power for is to make a world that you believe in. Well, all of these people are completely
fucking sincere. You know, and, um, and it really, that's the scary thing. That's the scary thing.
Right. You know, and basically they're all completely fucking sincere. You know, and, and so,
you know, when you get to basically sort of constructing your kind of new monarchy, the
first question you've got three questions. Number one is this person capable, you know,
which unfortunately in the case of Trump as a no, again, he's just, he's not, he's underpromoted.
It's like the opposite of like Parkinson's law or the Peter principle. Like he needs to,
he needs to realize that he's a great American. Donald, if you're right here listening, you're,
you're a great American. You should, you should run in 2024. You should win. You should become
the chairman of the board and you should hire a chief of staff. You should be like George Washington.
Right. You should hire a chief of staff who's like Alexander Hamilton and basically do a lot of
photo ops, play a lot of golf, say a lot of funny things on TV and on Twitter. Um, you know, obviously
they'll give it back to you. Right. And, um, that's what you should do. You should be you.
Don't try to be something else. Don't try to be Alexander Hamilton.
Don't assume that you're fucking son in law as Alexander fucking Hamilton. Get Elon Musk.
You know, you really think Elon Musk would be this guy? He might like, he could, you know,
you don't have to be an American, you know, okay, he's an African American, you know,
but the thing is that like, you don't, you don't, my worry about him is he seems,
he loves the limelight. He's a little bit. Yeah. He loves a little much. He's kind of fond of the
ladies. He loves the limelight a little much. Yeah. You know, basically, okay, get Elon Musk,
but 20 years younger, you know, get the guy who's going to be Elon Musk that nobody's heard of.
Easy to find. You could probably ask Elon Musk and he tell you what I was doing shows.
Final question. When I was doing shows in Palo Alto, I was in San Jose and I'm walking around
Palo Alto. If I'm walking around with you, is it like, you could throw a stone and hit a fucking
person who could do this fucking job. Yeah. I could buy, you know, I couldn't give you a list
of a hundred people. I could email you like 10 people and get a list of a hundred people who
could do this. But how, how, when you were in those, in those, in the old world, your old tech
world, is it a friendly reception? Is it like, is it like a mystique? Is it like, that's
crazy. How, how, you know, honestly, one of the things that I try to do as a writer that I recommend
to anyone who's in the entertainment industry is to basically not consume any content that's about
myself. Right. So I actually have, I actually have, there was this like Vanity Fair article on the
new right. I haven't read it. Jeff Bezos like tweeted it. I haven't read it. Right. You know,
and I'm not going to read it. Sorry, James. You know, and, and like the, like, you know, yeah,
like, so actually, I kind of don't know and I kind of don't care. You know, the reason I started
blogging back in 2007 was like, this is what I believe. I don't care what other people believe.
This is what I believe to be true. I probably made some mistakes. I think, you know, I'm famous for
being a little too like COVID crackdown happy. I'm convinced that this is because I was betting on
COVID. And, you know, so I've made my errors, you know, over time, that's one of them. But yeah,
the, the, like the approach of just saying what I believe is just one that I recommend to everyone.
But like before even, even like before you like read my shit, like, you know, just like
do that thing I talked about with the Islanders. Yeah. Like basically stop being a sports fan.
Right. Like it's like sports fan politics. Yes. Just like it's pornography. That's right. It's
fucking the pornography of power. If you want real, you know, if you want real sex, give up porn.
That's right. Starts by giving up porn. Yes. Completely serious about this.
And if you want real power, power that matters, power that like, you know, makes this country
like what it should be for like fucking red state and, you know, blue state and black and white and
green and purple and all fucking people in this country, including even the fucking zombies down
on Skid Row. If you want to basically make this the country that this should be for everyone,
just like turn off your fucking politics, turn off the culture war and basically just start
thinking about how the fucking government should work. I got two words for you before we get out
of here and you don't even have to respond. But in my head, after everything you've just said,
I got to be honest with you. I think we could do a lot worse.
Kaitlyn Jenner.