Kind: captions Language: en Trump announces a new trade deal with the UK. Besson dodges congressional attacks on his way to meet China in Switzerland. India retaliates against Pakistan with Operation Synindor. Culture continues its horrifying anti-Semitic slide as Yay drops his latest song. And the day Portoi Mo fiasco continues to unfold. And the US gets a fresh chance at establishing AI dominance as they rewrite regulations around chip exports. All right, first up in the economy, the deal with the UK is potentially something pretty big. The UK is the sixth largest economy in the world and our fourth largest export partner. And the new market access that this trade deal would offer uh takes us up by $5 billion in US potential exports. We'll see how much of that we actually capture. $6 billion are to be generated in tariff revenue from the UK on their imports. And UK tariffs were at 5.1%, they are now at 1.8%, so opening things up more to US trade. And US tariffs were at 3.4% and are now at 10%. So Trump feeling like he got a big win there. Started at 10%, ended at 10% in terms of post liberation day. Uh Lutnik gave a ton of praise to Trump for being a dealmaker who actually gets things done. Though if I'm really honest, the way that everybody talks to Trump gives me the heebie-jebies. Uh it is always this sense of oh we never would have gotten anything done if it weren't for Trump. And I cannot figure out if this is just how people talk to presidents. I don't think so. Uh or if this is a you learn how to uh deal with Trump. No matter what it is, I am not the biggest fan. I think the the awesome thing about this is the saving face. I remember you said a bunch that when it comes to trade deals, half the time politicians are going to politic. So Kier Starman went live in front of the whole labor force in the UK and had a whole gang of people behind him like, "Yes, this is good. we're bringing steel back to the UK. This is not going to uh impact us. Howard Lucknit was talking to the um reporters saying, "We started at 10%, we ended at 10%." So, it seemed like each side had something they could go back to their constituents and say, "See, I'll fall for you and I won." Like, so it seemed like it was a net positive. It is certainly important like from an entrepreneurial standpoint, if you're negotiating something, you very much want to put yourself in the other person's shoes and go, who are they going to have to explain this to? They're going to have to go home to their wife and sound like a hero. So, what are the things you're going to give them that allow them to have a story that's very compelling to their people? We'll see if Trump can pull that off. It was very fascinating to watch him with Canada and Mark Carney and how different he was uh when he was saying that Canada is a 51st state and just like constantly trolling those guys. And then when Mark Carney was actually in the Oval Office, he was very diplomatic. He was very presidential. Um, and I thought that that was very that was wise. I hated the way that he was talking to Canada. And I think he's pretty credibly the reason that um the Liberal Party ended up winning again was just he was making the people of Canada feel like they had no story that they could go back to their proverbial wife and be like, "Yo, we're the cool kids." He was constantly making out like they were, you know, our little brother and that they didn't have their own identity. It was just really, in my opinion, ridiculous. So seeing the way that he's navigated the deal with the UK where each of them get to say hey like we're in a great place this feels good. And honestly, in the meeting there was in the Oval Office, you didn't have Kira Star Dharma, but in the Oval Office, you had one of his um I presume one of their secretaries or to be honest, I don't know what they're called in UK parliament, but um somebody who was on the negotiating team for the UK side and he was ausive in his praise and it didn't feel like when Lutnik does it, it doesn't feel genuine. It feels like somebody who's trying to position Trump and trying to make Trump look good. Yeah. like to do the thing he knows. Like I very much doubt Trump ever says, "Make sure you give me credit, but people are obviously getting the cues that this is the way that you stay on his good side." And so so many of them do it. But anyway, it didn't feel like that's what the guy from the UK was doing. It really felt like he thought, "Hey, we got a good deal out of this and this is historic." So there's things that clearly the UK cared about that Trump was able to give them such that they would be able to if he's acting it was very convincing that they would be able to portray this as no we actually feel really good about this. So even if there are is now a 10% um tariff literally barrier that we've put on the UK, they've gotten something that they feel good about that they can go message back home. And that is a good sign. I don't know that it's as big of a deal as Trump is going to want you to believe this is. If you step back from this and try to get outside of the spin, get outside of the politics of it all, you remember the only game that matters is China. Yeah, that's it. Everything that's happening right now is about China. I want to get to China for a second, but really quick, just outlining the trade deal. We have it pulled up on the screen. It seems like this is a win with the we're bringing tar our tar UK's tariff against us is coming down. Our tariffs against them actually went up. So to me, I know China is the big game and that's a big fish in town, but UK is our fourth biggest trade partner. This does seem like a layup on the way to winning the game. Like this is what this is a step in the positive direction. I know there's going to be a bunch of spin about how this trade deal isn't that good or we're missing something else, but from a net positive, do you think that this was personally worth the chaos that was caused on there or we still have to see if this is all you got out of it? No, this would absolutely not be worth the chaos. That if this is the only basket they make, then this whole thing was madness and this guy is a mad man and he knows nothing about what he's doing and oh dear Jesus, get him out. Like, but uh it is way too early to assume that. Now, I'm admittedly, thank you. I'm being a little cynical in immediately going to well, but like this isn't the big one that we're waiting for and really what we want to focus on is Europe. So, thank you. Yes, this is a great brick on the path to success. Thousand we need to leave. The UK is an important partner. Um, Besson has been very articulate. We have 18 key partners. China obviously we're going to set to the side for now. That leaves 17 people. The 17 of them have come and said, "Here are these great deals. According to Bessant, they're good deals." And so Bessant feels like he's got a lot to work with with the 17 remaining important partners that we have. And hey, we got a deal that the UK seems happy with. We're happy with, like you said, on paper. Hey, like this is reasonable. This is a good deal. Even if it's not like something to do a backflip over, this certainly is not going to change Americans lives in any way, shape, or form. And if you traded everything that we just did with China just for this, that'd be a terrible position. But hey, one at a time. This is one of the 17. Cool. It's positive. And if all the rest are equally positive, now you're starting to move in the right direction, but largely for a different reason than just the math. And that reason to me is you have to isolate China. The game that you're playing right now is who's going to be able to get everybody on their team. And this is that Jerry Magcguire moment. And if when Jerry Magcguire stands up and says, "I'm out of here. Who's coming with me?" Everybody gets up and walks out with him. That's gangster. Movie over. like he did it. He got everybody on his team. But if on the other hand, all we get is Bridget Jones who follows him out the door uh the UK literally um and everybody else groups up with China, we'd be in a very very dark position. So, okay. So, with Scott Bessent headed to Switzerland um allegedly to talk to China this weekend, do you think that this is something that they're kind of putting in their back pocket to help shape the negotiations a little bit? like is this at least giving them is the wind behind our back or do you think it's closer behind China's back? I think both of them are going to say that they have the win behind their back but just like everybody thinks God is on their side and God can't be on everybody's side. Uh somebody is going to win and somebody's going to lose. There's my estimation I'll plant the flag and if I end up being wrong, great. I'll update my thinking. But the way that I see this now is there's no way any kind of meaningful announcement comes out of the meeting in Switzerland. the meeting in Switzerland is going to be something like hey we should talk and that's better that is a big step in the right direction given before it was you can have any kind of war that you want uh you guys have to bow before us both sides saying no the other side has to bow the other side has to bow so that was not going anywhere fast so definitely encouraging that hey oh we're both going to be in Switzerland I was in the neighborhood bro uh that at least they're getting together they're having a conversation that will be positive But both of them are going to go, I want to see how many people I can get on my side, and it's too early. So, um, certainly as an outsider, I have no sense of where's Europe going to fall in all of this, where's Japan going to fall in this, where's South Korea going to fall in all of this. If we can start plucking off like the two that I'm really watching are Europe as a block, just because they're so massive, like the EU itself. Exactly. And historically, we've had such a strong tie with Europe. Um, that would be a big win. also your and I's favorite uh Chinese government account, MFA_China. Uh they are clearly sending love letters to the EU over and over and over via X. Um so they're obviously courting Europard, so it's going to be a real litmus test of which way they bounce. Do they move as a block? Do they break up individually? Do we get some? They get some. Um, so I have a feeling the US and China are both going to say I need to see who falls in my side before I'm willing to agree to anything. Um, I think China has a lot of money they can print before they're in the same boat that we're in. So I have a feeling they can absorb. Where does that come from? Like they have a higher GDP to debt ratio. Like where do you Yeah, exactly. So they're um they just haven't in recent years they haven't had to print as much money as we have. So now we can export our um money printing, our inflation to the world in a way that they can't. Um but I while I haven't done a super deep dive on that at the headline level, it it really does feel like they still have more dry powder than we have. If we will do prints, there's no doubt about that. But um if we had to do like COVID style printing right now, I think it'd get pretty dicey very very fast. Uh and I have a feeling admittedly it is a feeling gut feeling uh at the headline level that they have that kind of dry powder that they just have more dollars that or not dollars but yuan that they can print. So and they do have that like trump card, the uno draw for card that they could just press the communist button if they really want to and just like okay now we're all doing this and this is the new policy and that's it. Yeah. Sorry you're losing your business. You're going hungry. Uh tanks are rolling out in your neighborhood cuz we don't like how much you're protesting. I mean, let us not forget Tianaan Square where it was like, "Okay, we've had enough protesting and we literally are shooting you in the face." So, um, yeah, they they are willing to play cards that we are not willing to play. Now, I don't think Xihinping is like would ever do that casually. Like, it really has to get dramatic. Um, but I believe he would do that long before he would just give up control. So, uh, we'll see. It'll all play out. I don't I don't have any credible reason to believe that China is anywhere near that. You're going to start hearing a lot of noises about no, their economy is a lot weaker than they want it to be. I don't know, man. Again, I'm being spun to high heaven at all times. Uh so I I tend to think that this will be a period of pain for both the US and China. I don't think it's a slam dunk on either side. The US is obviously gonna try to get you to believe this slam dunk on the US. And Besson says what and and I believe that this is true. I just think he's not giving the full picture which is that whenever you have this kind of trade war, whoever exports less will be hurt less by an embargo. So, and that's true and China exports roughly four times more to us than we do to them. So, it's going to be more painful for them. Uh but like you said, some of this gets balanced out by the fact that they can just say um no companies, you are going to keep paying your employees a minimum amount. Uh employees, you are not going to get new work somewhere else. You're just not going to do it. Things that we can't do on our side. So they have different shock absorbers than we have. We have some as well. Um so there is going to be a resolution, but I don't think it's a slam dunk in either direction. What's the best case scenario with this trade war? Oo. Uh, best case scenario from an American standpoint is that you get China to stop being a currency manipulator because basically the US position is really pretty simple. Uh, China has been able to artificially create an environment where they win and everybody else loses. Now, because we get cheap things from them, we think, what do you mean we're win-winwinning? Let me explain why. Uh, that's not true. So, China is able to through communist tactics suppress the wages to their workers so they keep costs artificially low because they're willing to do things like um on the Foxcon building they just put up nets so people can't commit suicide. Imagine that. Like imagine that in the US like no way. It's just not going to happen. People are just not going to work. But when you're forced um then it's like well the only thing you can do is literally make it impossible for people to kill themselves. Once you have to start doing that like if impact theory had to put up nets to keep people from killing themselves we are doing something very wrong. Uh so you would put them in a position where they can no longer manipulate their currency. They can no longer um artificially suppress wages. They can no longer use the IMF and the World Bank to get a most favored nation's treatment as if they were a developing nation and not arguably the biggest economy in the world. I get that that's a controversial statement. If you're in China, that's self-evident. If you're in America, it's like, hey, wait a second. It's not true. And that spin they're up here. Yeah. Whether we're exactly the same, whether they're a little ahead, a little behind becomes pretty irrelevant pretty fast. We're in the same batting. Exactly. We're we're in the same league. So, um, you would eliminate all of those artificial advantages that they have created for themselves and you would stop them from dumping because they've built up so much capacity. They can output goods so cheaply. it becomes absolutely impossible for anybody who's focused on low prices, which of course everybody in the world is, uh, from ever being able to get an industry going inside of their own country because your own countrymen, Americans are going to look at you sideways and be like, why would I buy a flat screen made in America when it's more expensive? That doesn't make any sense. Like, I want the cheap one. And so, given that, uh, especially in the West, we say we want people to pursue that free market. So, um, I'm not going to say that Trump is trying to create something fair because I think Trump is is using chaos, is using the 800 lb gorilla status to get what's good for America. So, let me not overstate what's happening here. Um, but clearly from where I'm sitting, China is doing things to advantage themselves that all of us would go, "That's pretty icky." And if we were doing it, the world would be very pissed off. So eliminating all of those uh tariffs, eliminating the non-tariff trade barriers, doing all of that. So now we can actually compete and if we can't make better things, then fine, forget it. Like we couldn't make it as well as them and we deserve to lose quite frankly. Uh but if we can be on a playing field where we can now actually compete, that's important. now where I literally don't care if we artificially uh move things in our direction so that now we're doing the very things I'm saying they should stop doing. There are certain key um elements of manufacturing that we have to have in the US. Uh we can't lose the AI war. So anything tied to that, China can't be in a position to choke you out. And by the way, I completely understand why China would say we can't be in a position where America can choke us out. And we have been depriving them of AI oxygen for a very long time. So I get why they would want to fight back against that. But we've got to get out from under that drones. Dude, modern warfare is chips and drones. And right now drones, the entire supply chain is controlled by China. So even if you're designing it here, your supply chain is almost certainly going through uh China, the um refining of rare earth minerals, which again your whole modern way of life is tied to that. So we can get the minerals now conceivably from the deal that we just struck with Ukraine, but we can't refine them. 95% of that still happening in China. So there are things like that, pharmaceuticals, there are things that if we do not wean oursel off of dependence from China, they can choke you out. We are sorry it just is true. We are in some stage of Thusidity's trap with China right now where we are headed toward we're in economic warfare and escalation to kinetic warfare is very much on the table and if the way to guarantee that it continues to escalate is to not prepare yourself for it because you look like the weakened enemy that's easy to take out. So you've got to build up your might on that side. So says me, I get I'm very grateful that there are other people that think through this problem and come to a different conclusion and will push their ideas as hard as I push mine. Longtime listeners will know that I'm very consistent on that. I want to be convincing without necessarily convincing everybody. You you need tension between ideas. Um but that is the rough ballpark of what perfection would look like from our side. And then how do we navigate this moment? cuz this is like you said one of 18 potential trade deals that we need to make. We're going to hear this was a slam dunk. Next week we're going to hear this is the worst deal ever. Tomorrow somebody's going to give you a thousand reasons why this UK deal is bad for America. When will the dust actually clear and when will we be can decide okay this was a net positive or a net negative for us? So, think of this like a boxing match. And in the boxing match, you have a bunch of rounds. And at some point, some rounds are too close to call. You're not sure who did that go to. But you can reach a point where it's like there are so many rounds I know you lost or I know you won that barring a knockout, the outcome of this fight is guaranteed. So, he's got until about 6 months before midterms to clock those rounds and to either get ahead or to know, uhoh, I've lost so many of these. The only way that I can win now is with a knockout. So, for instance, if he's doing all this and the 17 it's like, okay, yeah, like there's no clear winner from like did Europe side more with us or more with them and we're all looking at the data and we're like, I'm not sure, man. Some of this stuff seems a little bit confusing. So, it's pushed out into the future. Like, they did a PR release where they're trying to make this sound good, but I'm looking at it, I'm like, this is not obviously good. So, the odds of us ending up somewhere in that gray area, I think are pretty high. And so, coming into that period where people are going to start campaigning in earnest for the midterms, he's going to need something either very clear like 14 of the 17 people like sided with us and the deals are obviously good. We're already starting to yield benefits. We're exporting more. We've already clocked millions of dollars in tariffs. Uh we've already clocked millions bill, excuse me, billions in tariffs, billions more in exports. Cool. We can see the wins. It's on the scoreboard. Otherwise, your deal with China has to be dope. And if your deal with China is not awesome and it's not done by the time people start campaigning for midterms, he's he's just lost too many rounds to pull it off. And so, um, it'll be nearly impossible to call until that period because presumably he'll always have China in his back pocket. As in, we could still get it across the finish line. So, it's like when you watch the fighter go into that last round and the guy in his corner is like, "You have lost too many rounds. If you do not submit or knock them out, I'm now in MMA. If you don't submit or knock them out, you're going to lose." Um, and then we see what he does. So ultimately the the whole game is China. China is the submission or the knockout. He could literally lose all 17 and get China right and still win. Um I hope it doesn't come to that and I hope that this is good all along the way and this is easy to see and hey it's all starting to play out well. I don't necessarily expect I don't expect that to end the Kabuki theater of politics where no matter what he does people are going to be against him. Um, but that's politics. Yeah, I'm so glad you brought that up because speaking of Kabuki Theater, Scott Bessant went up against a House financial international financial committee and had to testify get it. He was really defending Doge, which was interesting. Um, but this was one spicy exchange that stood out to us with him and uh, Rep. Maxine Waters. Mr. Secretary, did all the individuals working with Doge who were given access to treasuries and CFPB's computer databases receive all of the required clearances and security training before they were granted access? Again, they were granted read only access at Treasury. Uh there were two So, let me just say employees, please. You can't filibuster here. This is not the filibuster playground. And so what you did was you let these strangers into our treasury with access to all of the data, all of the personnel information, and you just open the door. Why'd you do that? Uh, no, ma'am. The they were Treasury employees. Oh, are you saying today in front of this committee that all of them were Treasury employees? that the 25 year old who's being identified who worked for Elon Musk was not allowed was allowed into the treasury was that person there that he was a Treasury employee as was Tom Krauss the senior person on the Doge team. There were only two people. There were Doge employees also. Sorry. Do you know? Were you aware that there were Doge employees coming into our treasury getting all of our personal information? Ma'am, there is no such thing as a Doge employee. There were Treasury employees. I I I tend to disagree with you based on the information I have. Has information any information been downloaded by anyone working with Doge from any of Treasuries or CFPB's computers? Answer, yes or no? Not to my knowledge. You better learn. And gentlemen, I know politics is theater. Um, where do you think people stand with this Doge thingy? Because I I know Elon can promise the moon and sometimes deliver a couple pebbles. So, a trillion in cuts is now looking like 150 asterric maybe. Um, but isn't more efficiency a net win? What do you think the the culture is is responding so negatively against it? We'll get back to the show in a moment, but first, I've got an announcement that's been in the works for months. People are always asking me, "Tom, what do you actually eat to fuel that amazing performance?" Well, you don't have to wonder anymore. You can experience it firsthand and have it delivered straight to your door. For the first time ever, ButcherBox is releasing the Bill Box. It's never been easier to get the exact cuts Lisa and I have personally selected after years and years of eating Butcher Box. You're going to get 100% grass-fed beef that melts in your mouth. Wild caught salmon with that clean, rich flavor that's packed with nutrients. Freerange chicken that's never touched antibiotics or hormones. And because I've got your back, you're also going to be getting free bacon for life with every Billu box. We've got a long history with that free bacon and $20 off your first box at butcherbox.com/impact. Use code impact at checkout. Again, that's butcherbox.comimpact and use code impact to get one of those billy boxes. And now, let's get back to the show. I have a violent allergic reaction to the way that people respond to Doge philosophically. Um, everyone everyone in the US government should want there to be audits of every single dollar that's spent to show due respect to the taxpayers. You've got people that work their asses off day in and day out paying taxes. Forget about the billionaires. I get it. Nobody's going to feel any sympathy for them. But dude, everybody over a certain threshold, but the vast majority of people in America pay taxes. And if you're not going to be efficient with the money that you take from them, that is grotesque. So they're acting like the act of an audit is immoral in and of itself. And I'm like, there is an entire department called the Internal Revenue Service that all it does day in and day out is audit how people spend their own money, what they make, what they owe the government. And if they think that you've miscounted in any way, shape, or form, they are coming for you. And they don't care what it costs you to go in and deal with that audit, you are going to get audited. And all of a sudden, it's like the government is, hey, I better get mine. So I can It is a grotesque grotesque immoral and it happens on both sides. Both sides do this ridiculous Kabuki theater where they are constantly trying to get gotchas. But on the Doge specifically, they should all be like, "Dude, this is amazing." If you've got procedural beef, point out what your beef is, but like you said, they're Treasury employees. Doge is like a recommendation crew, but obviously if they're going to bring somebody into a department, they're gonna make them a temporary employee of that department and have them do the thing. That's just not the place to get the gotchas. And then this obsession with they're only 25. Einstein was 24 when he came up with the breakthroughs that gave us nuclear weapons. So, it's like you don't have to be in your 30s or 40s to be smart enough to figure out whether um there is a way to make the systems more efficient to help us save money. I I again, it's just political theater. Everyone is guilty of political theater. The one around efficiency though admittedly really winds me up. Like this drives me crazy. Okay, but there is a he is accessing personal information. these 25 year olds, these unvetted employees. Is there a security risk at the very minimum that these guys are coming in and looking at financial payments, how we're spending money? Sure. I mean, anybody could take something out, but I can pretty much guarantee you if you do a litany of fraud, abuse, uh, in terms of people gaining access to the system, it's not going to be, oh, because they work for Doge or because they're young. It's going to be somebody is a they have poor character. They are trying to enrich themselves at the cost of everybody else. And so if you have reason to believe that one of these kids is actually doing something with the data, like they're scamming it and they're selling it or whatever they're being accused, then pursue them. Like report it to the Department of Justice. The Department of Justice runs an investigation. We find out if it's actually true. But I have a feeling that these kids, I keep calling them kids, these guys know the level of scrutiny that they're under. These are people that are so bright and so techsavvy, they could be making gaggles of money anywhere else. And they are doing this partly because they want to help Elon, which is wise. If like you're trying to make your way in the world of technology, having um a chance to impress Elon is a very smart way to go about it. But I also like to believe they really just want to make the government more efficient because it's good for them and if they plan to have kids it's good for their kids. Um so this is one where man hold your firepower for something where ideologically you disagree like at a values level you think this is crazy. Not where it's like do you want the government the money that the government collects to be spent to the highest most efficient use for the American people? Yes or no? every single one of them is going to say yes. And so it's like, cool. Then if you have an idea that is better than the way that they're doing it, then put it forward. And I don't see why they wouldn't take it. But if it's just all this like harping on about they're young, they can see things. Dude, I guarantee these people take their credit card to the dumbest places without using a VPN and they don't think twice about it. They'll surf the internet without a VPN. like it's crazy. So, they're worried about it now because it's politically um useful to be worried about it. What's the why should we want Doge to win? You said something that like it's going to be better for them and better for their kids. How is Doge being successful better for our kids? Okay, so uh the government doesn't make anything. The government takes from everybody else who does make money. Um I I'll try to do this in a nutshell really fast. If people could understand the following thing as a miracle, they would understand why you should be very suspicious of how much the government takes in tax. People make money because they're a part of a chain where people can take inputs uh car parts and by having created a system for the design of the car, the way you put them together, the dealerships, all of it, the whole string of how these things come into the world and get sold, they're able to create something on the end where people go, "Oh my god, I would rather give you the whatever $22,000 to have that are than to have to like try to go make it myself. Like that's just so impossible. And so they manage to take inputs that output something that's worth more than the actual inputs themselves. It is so hard to do that. And if you don't believe me, try to start a company. Over 90% of all companies ever fail. and you're taxing the people that are working for the companies that have managed to do this miracle. But somewhere along the way, we started thinking of people that build successful companies as greedy capitalists, not as people that pull off a miracle of being able to do the extraordinarily hard work of finding a way to make the output of a system worth more than the inputs. It is ridiculously hard. And so when you take money from those people, hey, fair enough. I want to live in America. I want America to have a government, but be efficient with the use of that dollar so that uh my kids grow up in a place with incredible infrastructure with that creates opportunities and educates them and keeps them safe. That's why is this is Doge actually going to get us out of debt though or is this like virtue signaling? Because as much as I want the government to be more efficient, the Pentagon hasn't passed the audit yet. So there is certain things that I think need to happen in conjunction with Doge and I don't want to just give Doge the blank check to do whatever it thinks is necessary to Doge is never going to get us out of debt by itself. This is always a one-two punch of be more efficient. It's actually three. Be more efficient. Reduce the amount of things you spend money on. Full stop. and then you have to make more. We we will never balance the budget unless we increase the growth rate. So right now I think they're predicting 1.8. You got to push that. You got to be four five. You've got to be up at those numbers. And the only way that you're going to get there is being more efficient will definitely be a part of it. modernizing the tech systems of your government, which Elon always sort of jokes that he's tech support and that's what Doge really is. Um, but I mean, they're getting people to make software solutions for the government for free. It's incredible. So, everybody should want that. Everybody should want the government to be easier to interact with as an individual. Um, but Doge is a part of the equation. And hey, if we look at it and we go, this is primarily a tech support. Sure, we save uh 150 billion annualized. It's still massive. Um but it it's not the trillion dollars that we wanted it to be. Okay, but does that mean that we're mad at the 150 billion? To me, this is about they hate Trump, they hate Elon, and therefore I don't want you um walking through my department and telling me how I could be doing better. that people just have an intrinsic disdain for that when somebody sees something that you don't see um and they tell you that you could be doing better. I get it. People hate it. But when you're the government man, you have an obligation to the people. People do not have an obligation to you. Well, uh we'll see what the final numbers are. To your point, we got six months before midterms. So, we're really going to kind of Oh, you that you have a year until your six months to the midterms. Um so, yeah, May of next year. literally next year we would kind of figure out okay what is the actual totals how much did they actually save versus what was proposed to be saved uh and we'll we'll take the tally there um in international news uh Pakistan and India the tensions are increasing and increasing India had two counter strikes on the sixth and the 7th and Pakistan has vowed to kind of respond um it seems like this turned into like a oh it's just retribution for a terrorist attack but instead of India kind of uh reprim reprimanding one organization. It seems that they're reprimanding an entire country and now Pakistan is now reprimanding India as a country. So I thought it was India going after one group of people and now it feels like it is India versus Pakistan. Um what's your take on how tensions have changed over time? Yeah. Uh this is everyone should be on escalation watch here for sure. So with operation Synindor um India had made big promises that they were going to come in and clap back on Pakistan for the terrorist attack that killed 26 people injured like 57ish other people. Um so uh devastating terror attack obviously they were going to do something uh but nobody knew how big it was going to be. So Pakistan is going to tell you that they've gone way too hard. India is going to tell you that this is pretty proportionate. When you look at the numbers, it's there's no doubt that India strikes did killed more people than were killed in the terrorist attack, but not by some crazy number. Uh so my hope is now at this point that cooler heads are going to prevail. Um China at least on the surface does not seem to be um taking a strong stance which is good. So they've been known historically to have a bit of a complicated relationship with India given that they're from a demographics perspective they're rivals uh from where they sat in the um as a place to go for cheap labor. There was a lot of rivalry there. You see Apple is going from oh China's now got tariff problems. Where do they move? They go straight to India. So there's like a complex relationship there. uh China has signaled um a closer relationship to Pakistan historically. So you've got China saying, "Hey, you know, like we're not going to try to insert ourselves. We're not going to try to be the mediators here." You've got Trump, in fact, we have a clip that we should play of Trump uh saying like, "Listen, you're going to have to let them fight." So my hope is that um at this point that people step back, they urge restraint. um they don't involve themselves so that this becomes a part of the bigger China v US beef. That would be bad. Yeah. Here's a Trump clip here. And they're fighting each other. I said, "Why don't you let them fight? Why are we getting in the middle of it?" I said, "Let them fight." Sir, we want to do it. They go in and and they end up fighting both of them. It It's the craziest thing I've ever seen. Let him fight. So, yeah. I mean, let them fight maybe not my most ideal uh choice of words, but at least this isn't um proxy wars. That is the thing I think we want to make sure this does not become. But they are nuclear powers. So, uh if it doesn't find a natural calming point, I think people are going to have to step in. Uh there should be exactly zero people on the entire planet that want to see countries go nuclear. Um, so yeah, that that would be very bad for reasons that I hope are patently obvious. That was my next question. I feel like with Israel, Palestine, we're like, we care, but it's been happening since the '9s. So, it's like, yeah, whereas India, Pakistan, seems like there's a different type of energy of nervousness that's now bubbling up. Why is this conflict, you think, different from some of the other conflicts that unfortunately we have kind of learned to ignore or put on the back burner? Well, if you look at the different nuclear powers, um, so Israel, people presume, though they've never actually stated whether they are or or not. Uh, but people assume, uh, they're not going to use nukes. Certainly not against Palestine for sure. Yeah. In their own. Would they against Iran? Maybe people have some concern about that, but given that Iran is not nuclear capable, um people probably have less concern that they would escalate to that because Iran's not going to hit them with nukes. They um are much less likely to lead with nukes. So on that, I wouldn't say that people don't care about Israel Palestine. I would say in the West, that conflict is a flash point for a cultural thing that we'll get to in a minute. Um, so people care deeply about that, but I don't think people are on edge about it going nuclear largely because the differential between Israel and Palestine is so great there just there's no need. Uh, Iran, I think, is a bigger question mark for people. I think you would feel way more nervous energy if Iran announced that they are now nuclear. That would be instant overnight. people are whoa very worried um because of the tensions specifically between Iran and Israel. So that one would uh not be good. Most in the west I think would be pretty clear they don't want to see that happen. India Pakistan have a long-standing rivalry. They have a border in conflict. They're both nuclear armed. Uh there are religious differences. So, it's like you have the whole powder cake of things that could escalate. I don't know that I don't know that we see enough now to be worried about it to that extreme, but it's never good when bombs are being dropped by two nuclear powers. Yeah. Uh, in future tech news, um, there's an interesting rule that Trump wants to scrap from Biden's administration. So, Biden released the AI diffusion rule. What this rule does is it creates a three- tier system for different countries that are allowed to buy chips um from Nvidia, the leading AI chip maker in America. However, Trump wants to rescend that rule to let Nvidia sell to more people and that way it becomes a less complicated ecosystem. It looks like Trump is doing this just so that way he can, you know, increase exports and make easier trade deals. Saudi Arabia and the UAE both of were on the restricted list. They were just lobbying Trump this past week trying to get those restrictions moved. Trump is visiting her next week. So, it could seem like that's on the table of those larger trade deals. However, it does seem like this can also be a back door to allow China to have more access to AI chips. And the whole point of this rule was to restrict, to your point, China from getting any leverage in our ongoing AI war. This seems kind of counterintuitive to what Trump ultimately wants. What do you think is the what MC logic should I use to kind of walk through this rule being taken away? I'll I'll give you a highlevel assessment here, but more data is going to have to come out. Like they're going to have to start getting really specific for me to know which way this is going to break. So there's two ways to approach what's happening in China right now. Way number one is you continue to try to choke them out uh to deny them chips. That's what we've been doing now for years. And that has pushed China to begin manufacturing their own ships and to push the country most known for the ability to do scaled state-of-the-art manufacturing to go, "Oh, I see. We're going to have to become state-of-the-art scaled manufacturing of chips." So, um, the last people on Earth that you want to challenge to get good at that are the people that have proven over and over and over across industries that this is what they get good at. So, that feels like the genie might already be out of the bottle. And so, it's possible that what um the Trump administration is doing here is saying, "Okay, uh trying to choke them out, that wasn't working. We'd rather start selling them things that are uh maybe a year or two years behind." And we leverage that whatever gap that we have um to disincentivize them to have to continue to do their own manufacturing, though they are admittedly very very very far down that road. Uh but it's my understanding that the chips will be able to make for themselves are a year or two years behind. So anyway, uh that you start allowing them to have not state-of-the-art, but like close to it, which is what we were attempting to do. So how much does this rewrite that? I don't know. But it could be them leaning into that, saying, "Okay, we're going to give a little bit more here." Uh or it could be that Trump's like, "No, like we're going to now have very close relationships with these guys. We're going to track everything that they sell. we're going to be able to see exactly what companies these end up in. Like to give you an idea, it's pretty absurd um that they act like they can't track this. If you're a food manufacturer, and I know from experience, I have to be able to tell you uh this bucket of almond butter ended up in these bars and these bars ended up in these exact stores. So, if I can tell you that with a protein bar, you can certainly tell me where these chips ended up. So sure, the first port of entry may have been Singapore, but where did they go from there? Uh, so these things are knowableish. They're not fully knowable, and of course, people are going to find ways to get around it. Um, but if they're saying, look, we want a similar regulation, just the way that they wrote it doesn't allow us the flexibility we need with some of our stronger allies that we feel very confident would not go around us. Um, it's probably something like that. I think the cat's out of the bag on manufacturing for China. I think China's going to control their own destiny. Uh, but I think the US realizes there's a better way to word this. Uh, where we can get it to all of our allies, keep it out of the hands of China and, um, try to make sure that we have enough cash sloshing around here that we can really push the innovation. Yeah. A representative from the commerce department said the Biden AI rule is overly complex, overly bureaucratic, and would sty American innovation. We will be replacing it with a much simpler rule that unleashes American innovation and ensures American AI dominance. However, though, I got a steel man the other side. Anthropic, the AI company, urged against the uh export rules and they didn't want it to become too lenient and they're citing that it needs to protect America's intellectual intellectual property and technology. Yeah. If I'm an American AI company, I'm like, uh, don't do that because a means you're going to be selling those chips to more people, which I don't want you to do. I want to be able to gobble those chips up. For all the hype around, uh, DeepSeek R1, people are still buying up the um, GPUs as fast as they can get their hands on them. There does not seem to be a limit that we found yet for compute. Elon Musk showed that you could, I think, more than double uh, the size of the cluster. So, um I don't think there's going to be a shortage of desire for GPUs anytime soon. And so, if you know that you're already competing with more people than you want to compete with, uh from a just get the chips perspective, this is going to make that bigger. And then on top of that, if they've got the chips, now you're competing with other models. And companies want to be monopolies. Just simple as. Now, we as consumers don't want them to be monopolies, but they themselves want to be monopolies, man. So, we'll take a quick uh closer look at that. Uh in culture news, um there's something very very weird happening. Uh yeah, a matter of fact, let's start with the easy one first. Um in I am so curious to see which one you think is easy. We have a new pope. Ah, okay. That is easy. In culture, does he have a new pope? Cardinal Robert Pos is a new pope and he will go by Pope Leo I 14th. He's a Chicago native. He went to Villanova and he just became the first American pope. First American pope in the house. America's so back, man. We're winning even in on international level. Indeed. Congrats to uh to our man there. Yeah, we haven't got I'm surprised somehow that feels like the old world of Catholicism would be very anti- new world American. So, I'm uh very not surprised that this is the first one. And I am surprised that we got one in there. I I was surprised. I was like America didn't have a first like with all the other pope Tom the popes. As much as we talk about the pope, as much as everybody loves the pope, I thought there was at least one American in like the 50s or something, but really not. Yeah, this is the first one. So, a new pope, we shall everybody's doing a bunch of deep dives on him. So, I'm sure we'll see in in recent news what he believes and everything like that, but white smoke came out of the Vatican today. So, everybody's now celebrating the arrival of the new pope. So, I love it. Okay. Um, now let's talk about anti-semitism. Um, Jesus, I don't like I am so over it. Okay, so Kanye released a song um and it's titled Hail Hitler. Um the music video was released and it's a bunch of black dudes shouting Hail Hitler cuz that's like the This is so surreal. I feel like I'm in a Twilight Zone episode. Dude, this is a timeline I could never have predicted I would be on. This is bananas. Uh yeah, what are we doing? So I when you look back in history when a culture begins to get sick and you know my thing is largely from debt uh they end up as a sign of their sickness which seems obvious to me uh they turn they get hyper tribal and they turn on somebody. Um, when you like take Rwanda, they obviously I don't know if they have a population of Jews, but that wasn't who they turned on. So, it's not always the Jews. But when you start turning on uh Jewish people, bro, it like every alarm bell you have should be going off in your head. Yeah. Every alarm bell you have should be going off. Like it it is a sign of a culture in deep trouble. And then this is off the back of the Mo David Portoy beef. Um, this past weekend at the bar stool sansome street bar in Philly, a [ __ ] the juice sign bottle sign was brought out to a table. So when you buy a table, you can put whatever you want on the sign. This 21-year-old named Mohan decided to put [ __ ] the Jews on the bottle at that time. So crazy. That's already just crazy town. Just flat out that that. So I'm here at a party and that's what you want to put on the sign. Anyway, keep going. The video posted by Moan gained traction across social media and various news outlets. When Dave Portoi saw the video, which was posted by Moan, he was understandably quite angry. For those unaware, Barcel Sports is a company owned by Portoi. The video was uploaded from his bar and Port Noi is Jewish. So, it's safe to say that this story hit a bit close to home for him. The two idiot bottle girls who brought the sign out were promptly fired the next day. But, as far as the people who ordered and posted the sign, the media mogul opted for a different route. He called up Moan, the guy who posted the video, and his friend on the call. They both cried their eyes out, but ultimately accepted responsibility for their hateful actions. So, Pooo, always known to be the bigger man and never to hold on to grudges, opted to use I think that's sarcasm. Yeah. opted to use it as a learning experience for the young man. He generally offered to give them a trip to Europe, uh, specifically to the Alerich concentration camp in Portland. I guess it's like a museum now. Um, yeah. so that they could reflect on their actions and hopefully come out as better men. But in the days that have passed, things have changed. First, some journalists from 6 ABC in Philly tried to blame Poro himself for the incident. Really fast. Who wrote this? Team Port. So that's Yeah, that's it. It says whackadoo journalist. I've tried very kind to cut out, but okay. So, got it. Keep going. and and then poor and then uh Mo Khan tried to distance himself from all responsibility, ran to his parents, and is now trying to play the victim and raise money for himself through a video statement where he poorly read tried to read a PR statement likely made by Chat Gvt. Um they all have no aspersions cast on CHT. In conclusion, it seems that this Dave Poro tried to reach out and say, "Hey Mo, we can make this a learning experience." Mo has went the other way. He has done news press uh now with one very anti-semitic uh journalist that he literally says like is this Jew supremacy that you're experiencing. Oh god, this is horrible. So Mo Khan kind of broke the other way and instead of using it as a learning experience, seems like he decided to just be a grifter and raise money now. He has a go set and go account which is similar to the account that Shiloh Hendris and Carmela Anony's family used in the past. Yeah. Okay. So for completeness, the one part of this, it's my understanding though I have not seen the original message, but it's my understanding that Dave Portoi put out a message that was like, I'm coming for you uh to the kid. So because um from what I took from the statement from Mo Khan directly was that uh he's been doxed and now people are coming after him and he may need to relocate and do things to protect his safety and was saying basically that um Port Noi had brought all of this on him and so now he needs people to help protect him legally uh so he can deal with all the the legal fallout and stuff. Um maybe legal is not the right word, but dealing with the logistics if I have to move or get protection, whatever. Mhm. Uh okay. So, with all of that on the table, the fact that we're now in this super weird thing where uh it's like reverse cancel culture where you did a thing that is getting you cancelled and no matter how repugnant, we're going to do reverse cancel culture on you. Matt Walsh did a whole thing on this that we covered in one of our other episodes and uh I just can't get behind it, man. I just can't get behind it. And I don't like cancel culture. I think cancel culture goes way over the top. Um, but culturally to me it feels like we are largely, not entirely, but we're largely in a place where you can at least come back from this dumb [ __ ] Like look at Kanye, right? Um, not that it's been easy for him, but Jesus, like he's going hard in the paint. You can still find the song. It's like people don't get disappeared the way that they used to get disappeared. And that is a good thing. And I would love to see it continue down a path of like uh let people have the reaction they're going to have. And so um if you're going to completely alienate somebody that doesn't share your values and you think is an absolutely grotesque human being, great. Uh hopefully the days are over where it's like people mobs are stalking people and doing all this [ __ ] that admittedly I don't want to see that. But um I think it's it is a sign of a sick culture that people are raising hundreds of thousands of dollars on the back of uh being pursued because they call the 5-year-old the n-word. Uh that I have no idea, maybe this kid hasn't raised a dime, but getting that put on a sign and then being able to raise money off the back of it is like, god, his go and go account is at $15,594. Okay. Maybe if he would have said [ __ ] the Jews to a 5-year-old, he would have raised more money. Help me understand. So, on that, so for people that didn't see, we talked about this before. I really um enjoy is the wrong word, but I uh love the opportunity to talk about racism with you for obvious reasons. For people that are only listening, I am white, Drew is black. Um and so I am Don't tell. Yeah. God, I love that movie is [ __ ] hilarious. Uh, so Drew Mhm. was the big thing with the Shiloh thing for you that he's a little kid cuz I think that's gotten at least that hasn't been the thing that I've seen people talk about it. Yeah. Um, when anti-semitism happens, it's hate has no place, but yelling racial slurs as a 5-year-old seemingly isn't considered hateful. It's considered justified for whatever reason. Well, I hate to say it, but the fact that she's raised whatever 600 grand and homeboys only got 15K, that says something. Yeah. So, apparently, it's cool to call the n-word. It's not cool to put f the Jews on the bottle sign. I know where I stand in society now and the lines that I can do. So, we'll see. We'll see. I Do you really take it personally, though? No, because I'm nuanced. We had this conversation last time. I Yeah, I don't take it personally because I have [ __ ] to do. But there are people who don't have interesting. It is interesting. I'll be interested to see if that number climbs. God, this is like the hate Olympics. This I really don't like this. Okay, so what is there to say that is actually useful? Um, boys and girls, there are certain things that when you see them in society, they are signals that something is going wrong and you are going to want to address the underlying cause. When you go into a neighborhood and there's broken glass everywhere and there are bars on the windows, you have a problem. These are indicative of a problem. And in a weird way, they used to talk about this with uh broken window policing. It's like if you go and make sure that the windows are fixed and lights are on and the windows aren't covered up and people can see inside. Like even though that's a symptom, it's not the cause. Like when you go and clean that up, it sends a signal that this is a healthy, thriving neighborhood and people are less likely. I I'd have to really look into the stats, but this is like at the headline level the thing that people talked a lot about in the '90s. Uh, and so that always made sense to me that if you show that you have respect for your area and you're taking care of it, then other people just treat it with that same respect. There's just something about walking into a clean room, your first impulse isn't to mess it up. But if you walk into a filthy area, then Yeah. Like you just feel like, oh, I guess this is what we do here. Um, when somebody feels like it is funny, I I'll all I need him to believe is it's funny to have uh f the Jews on my bottle service sign. That's a signal that that's broken glass and trash everywhere. And figuring out what it is that we need to do to begin to unwind this. And I don't think it's club people to death. I don't think it's show up at this kid's house. I don't think it's pursuing any of these people and heranging them. But we have to recognize that this is the escalation pattern. I mean, listen to talk about the Jewish people just because this one's a lot easier. Like pilgrims, man, they're real. They happen. Like those pilgrims break. This is where um a society will begin having problems. Uh take what went down in Germany. Uh so all of a sudden Hitler decides I mean Reed Minecom Hitler decides um for us to get out from under the Treaty of Versailles to regain our rightful position uh we've got to deal with Jewish people and so uh we are going to basically start targeting them uh isolating them passing uh racial laws against Um it needless to say escalates to the point of just outright murder and extermination genocide. Um but it's not where it starts. And so pilgrims are the moment where the culture turns and they start attacking often taking from killing Jews. Um so pilgrim is like a moment or like a people. It's a moment. It's a thing that has happened to Jewish people many times throughout history. It's crazy. And so that's the sign that like when you feel you're getting a sore throat, it's like uhoh, I'm getting sick. This is that like this is a really bad sign that things escalate and they go somewhere really [ __ ] dark and that humans have it in their soul to go down that very dark path. And my hope is that merely seeing it and going, "Oh [ __ ] this is this is a signal of something." um that people will understand it for what it is, back way the [ __ ] off. Um if your read of it is, oh, haha, like this is just a funny thing, bad, dark. Uh if your read is this transgressive because we're not allowed to talk about it. Um we should be able to talk about anything that people can talk about sincerely, but putting that on a sign is not talking about it. Um, I don't think Kanye song is talking about it. Um, we should probably dive a little bit deeper on the Kanye song in terms of one of the things that you hear is [Music] um, well, you hear the words, but you don't understand his pain or like what he's going through. And what I'm saying is the Lex interview I thought was really deaf. And even though Lex took a lot of [ __ ] for interviewing Kanye, I thought he really nailed it when he said when did he interview Kanye? And this is maybe two years ago. Oh, okay. A while ago. Okay. And um he said, "Kanye, I'm not saying that a Jewish person or multiple people who did bad things to you aren't Jewish. fine, but you're conflating that with that being the nature of Jewish people. And that is a category error that is so dangerous every time it rears its head in um society that please just recognize that you're doing it and even if 100% of the people that are attacking you and making your life miserable happen to be Jewish, don't confuse correlation with causation. And I think that's the right play. Like the second you group people like that, you dehumanize them. It's not about them anymore. It's about you have a you have an ideology that I will liken to the sore throat that shows that you're getting sick. Like it is it is a um it doesn't mean that Kanye hasn't been abused. Doesn't I have no reason to believe that he wasn't horribly mistreated. I'm just saying he's making a category error as to why he was mistreated. And it goes somewhere dark so fast. I feel the same way about that that I feel when people are like, I wouldn't want uh my daughter to marry a Republican or I wouldn't want my son to marry a Democrat or whatever. It's like you're assuming that everybody that um is part of that classes. Yeah. Like it's crazy. You're you are definitionally dehumanizing them. You you're just looking at them as a group. Like you're looking at something and you don't see a person. you see a an avatar, you see a representative of a thing that you've told yourself a story about and now that person gets caught up in that and it's so terrifying. It it is the same thing that makes me fear authoritarian rule. It's like wait hold on I'm interfacing with a faceless thing that I I cannot express my humanity and receive humanity back. And that is why bureaucracy is terrifying. That is why when people are grouped by their identity, it's terrifying. That's why lynching is terrifying. That's why pilgrims are terrifying. Um it it you do not see your humanity reflected back to you because they can just we every human has inside of them a switch that says in-group, outgroup, one of us other. And when we [ __ ] flip that switch to other dude, read about the the conquest of the American West. Yo, like what Native Americans did to us, what we did to Native Americans in inhuman on a level that's like crazy. And when I read those things, I go, "Oh, wow. The architecture of my mind is capable of that. That's scary." But because I look at myself as a biological creature, I'm like, "Well, way too many people." There's a book called uh Ordinary Men about how ordinary German guys were turned into um assassins that like normal cops could take a pregnant Jewish woman out in a field and shoot her in the back of the head. Like, but they were so traumatized. Yeah. And but yet they did it. And so it's like yikes. We have that switch in our brains and uh I'm trying to sound every alarm bell that I can that uh this is a signal of a problem. That was deep. I'm leave that alone. That's all I got. All right. Well, sorry to leave you guys on that note. Uh if you haven't already, be sure to subscribe. And if you're not already watching our lives, make sure you join us Wednesdays and Fridays at 6:00 a.m. Pacific time. And here is a clip from today's live. Check it out. This this is what I think people feel right now. This is the vibe. This is what people have internalized. And what I'm saying is the reason that people have this feeling is because fiat currency period. Full stop. End of story. And I I think that the reason that you're banging this drum in my opinion, and don't let me talk for you, but um you want to you want to hone in on that this is something that is happening that is universally accepted that you think is wrong to the boots of the to the dismay of the founding fathers. If Alexander Hamilton was here right now, he'd be like, "What the hell are you guys doing?" Guaranteed. And he and right now culture has this wave of we need to take this, we need to tax the rich, we need to do these things and that is going to balance the system and help help us become more monetarily sound. And you're saying that is a downstream symptom and you're not addressing the root issue of the disease that is causing us things to get perverted like asset classes and correct rich to get richer and poor get poor that way. Copy. Okay. Now, with with that being said, where we are right now, 2025, I hear CBDC's whispering in the background. I hear crypto is going to save us whispering in the background. Uh Donald Trump just announced that we spent 55 billion less in Q1. Government spending is down 5%. It's not a big am. It's not a huge number, but we're spending less than we have before. Is there anything on the landscape now that is giving you cause for optimism? Like if we can do this a little bit more, it can help kind of reset that scales or do you think it the exit ramp is going to be debt jubilee, blood, war? Like there is no nonviolent solution that we can get our way out of this. I I'm going to answer that shortly and then if you will allow me to go deep, I would love for you to go deep. I would appreciate it. Okay. Okay. The short answer is all I see is darkness stretching out before us and this is going to be a very bad time. Okay. Uh now I operate in my life that you become whatever you repeat. And so if I allow myself to repeat on a loop that this is all darkness and it's going to be bad, then it really will be bad and I will live a bad time all along the way. And that's suboptimal. So I am trying to find a space where I um stare nakedly at what is really true and what's really happening. And what's really happening is that um we are as far as I can tell we really are at the end of the big debt cycle. Um this is how countries go broke. When countries go broke it it ends in bloodshed. Um I don't see the exit ramp. I don't see it yet. I want there to be one. Now maybe at the societal level, you just have to stop thinking about it and maybe this is time for me to return to my roots and think only about the individual and just go, okay, here is what everybody should be doing in their life. Um, think about it this way. Approach it from this perspective. Uh, get some gold, get some crypto. Um, watch what Warren Buffett is doing. He's got a history of being very shrewd about these very disruptive times. He's super in cash equivalence. Mhm. And he's looking for that moment where there's blood in the streets and then he's going to buy. And all of us should probably be doing the same. So, uh, put yourself in a super defensive position. Uh, be very cautious. wait for when the downturn isn't like, "Oh, have we hit the bottom?" When it's like, "Oh [ __ ] people are panicking and freaking out and everything collapsed. People are screaming. Uh, you know, it feels like 1929 after Black Monday, like that's what you're looking for and that's when you buy. That's probably the right play. And by the way, in the interim, love your family. Um, figure out what the things are that you're passionate about. Pour yourself into them. do those things and just live uh as beautiful a life as you can with your eyes open so that you can position yourself well that's probably the right answer um I have admittedly the more I look into these things and let's take today's um jaunt so I come in hot and heavy about uh it's unconstitutional we go through it it's early enough I there's probably more to look at, but right now I'm willing to accept that no, the uh this has been ruled on. The Supreme Court has said regardless of what you Tom bill you think the Constitution says this is what you pay us for uh and we're telling you it's fine and the world is uh around that. And so I go, okay, well that argument isn't uh going to get me anywhere. So people are going to be able to shut that down and say no, it is constitutional. Okay, so then don't waste time with that argument. But then I move to there's a reason I'm beating this drum. And I'm beating this drum because I can certainly protect myself from these realities as much as I can. Yeah. Um but other people are going to get mauled. And the only reason that I started doing financial content was because when COVID kicked off, uh that was not long after having had 3,000 employees. A thousand of them grew up in the inner cities and knew nothing about how to manage their money. And so I thought, oo, let me make content that will help them. and people like them. Obviously, I wasn't doing it just for them, but let me do content that will help people through this difficult time. And then I realized, huh, the other shoe never fell. What happened? Money printing. What's money printing? Start looking into quantitative easing, all that stuff. And then you go down this really bizarre rabbit hole of, wait a second, people's money is being stolen from them in this super weird, invisible way known as inflation, which I thought, I mean, I didn't think much about it, but in the back of my head was an algorithm that said inflation is a law of nature. that there is no way to not have inflation only to realize oh that yes that's completely manufactured has to do with this thing called central banking uh central banks make money completely abstract completely pull it out of the free market for reasons that I didn't understand but I'm coming to a better understanding now and you start going whoa this is like cold-hearted manipulation to serve the quote unquote elites uh and this is really bad for the average person and then you start looking at all the things that are going wrong and you're like, "Oh, I get why houses matter so much because it's an asset class that keeps up with inflation that people understand." But whoops. Uh through demographics and poor um policy choices, we've ended up in a position where the average person cannot afford the one asset that they actually understand. And so now it's like, whoa, we're getting this racing away from each other. And you start going, okay, uh if I'm talking to an entrepreneur, the first thing I will say is you're trying to do something. has anybody done it well before and so oh have we ever been through a time like this before where the um classes are racing away from each other the middle class is falling away and then you end up in the 1930s and anybody that pays attention to the 1930s knows that that leads to World War II Hitler yada yada yada so it's like whoa this is a uh this is a dark point of rhyming with history and if you're me anyway you start going is there a way to pull out of this like is there a way to calmly back out of this? And when you look at history again, it's not always, but uh the vast majority of the time it ends in a debt jubilee, which is bloodshed, and then people go, I don't want to fight anymore, so I'm willing to let go of the fact that a lot of people owe me a lot of money, and I'm just going to let it go because either I'm already dead, uh you've drained all my money one way or the other, um or I just don't want to fight anymore. And so then the tables reset and for a minute it feels good. And then the cycle just repeats. If you like this conversation, check out this episode to learn more. Israel fires back at the Houthis. Trump calls out Iran. Trump denies he's running for a third term, but seems confused about the Constitution. China woos the EU and tells the CIA to chill. Zuck wants you to have more AI friends. Steven Miller steps on the throat of leftist values.