Kind: captions Language: en China has done something extraordinary. In just a few decades, they've lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty, mastered global manufacturing, and positioned themselves as a true superpower. But as they rise, the question for the West isn't just how do we compete, it's how do we live with China without losing ourselves. Today's guest is former CIA operations officer Mike Baker, an expert in intelligence, geopolitics, and the subtle forms of power that most people never see. In this episode, he breaks down how China is reshaping the world, not with bombs, but with data and influence, as well as economic leverage. This isn't about fear, but it is about understanding the game that is actually being played so we don't sleepwalk into a future that we didn't choose or control. Now, what do you think the real threat is with China? Are there things that they're doing that Americans might not be aware of? Well, if you'd asked me that, you know, a handful of years ago, two, three, four years ago, I'd say um there's probably a lot that they're doing that people aren't aware of, but it's actually been in the news more. And um look, you can hate Trump or like Trump, doesn't matter, right? But one of the things that that he's done is put a spotlight on China. and whether that's sort of their lack of transparency over what happened during the pandemic um or whether it's their theft of intellectual property um their economic espionage whether it's their aggressiveness in the South China Sea there's been more of a focus so I think people people have become increasingly aware and then there's the Tik Tok issue and that's probably to answer your question probably where the the shorter term threat comes from with the Chinese regime is their understanding of how to influence opinion um through something like Tik Tok and that that's legitimately what they're doing, right? I mean, they they they're very good. They the Russians, you know, the Iranians to some degree, anybody who's got resources and motivation. They've learned some time ago um the uh importance of of manipulating opinion through disinformation and misinformation. Uh how easy are we to influence? Most people aren't curious enough to keep digging or they don't have enough time to keep digging or they just not motivated to keep digging and say, "Well, where does that information come from?" Right? Has this been reported anywhere else? Right? Is it credible? What was the actual source of it? You ask those questions of the things that you read and you're likely to be less um siloed, right? But we tend to just end up in a in kind of a one swim lane that makes us feel good because it affirms sort of our thought process anyway. So yeah, they I think the the Chinese certainly the Russians, they they've figured out that we're fairly easy to manipulate as a general population. Yeah. Okay. So um of those that's a full basket of things that I think people should certainly be thinking about. Which of those, like if you had to rank order some of the top ones, are you most worried about their ability to influence us via Tik Tok and sort of algorithmic control? Are you more worried about economic problems, the espionage, manipulation of opinion, that's a top tier priority, right? The theft of uh economic information, research and development, intellectual property, um that's a top tier concern, right? It's it's hard to prioritize and say this is worse than the other because they're running on the same, you know, time frame and it's all they they're they're very good at multitasking, right? Because in part the Chinese regime has a very long view. So, you know, whether it's it's those issues, the the military concerns, right? This this this concern over the invasion of Taiwan, you know, and what that could look like, uh their aggressiveness in the South China Sea, those things are of real concern. their um their development of of new weapons technology. Um I run the algorithm that we're for sure going to deal with the cold wary stuff first. So the espionage, the um the influence, the economic warfare for sure. Do you share that? Like if I had to sequence them, I would say, okay, let's we know that we're we're on the edge of between China as a rival and China China as a true adversary. Hopefully, everybody wants to stay rivals and not spill over to adversaries. And I think the the best way to do that is to if you got to lash out at each other, do it at the Cold War stage. But do you think that we have to sort of parallel track the Cold War stuff, the espionage, the influence with the aggression uh kinetic side of things? Yeah, I I think so. Um, look, a a good friend of mine, uh, a China expert, Gordon Chang, we've talked about this a lot, right? And his point of view is is always that China is on a war footing, right? We just we just prefer define that. Well, he says that they're not not necessarily Connecticut, you know, uh, event tomorrow or next month. But in their minds, right, they don't view us as a rival. They don't view us as a economic competitor. They literally view the the regime, I mean, not the Chinese people, but the regime views um the West, certainly the US at the top of that heap um as the primary obstacle to getting to the top of the food chain. I was going to ask, so what is our goal in all of this? Just to be number one. Be number one, right? Globally or in the region? Globally. But first of all, in the region, right, they've always been upset that since World War II that we've kind of patrolled the seas. I mean, that's that's always been which explains kind of their behavior in building up their navy and and creating artificial islands and pushing themselves out. They're now starting to develop uh relationships with other countries to develop ports uh for their navy. I mean, that's is it's a slow creep, but it all speaks to this idea that there's no reason why China shouldn't be at the top of the food chain. And they they have a much longer view on things. We worry about what's right in front of us, right? Why do you think they care so much about being at the top? I think it's just I think from Xiinping's perspective from all the way back to Mao I think they just that's their assumption. I mean, local Americans, you know, we we talk about it all the time, you know, don't get me wrong, I don't want to give up the spot, right? Right. Right. It's a pretty good place to be, right? And so, and it's not a community of nations, so you can't share the top spot, right, with with others. It just doesn't I know a lot of people think, you know, well, if we just stop being aggressive, you know, we I spent way too much time overseas to have that point of view, right? It's not a community of nations. We've got allies. Um, and most of the time our allies share our same particular interests or concerns. sometimes not. So, you have to be pragmatic about that. But, um it's not a place where, you know, we're all going to hold hands, right? And and and and it's just it's not the way the world works. It'd be lovely if it did, but it doesn't. So, with China, I think you have to you have to look at all these things at the same time. If there's a global conflict, if there's a kinetic shooting match that goes on, all these other things will come into play, right? the the effort to influence the opinion of of the American population, right? The cyber attacks that will take place on the home front, right? To shut down our transportation and our water and our power grids, um our ability to move everything from food to fuel to pharmaceuticals. All that's going to come into play to bring the pain right home as quickly as possible, right? And also then to drive the thought process, right? So, it all eventually kind of comes into like the same pot. Yeah. And I think you have to we have to be smart enough to worry about all of it at the same time. And sometimes we're not that good at that, right? We tend to be a little bit too we get blinders on, right? And and we think about one thing, you know, like and so, you know, it's for what that's worth. Is that a an American uh temperament thing? What is it culturally or systemically that leads us to get myopic like that? You know, I Yeah, it's I don't know if it's uniquely American and certainly we've certainly taken it to new levels. We've developed it. Um, you know, and so we, you know, we're all like a bunch of raccoons chasing a shiny tinfoil ball and then we see something else over there and we go chasing that, right? And you you see that in other parts. I mean, over in Europe, it it there's a little bit of that. I think they've got, if you just look at the Russia Ukraine conflict, they've got a different perspective, right? I mean, we're we're acting as if right now, at least the Trump administration is acting as if, well, that's it. You know, if they don't agree, then we're walking away. Okay, what does that mean? What? Walking away from what? The peace talks. Walking away from Ukraine. Literally, the peace talks. They actually didn't attend. Yeah, they didn't attend. They Marco Rubio said it was a logistical issue. They couldn't make the meetings in London. Um, so they had some low-level discussions, but uh, you know, we have to, and I think that, not to disappear down there, but I think, you know, the problem with the the the Russia Ukraine negotiations is that people are attacking it from a different reason, right? Ukraine's looking at it and Zilinski is looking at it. It's an existential threat, right? It's a little bit like how Israel looks at their problems and then people don't understand why Israel does the things they do. Well, they it's an existential threat. They're surrounded by enemies. Ukraine looks at it and goes this is an existential threat, right? Europe looks at it from a, you know, a somewhat same sort of traditional east west perspective because they're right there, right? You know, I think part of our issue is the the the current administration. They're looking at it from a domestic politics perspective, right? How does it play in in the US with the voters? And, you know, we talked about on the campaign trail, we're going to end it quickly. So, we just want a peace deal. So, we're going to construct a peace deal that we think will get across the table quickly, which means we'll give Putin essentially what he wants. We'll give him Crimea, recognition of Crimea. We'll freeze the battle front on the 20%, you know, that he currently occupies. Um, no mention of Russian withdrawal from those those areas. Uh, we'll say that, you know, Ukraine can never join NATO, which goes counter to their uh their charter. Um and uh essentially there if we draw up a peace plan that gives Putin his key demands, okay, we can get it across the table and now we've done what we said we did, you know, so good for us and the voters will be happy. They're not looking at it from a geopolitical perspective, right? So, okay. So, I definitely want to get back to Russia and Ukraine, but um going back to China for a second. So, I told you I would disappear down rabbit holes, right? Which I love because I'm going to I'm going to connect all these dots cuz um I think we think I'm glad you came cuz I can't. A similar way. Here it is. Uh so real politique I think is what draws us all together. Now um I go live three times a week and one of the things that I constantly see in the community is ah Tom is like got such a hard on for real politique. Uh I'm just saying that's how the world is. Not that I like it or that I want it to be that way. But if you want to be functional, rule number one is deal with the world the way that it is, not the way you wish it were. Right? And now I'm very open if somebody can convince me that it actually isn't that way. But when I walk through the just first principles of it all, um I suppose if you believe in God, you think that there's something above it. But the world that we live in from a militaristic standpoint is um you have an opening where the strong will do as they will and the weak will suffer as they must. Now, we have for the last 70, 80 years, we've kept that in check where everybody post World War II just had kind of a same vibe, which is at least in the West. We're not going to tolerate somebody invading another country. We had enough of that with Hitler. Um, but what it feels like is happening now is that collective um understanding given that that generation and the generation after it have died. Yeah. Um or at least boomers are beginning to pass on. uh we don't have the same level of like visceral understanding of we don't want this to happen, right? And given that you're seeing now the reassertion of aggression and to me it I look at it and I'm like, yeah, this is real politique. It was always real politique. You were just living through a moment of peace brought to you by fatigue. Um but the fatigue is now worn off. We've gone through political cycles where that appears to be the case. you know, they they imagine this lovely world that would be nice, but it's not the one we live in. It's the Saudis. That's a good example of that, right? Um, you know, people are sometimes, you know, horrified that we have relations with the Saudis because what they'll do is they'll point to obviously to, you know, human rights abuses or or treatment, hacking a guy, right, Kosogi. And you think, yeah, crazy. It was crazy. But my point being is, okay, yeah, that's terrible, right? But we're in this world, right? And you're going to end up having relationships with uh countries that don't always share your values, but for real uh solid reasons, you know, being selfish for your own country's best interests, you're going to need to deal with them, right? You don't necessarily need to like them all the time. You know, it's like the politicians, right? I don't need to like a politician. I need to like their what it's going to get, right? where we're going with with either policy or the reason why there's a there's a drive there for that relationship with that country and the Saudis are good example of that, right? Um so yeah, I I guess at the end of the day, we we don't tend to do that very well here in the US, right? I think most accept the realities of the way the world works. Yes. Yeah. And I and I think part of that is um because you know people don't it does it's not particularly satisfying right when you talk about that when you say look this is the way it is you got to deal with it right we may not like them but we have to work with them right we may not like that but we have to work with that you know it sounds better to say these are our hopes and dreams and this is what we're going to do we're going to build a community of nations and we're going to that sounds good right and I think it plays well to people makes you feel better. Um, but yeah, I'm I'm not one to I don't like to sugarcoat the way the world actually operates. Every country operates according to its own best interests, right? Although, again, in the US, we we we seem to uh apologize for it more often than not. And if we're All right, help me remove the scales from my eyes. So, I live in constant fear that I'm becoming too paranoid about China. And when I was preparing for this episode, I first I wrote an intro that was like basically um this is how China could take over without ever firing a shot. And you could as I was writing the intro, I could hear wolves howling in the background. And I was like, oh god. Like okay, hold on. Like I need to understand that um my tone matters. How I set things up to my audience matters. And that we are easy to influence. And that means if all I do is broadcast fear, my fear is real. But if all I do is broadcast the fear element of it, then that's the bit of nudging influencing that I do in the world. If I polyana it and it's a lie, then I'm setting people up to getting knocked off course. But if I don't understand that there's a middle ground, there is a you need to be paranoid, but you also need to understand that your paranoia can become runaway and it will make you make bad decisions. And now instead of working with them, you're being antagonistic towards them, which is making them be more antagonistic towards you. Right? Uh and so I people will have heard the intro that I actually settled on by the time they hear these words. But my hope is that I struck that balance right of uh China's done something extraordinary. The I am hyperfamiliar with um China under Mao and how dark things were. And so China now um in the modern era under Xiinping and using what I call red light green light capitalism to pull people out of poverty it's really been extraordinary and in many ways I feel like they're surpassing us in cultural energy innovation like there there's a real sense of we can do this we can regain our uh what I would say if my understanding of their culture is accurate our rightful place as the leaders in the world and if boys and girls if you look back over the last 5,000 years of history, it's all us. And we've had a hundred years of humiliation. It's never going to happen again. Uh and and this becomes their hundred-year plan now and how they plan to move forward. And so I it feel I feel that energy coming off of them. And so I'm like, "Okay, these guys are really playing to win. I want to acknowledge the extraordinary things that they've done. I want to acknowledge that part of my life is that they make things, incredibly complex things, for very cheap and we benefit from that. So, I don't want to um I don't want to make them out to be some dark evil civilization. They're, I'm sure, just flushed with incredible, lovely, beautiful human beings creating extraordinary things. So I don't want to unnecessarily find myself battering heads with them. But I'm so aware that Thusidity's trap when you look back in history says when you have a declining power the US and a rising power China they cannot help but collide. So I'm like okay we are going to collide. And so now how do we do that? Well yeah. Um look I I agree my my daughter uh great person. She lived and worked over in China uh a couple of different occasions. Uh it's a great place. People are terrific. Culture is amazing. U history is incredible. Um and uh and that's and so that's all true, right? It's also true that they've gotten to where they are over the decades um in part by the theft of intellectual property. realizing that the way they get there is to accelerate that whole development process by skipping the research and development phase early on. It's you know it's been less now as they've kind of made these advances and now but they they went for a while just kind of bypassing that you know the idea that you're building generations of engineers and innovative thinkers and now they you know that's I'm not saying they don't have them but the initial goal was this is what we're going to do. We're going to hoover up everything that's available out there in the west from everybody and we're going to use that to jumpst start the process and bypass the heavy lift of of of uh research and development. So, okay, well done them because they accomplished that and they still do it from a variety of ways, right? It's as innocuous as, you know, attending academic conferences, right? Maybe bumping into, you know, a professor of interest or a researcher of interest, right? Developing that relationship. Maybe it's targeting first or second generation Chinese Americans, which they do all the time. Playing off targeting in what way? Well, you know, basically identifying and saying, you know what, the leverage point here is going to be uh ultimate loyalty to the homeland, right? And so we're going to play off of that. And so getting a Chinese American to like, hey, just help educate us. If you look at the counter intelligence operations that have taken place over the years where there have been a successful result in terms of identifying that we've got a threat that we've got people who are passing uh secrets uh or economic intelligence whatever it might be then often times you'll see that that's what they've done. They've targeted because that's that's natural, right? If you're doing an operation like that you're you're looking, you know, it's like a criminal walking the streets. It's looking for a soft target. So in their minds, you know, it may not be true because, you know, you may come across someone that's that's that's that sees through that and says, "No, my loyalty is actually here." Or, "No, I'm not going to, you know, provide this information." And it could be a slow pull, right? It could be just something as simple as, "Oh, you know, you're working on that. It's so interesting. You know, my my daughter, as an example, I'm just saying my daughter is writing a paper about that." And you know, if you have anything, you know, that that's of interest, right? Maybe they just give you something completely unclassified because they're working at a a company of interest to the Chinese service. Maybe just gives you like a an article. Well, that's good, you know, because it shows that they were willing to listen and accommodate to your request. So, they'll work on that. That's a leverage point. Then they'll start working and saying, "Okay." And eventually they're saying, "Well, what about this?" Right? And they're looking to see how far they can pull you along to see what level of information you're willing to provide. And eventually, you know, maybe you're handing over something that, you know, you shouldn't be, you know, and then at that point they feel like they've set the hook. So, again, I'm disappearing down sort of operational, you know, procedures. The deeper you go, it's so that's that's um, you know, I there's there's lots you can have conflicting ideas or truths, you know, so wonderful history, culture, etc., etc. You can also have okay well the reality is they've gotten you know they've accomplished this magic of advancement through in part this the theft of intellectual property and using that to jumpst start their own um uh sectors whatever it may be aerospace or communications um and then you you you you right you know if you accept the idea that the US is a you know civilization in decline right I'm I'm not quite sure I'm there yet, you know, I mean, we have our ups and downs. Um, but and and that they're on the ascendy, then sure. Yeah, there's going to be a, you know, at some point there's going to be a collision. Um, I think, you know, if you just look in the immediate issues of the trade war, as an example, right? Um, that has recalibrated uh Xiinping's thinking, right? Because he could read uh Biden. he knew what to expect from Biden as an example, right? I'm again I, you know, I'm not talking partisan politics or anything like that. I'm just saying this is the way someone's going to think. Then they look at Trump and you know, again, love him or hate him, um, he keeps people guessing, right? And that's on purpose or is he a [ __ ] Um, I don't know that it's on purpose, right? Look, he's a tri-state property developer, right? I mean, that's that that that's the experience that he came out of, right? So now when I hear something like that, I I immediately go to and I have no idea if this is true. He's had to deal with unions, mob bosses, like all kinds of like right dicey [ __ ] And so this is just a guy that knows how to keep people on their toes. Well, or you get punched in the nose and you punch someone back, right? I mean, that's how you negotiate, right? I mean, there's it creates a look, you can't get away from your past, right? And he had a long period of history as a tri-state property developer working in that business, right? And also, I mean, obviously he had other properties around the world, but but that's kind of where he grew up, right? And what he learned from that I should take this is a guy that's not afraid to be tough. He's not going to be easily intimidated. Like, what's the short sentence that I take away from that? You have to admit he's done things that other politicians or other people in that position haven't been willing to do, right? And so either he's just doing it because he doesn't care about getting punched in the nose or he's doing it because he 100% firmly believes it's all the right thing to do. He he's doing it in part because he knows that's what the people voted for, you know, at least the people that voted for him. Um I don't know. I'm not in his inner circle, so I I can't read his mind. But I will say that if you're Xiinping um or you're Putin or you're Nicholas Maduro in Venezuela or whoever and you're looking at this, there is an element of unease. You're not quite sure what he's going to do next, right? And so therefore, you you have to spend a little bit more time, you know, kind of thinking through your strategy. So they looked at as an example the Chinese regime has been watching what we've been doing in Ukraine uh for all these years now the three plus years of the conflict there trying to understand and interpret okay what does that tell us about how they would act if we moved on Taiwan what what do we believe well they've got to set their playbook aside a little bit right now and think okay well now what do we think is going to happen if we invade Taiwan I don't frankly believe we we're ever going to put boots on the ground there So, you know, they their assumption is probably we'll provide material support um and a lot of angry memos in the UN, but they probably believe at the end of the day they'll accomplish their goal because we're not interested in getting into a shooting match whether it's a Trump administration, Biden administration, anybody. Um so, yeah, it's just um yeah, again, I I what I guess I'm saying is sort of the um the disruption of the current administration, the US administration, the what appears to be chaos on the surface. I don't know whether sometimes it's it's designed chaos or whether it's just chaos, but I, you know, I'm more interested in how it plays out in the halls of power overseas with countries that we need to be concerned about from a national security perspective. We'll get back to the show in a moment, but first, let's talk about something that stops most people from starting an online business. Overwhelm. When you're staring at a blank screen wondering how you'll create product descriptions, set up payment systems, and figure out shipping, that's when most people give up. But with Shopify's AI tools, you don't have to figure it all out on your own. Entrepreneurs with zero technical skills can launch successful stores because Shopify handles the hard parts. Their AI assistant, Shopify Magic, writes compelling product descriptions from just a few keywords. It creates personalized FAQs for your customers and even helps craft email campaigns that actually convert. From firsttime sellers to household names like Mattel and Gym Shark, they give you everything you need to succeed with awardwinning support every step of the way. Turn your big business idea into with Shopify on your side. Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at shopify.com/impact all lowercase. Go to shopify.com/impact now to grow your business no matter what stage you're in. Now, let's get back to the show. When it comes to the chaos, uh my gut read is that he is somebody that uh understands that there is utility in chaos if you can figure out how to capitalize on it, but that it's not like a clear-cut thing because chaos by its very nature, you don't know what's going to be on the other side of it. So, I think he just thinks you have to shake up the way that people where wherever they're entrenched, you've got to shake that up to get them off that position so that you can get them hopefully to a new position that you want to be on. Yeah. For some reason, whenever I say that, people think that that's me defending it. I'm just I am trying to map what is actually happening. Yeah. And there's one way to map Trump, which is he's just dumb and doesn't can't anticipate the amount of chaos that he's creating. Uh, another way to map Trump would be that he understands that if you can get somebody off their position, now you've got a chance to move them. Whether you can end up moving them to the right place or not comes down to your belief in yourself. Trump's self-belief is off the charts. I think it's ludicrous. I think he believes in himself way too much. Yeah, there's a lot of confidence there there. I would say he's now in pure delusion territory. But in terms of um understanding the cause and effect of what you get when you elect Trump is that he is um he believes that there's utility in chaos and so he doesn't mind. Not only does he not mind it it's like step one. Yeah. Um well this chaos opportunity right I mean you see this again I you I always fall back on what I know best. Um, from an operational perspective, you know, movement often creates opportunity, right? And so you'll you'll do something just to to shake things up to see what the other side you talking about a terrorist operation or you're whomever a cartel operation and you sometimes just creating uh a scenario where they've got to react or they they've got to move in some fashion, it can create opportunity, sometimes unexpected opportunities, sometimes, you know, it's not necessarily an upside. Uh but I I I I do think that sometimes the current White House, the Trump administration, uh probably has that in the back of their mind. Let's do this and see what happens. Let's let's tack on another 50% on the tariffs and see what they do, right? Um China's interesting because they got to a certain point. Look, China's not going to get bullied like, you know, most other countries out there, right? They're not even though they're completely export dependent, right? That's not their mindset, right? They're not going to say, "Okay, well, let's go to the table, right? You have to figure out a way to get out of this now so that they um save face basically." And you know, they can sell that. Um so I think you know, but the idea of imposing additional tariffs in part on China. Um you there was an probably an element. I'm not saying that everybody's playing 3D chess over at the White House, but I'm saying there's probably an element there of saying let's let's see what this does out of curiosity because we know we have to rebalance to some degree, right? And that's that trade imbalance is never going to, you know, right? I mean, we're number one consumer out there, right? So, it's never going to we're never going to balance trade between countries, but there certainly could be some advantages here to shifting the dynamics between the US and China. And I think that's what they're that's what they're ultimately after. U but you know, China turned around and said, "Okay, fine." You know, you want these sort of reactions. We're not going to up the tariffs anymore past whatever 125% on US goods. But how about we shut down export of, you know, rare earth minerals. Well, that's a problem. That's a long-term problem. Yeah. Um because we once again we were so busy whether it was Gwa whether it was the global war on terror or it was something else we were so busy looking in this direction that for the past 15 or 20 years we didn't watch China out there signing up minerals deals all around the world and then building up a monopoly on refining of minerals in you know in China control maybe 90% of that. So, we were focused over here doing something else and they're over busy doing that because they they had a longer view and now they're trying to say, well, that's, you know, in part a benefit of our longer view. We've got this as leverage. I think it's going to backfire on them to some degree. How would it? Well, I think I mean already you're getting um regulatory changes here in the US. I mean, just in a short order, right? Ever since the the Chinese announced that they're going to stop exports of rare earth minerals. Um, and look, you keep you you got to have these minerals, right? You're building everything from uh I was about to say spaceships. I don't know if we build spaceships, everything from the aerospace industry and military hardware, uh semiconductors, uh smartphones, you know, pretty much anything clever that you're using. Um, but I think it, you know, already in the US, the uh the White House is saying fine, you know, let's let's fasttrack um mining operations here in the US. uh the ability to refine those minerals. I mean that's been part of the problem for years, right? And one of the reasons why we've given that ability to China is because over here environmental policies and you know regulatory concerns, we we mine almost nothing, right? Because it's so goddamn difficult to get a mine approved and well you you're going to pay for that eventually. And we've been happy to look the other way and let [ __ ] get mined in in Africa, right? Where I've been to some of these, it's awful, right? You want to talk about environmental impact, but hey, you know, we're not looking at it, so fine. Let somebody else do the dirty work and we can act all self-righteous about our, you know, environmental policies. And so it hurts the environment and it hurts our national security interests. So we're now fasttracking the ability to do that. I don't think Xi Jinping factored that in. The EU is also doing the same thing. Can you imagine Europe saying we're going to we're going to open up mining and refining, you know, policies here in in the EU as in response so that we're not dependent on China. Um, so that's what I mean by I think it it might be backfiring on them because I don't think they they imagined that would be one of those uh results. It's interesting. Uh I don't know if I imagine they didn't imagine it. I have a feeling that this moment is all about the inevitability of the way that the human mind works. Uh, and what I mean by that is they just can't stop themselves. So, if my on both sides, we can't stop ourselves from from electing a populist president because we're in a populist moment because of debt, because of what debt does to asset prices, which what that does to the difference between the rich and the poor. All of that's just like the way that people are going to react to those moments is entirely predictable. And the only question mark for me is did we numb out young men to the point where they just aren't going to fight back the way that they have always historically in moments like this. Uh so we'll see about that. But um the what do you what do you think in terms of how we numb them out? Yeah. No, I think given the swing to the right on the youth vote, I have a feeling that we're reawakening that and if we actually do target health things, I think uh a rise in testosterone will overcome some of those other things and people will get the I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore. Um I think what we just lived through is people believed the way to have their um their oh god, what does Jordan Peterson call it? doesn't call it their Christ moment, but that kind of thing where like I'm doing something that really matters and I'm sacrificing and I'm sacrificing in the name of something that uh is really important. Messiah moment. I think that's what he calls it. I would call it a come to Jesus moment, but that's just well that when you're having if somebody is going the wrong direction and you want to help them have their Messiah moment, yes, you have them come to Jesus. Uh but that was um that moment was all about basically neutering uh the aggressive male instinct. And so the righteous thing to do was to be woke to um really lean into a beautiful thing that the left has like I'm a I don't you don't know me well enough to know my stance on this but like I really believe you want tension between the left and the right. They they are both critically necessary. Uh and so unfortunately humans tend to swing from one side to the other and that's what we're witnessing now. But so you had this moment where the left went pathological and they were overindexing on uh compassion and all those things which are beautiful but they can go too far. And now we're about to see the swing back. Will it go pathological on this side? Yet to be seen, but it's certainly the thing that we should be looking out for. But I have a feeling that no, we'll reawaken that beast with the onetwo punch of they now have a new thing to focus on, which is don't let America die on the vine culturally. Uh, and if it's actually happening at the same time that we're rectifying health concerns that hopefully impact testosterone levels, it's that's a super oversimplification, but directionally correct. I don't know that there's going to be a a a moment on the left side where they think, uh, look what, you know, we we overstepped, right? Now we've got to now we've got to recalibrate. I I don't know that that's going to be the case. It doesn't seem to be the case right now. It's never the case. No one ever lets go. They have to be smashed in the mouth. Yeah. Yeah. It's Yeah. I think you have to find the the bottom before you you change, you know. It's sort of that we've already done that on the Well, I don't think so really. They seem to be look I mean they're I think they're searching right now on the left. I think they're searching for uh some some solutions, some leadership. Yeah. But they're record low like approval. Record low. So the leadership might be deranged, but I don't think culturally I think we bounced off the bottom anyway. That's Yeah. Yeah. I I I'm I'm not sure. I think that they'll they'll view this as I mean there's obviously you can't paint them all with the same brush, but so like Gavin Newsome I think read the tea leaves and said, "Okay, I've got to I've got to drift a little bit towards the center without offending everybody on the left." And so he's trying to to position himself that way. I think even Pritsker in Illinois is trying to pretend as if he's not, you know, hard left. And so there will be some, but I think there's still a a a fairly sizable portion on the left that feels like no, we just we didn't get our point across enough, right? So and and maybe the population just wasn't smart enough. Uh so if anything, we've got to figure out how do we message the same message, but you know, reach more stupid people in in their minds. I So, you know, I I think look, I'm I I tend to be a I'm a centrist, right? I think, you know, you got to be willing to listen to to everybody and without throwing a hand grenade um and then say, "Okay, well, those ideas are just batshit crazy and those over there are and so let's find something that that means it." But, you know, compromise has kind of become a bad word, I think, over Yeah. So uh but I don't think that I think there was unwarranted confidence on the right after the election that somehow we are in a new golden age meaning in their minds anyway that it's always going to be this way. I think, you know, there's every chance that um what people sometimes can perceive as chaos from the White House with the Trump administration or how a a portion of the media drives it that way in terms of a narrative could influence the midterms and suddenly, you know, you're back to inertia uh in Congress because, you know, that flips, maybe they keep the Senate, but um I would never be overconfident. I think we're we're at the stage where to your point about, you know, bouncing from one side to the next. I think the the the the time frame within that happening is is has lessened. So, we're going to see more of that short-term like shifts from left to right. And, you know, I don't think we're, you know, I guess what I'm saying is I don't think we're looking at a a stable long-term period of politics here. I definitely don't think that. Um the thing I was trying to address specifically is traditionally in a moment like this where you get populism rising, you get the um the people rise up and just say we're we're not going to take this anymore. It can break bad or it can break good and you get uh one way or the other you get on the other side of that inequality. It tends to uh come at the end of a whole lot of bloodshed and fatigue. Um but at least you get to the other side of it. I mean, I think we we've gotten Yeah, I I would agree that we've gotten better at calling things out, right? I mean, like um the idea that you you're okay with, you know, boys and girls sports, right? I mean, I'm a simple individual. I'm thinking, well, I'm not a big fan of that. You want to do that, create a trans league. If it's that big of an issue, you know, for the left, then fine. Promote a trans league and say that's where we're going with this. But having raised three boys in in competitive sports, um there are just differences, right? I mean, I you know, that's it. So, I'm a firm believer in the whole idea. You got boys and girls. Maybe you're a boy who feels differently and and you believe yourself to be something different. That's great. You do whatever you goddamn want to do. I don't care, right? I mean, people should be allowed to think the way they want to think as long as it doesn't hurt anybody. But don't try to alter science to say we got, you know, something other than what we have when you've been, you know, as an example during a pandemic, screaming at people to believe the science, right? Well, you know, turns out we probably should have listened to a lot of different opinions, right? And just admitted that we're doing the best we can, right? But not that this is a 100% tied down solution, right? How about you just do that as a government? How about you say, "Look, this we're following what we think is the best advice, right? But we're not going to, you know, we're not going to put you in prison camps if you don't go along with us, right? So, I think, you know, not to say we're going to learn anything from the pandemic when the next pandemic hits, but look, I my my my boys are a good example. I again, you kind of base your opinions on your immediate orbit. And so, I look at at what they went through in their public schools, right? And the way that schools changed a little bit during the course, right? I've got 17 all the way down to 13. The 13-year-old boy was squarely has been squarely in that sort of DEI, you know, trans um you want to believe you're a cat and dress like a cat at school, god damn it, we're going to support you, right? All these things, right? So, he was squarely in that. The 17-year-old kind of missed it, right? He got a got further ahead and or it wasn't quite taking hold. He wasn't like, well, it hadn't really taken hold firmly, right? And then and so uh and the middle boy, he's just like all about basketball. He's like, I you know what? You guys do whatever you want to. I'm I'm busy getting my shots up. And so, but the youngest one, you know, if anything, it's it's made him more conservative, right? Because he's looked around and thought, "What? Well, you're not a cat, right? Or you know, and he's not rude about it. It's not like he walks around and confronts people, but you know, you talk to this kid and he's like, "No, it has, if anything, it's it's reinforced in him the idea that um you know, he he'll he he'll come back and say, how was your what was the game like or whatever?" And he'll go, "Well, early days it was like um you know, they they stopped keeping score because we were winning." And so, you know, and then we had to give them the ball so that they you know, like they're playing believe that shit's real. I've heard you go on the playgrounds and oh my god, you go on the playgrounds and it's just like, well, you can't, you know, you don't want to you don't want to make people feel bad by winning. I'm thinking, well, I'm okay. I'm sorry, but someone's got to lose. Someone's got to win, right? And and you want to be on the win side as far as I'm concerned. So, you want people to learn how to lose properly and lose graciously and be kind and empathetic and all those things. But we really took it. I mean, I' I'd watched team sports for youth where, yeah, literally they wouldn't keep score, but you know who was keeping score was the kids. They knew exactly what the hell was going on, right? So, I don't know. Again, I'm uh disappearing down some rabbit hole that I don't know where it leads. Uh let's bring it back to the very thing that worries me about all of this is while China is um playing to win. We've had such an extended period of things being great being peaceful at least on the homeland that we were able to have these luxury beliefs where we don't have to teach people to be competitive. we can um I I think that many people really don't understand that the world is such that uh the strong will do as they will and the weak will suffer as they must because they've been protected from it for so long. But then eventually that protection wears out because you get a China who's just at a different cultural moment where they are playing to win. They don't give a [ __ ] if you want them to hand you the ball. They're not going to do it. They have a totally different cultural lens, right? uh and so I am very worried that given the importance from a day-to-day life perspective of being the reserve currency of being the dominant world power that we're going to lose that and people do not first of all they don't give up that easily. Uh and so this is the whole idea of thusidity strap for anybody that's hearing this for the first time. Thusidity trap was something from ancient Greece where they realized when you have a declining power and a rising power, the declining power does not want to acknowledge that they're no longer as strong as they once were. And so they expect the rising power to still show them difference. The rising power is like, "Hold on a second. I'm now your peer or maybe even surpassing you in some ways. And I expect you to acknowledge me as such." And they're both incapable of negotiating that. Well, and so they almost always end up in a kinetic war. And that's the part where I'm like because I'm looking back at history, I just can't shake off that this moment matters. Yeah. No, I I again I I agree with the the notion u maybe I'm one of those people that doesn't recognize that we're in decline like you just pointed out because I'm quite sure. But I will say what markers do you look at to decide whether we're in decline or not? Yeah. Um well again being fairly simplistic one of the things that I do believe is that and this probably you know is why I say like I'm not completely convinced that we're a nation in decline rather than saying oh we're not in decline or you know moving towards a new golden age is because I think it's just on a very simplistic level it's human nature right and stick with me on this is that you want things better for your kids right so my parents uh born uh quite some time ago. They're deceased now. Great people, wonderful people. Um 1919, 1920, right? So, you know, they there was some hardship in the way they grew up, right? They did not grow up in in easy environments. Um and they wanted it better for us, right? My grandparents, they came even out of more difficult um settings, right? And um they but they wanted it better for for my my parents. I want it better for my kids. Right? If you have that perception, right, you do reach a point where we're not spending our days searching for clean water and food, right? We've got more and more free time. We've got we've developed more comfortable lives. A certain point, you get to diminishing returns. I'm certainly willing to believe that, right? And so things become softer, become easier, and that's absolutely true. And so I think you get the more time you have to sit around and and and get all angsty and and worry about little things, right? Um yeah, the softer you become. I'm sitting here talking myself into god damn it, we're in decline. Well, here's the thing. I would say uh pick the KPIs. Like so I'll give you my handful of things that I look at. Uh okay, what's your GDP? So that's going to matter. um what is the uh cultural energy that you have in your country and most importantly what is your debt that is a big part of this and so even just looking at those three things but you can certainly add more military readiness um looking at those things it seems self-evident to me that we're in trouble our our debt is it it is the thing that animates me. So when I think about it's oversimplified, I'll be the first to acknowledge that. But if you were going to say what's the only thing that matters. In fact, as we were my producer and I were prepping for this episode, uh one of the questions I considered asking you was what what is the biggest threat facing the US? And so he asked me what do you think the biggest threat is facing the US? And I said debt. And so um we're here talking about China, but honestly the thing that I worry the most about is debt. It is because of debt that I think that we're having the collision now that we're having with China. If we weren't in the kind of precarious situation that we were in and we still had the ability to leverage leverage debt in order to bring back manufacturing here so that we could compete with China. And if anybody thinks that I'm crazy about China out manufacturing us, they make boats, ships, not all military, but this is manufacturing capabilities 232 times right more than we make. Yeah. So whoever controls the seas controls the world. So hey, when your pure competitor, perhaps adversary, outproduces you on the seas, the most important thing by 232x, you've got a problem. Yeah. Our ship building industry is is I don't want to say it's non-existent, but it's nowhere near where China's is. And they did that deliberately. Our technology, our capabilities, they have more vessels, right? on a military perspective, they have more they have more military vessels, but um our collectively our our capabilities, I would still argue, are somewhat stronger. So, it's not sometimes with with with with naval power, it's not just numbers, right? But, uh but they're getting there. Look on that. Well, no, it's I mean, look, you can throw out all the small craft you want. What does war three look like? If if US and China went to war, what would the primary battle weapon be? Weapon. Well, it' be I would argue it would be cyerspace. Interesting. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. There'll still be boots on the ground. There'll be, you know, kinetic war. There'll be Yeah. Yes. So, yes, sea power is I'm not I'm not saying by any means that sea power is not important. And that's why I think we we've been I've been talking about this for some time and and I know that the from a a Pentagon perspective, they understand the importance of it. Doesn't mean that things are getting done. I think drone warfare is the big thing. China controls that entire supply chain. Yeah, I I think that's drone warfare is certainly there. Uh the weaponization of space which has already happened. Um so those those and look the the drone capabilities we've already seen in real time in Ukraine how that can adjust uh your perspective, right? Whether it's armed drones or whether it's the ability to gather better intelligence and you know pre-plan operational activity. I think um but again going back to your point there's no doubt about it. People would be shocked to learn the speed with which they've created a navy that numerically is greater than the US is the largest in the world at this point. Um but can you imagine in China them ripping down somebody's Chinese flag waving out in front of their house? Oh no. That's that's the ad, you know, when you say something, well, that's the advantage of being in an authoritarian environment. I that people imagine that that is like the benefit. It's like it's like when you talked about Trump, if you say something that people think, well, you must be defending Trump. I'm not defending their regime and their their their style of government, but I'm saying, you know, from a efficiency perspective, you know, whether it's controlling population or um focusing resources on particular needs or or perceived requirements, they're living in an easier environment. But do you really think given what's happened to China over the last call it 35 years that they would internally feel like we suck? I think watching what happened to China over the last 35 years had to be one of the most miraculous things ever that they would all just be standing in amazement like I can't believe this is crazy. In like 1965 Yeah. 45 million people had just starved to death. Mhm. So from that to now arguably the most extraordinary metropolises anywhere on the planet, they have something like nine cities that are bigger than New York. Yeah. I mean, look, there's some underlying weaknesses in their system. There's no doubt. No doubt. But I'm saying if I'm Chinese and I'm looking at what we just did, right, and I'm an American. I remember this is like three years ago. A friend was like, "Oh, I just put an American flag up in front of my house." I said, "The first time you leave, someone's going to rip that down." And they did. And I was like, uh, our own flag has become a symbol of racism, which is crazy. Where were they, if I could ask? Here. Here in LA. Yeah. Toast. I mean, look, if they were in Texas, it's probably not going to happen. Not going to happen. Here. Here in LA. Gone. And And literally, it actually happened. This is not just a prognostication. So, that's the energy that I feel. Now, I'm an 80s baby, so I grew up like, yo, America's the greatest ever. Like, this is the place. And that energy has died. So, that's bad. We're 36 trillion dollars in debt and getting more in debt. That's bad. And so is that too because I mean I think you could go out there and you could ask a 100 people what's the biggest threat to the US and I think you're going to get a very small number of them talking about the debt, right? They're going to they're going to look at it in a in a different way. Maybe a regional player, say China, they'll say, "Uh, this is why I scream myself to sleep every night." But why do you think that's the case? I mean, I'm I'm genuinely because I I'll be very honest. If you had said if you had asked that question to me, I I wouldn't have come up with debt. I wouldn't have said I I you know, I'm aware of, you know, the the issue and and I mean, but I guess maybe it's because the way I look at things, I'm thinking of like targets, you know, what's our biggest threat? Oh, it's this. the, you know, and so I'm I'm I'm a little bit more um, you know, focused on on sort of that that immediate regional threat than debt. But I take your point, but I'm I'm just curious why why wouldn't people look at it and say, "Yeah, this is our number one threat." Uh, there are two things that destroy nations. Genghaskhan and debt. Sort of kidding. But, uh, of course, you can be invaded and that's going to take you out. So, uh, that is real. And if you had said, uh, China is our biggest. Or if you said, I think Trump is unhinged, and that's our biggest. Like, I would at least have a frame of reference, I'd be like, I get it. I disagree, but I get it. Right. Uh, debt though is simply because people don't understand. They don't understand money. That's why the average person isn't going to say it. Um, and the reason somebody like you, who's very plugged into it, still might not look at that and go, "This is our biggest thing." is because you and I probably share different base assumptions. So my base assumptions go like this. The reason America is tearing itself apart is because people no longer believe that their kids' lives will be better than theirs. Yeah. That that's like covenant. That is a covenant you cannot break if you want your country to do well. The reason people say it's the economy stupid is because it changes everything. If people feel like, "Oh my god, I'm I'm going to make more next year than I'm making this year. I'm going to be able to do better and cooler things. This is amazing. Oh, and by the way, I'm almost jealous of my kids because their lives are going to be even better than mine. Like now everybody feels good. And the cultural energy is we're winning. We're doing the right things. This is phenomenal. We're in a land of plenty. All is well. What ends up happening? You create that like this cycle is as old as time. So you get into that space because you understand the power of leverage. So the great irony of all of this is debt. the early stages are the very reason that America became America. We understood how to leverage debt. And Alexander Hamilton, who basically gave birth to the modern world economy, PS uh he was like, "Okay, listen. Debt is the thing that destroys nations, literally said it just point blank, the very thing that will cause a revolution in America, said Alexander Hamilton, is if you get in debt and you don't pay it off." So, I'm going to allow us as a country to get in debt. But I'm always going to have a mechanism by which that debt will be discharged. If you which we did not take advantage of, right? If you brought Alexander Hamilton here today, he'd be like, "Oh yeah, I get this is exactly how people react." Except you [ __ ] I warned you about the debt and you still did it. And so what ends up happening is the rich get richer and the poor get poor. That is a mechanism of debt because the only way to cover the debt is money printing. So you could say this is a money printing problem. You can say this is a debt problem. It's the same phenomenon. And so the assets go up in price. They become inaccessible to the masses. And so the elite class who already think they're better than you literally intellectually uh and think that they should be able to control your narrative. It's happening again literally even postco. I won't fractal us on that. But you've got the debt becomes it will rapidly just the interest just the interest on our debt will become the number one uh financial expense of the US government like the next 20 years or something. I mean this is not a distant future thing. This is a very soon thing. It's already number three. It's surpassed our spending on um military. It's nuts. So you've got it makes the rich rich or the poor poor and it makes it impossible for you to do something like fight a war, right? Uh yeah, people have been warning about this. There have been voices up on Capitol Hill that have talked about this over uh quite some time. But I guess I'm just I mean I think you Yeah, it I I I get what you're saying. I'm just thinking that okay, maybe it's too big an issue for people to put their heads around and given how we all get focused on what's right in front of us that it's not, you know, it's not an immediate threat. And so people are happy. It always ends in war. For real. This is why I uh I kid that I scream myself to sleep. But there are days where I hit a wall not of existential dread of just, oh, this is why nobody can pull out of it because one, look, I'm a reasonably bright guy. I am not the smartest guy around. I'm all too aware of that. Uh well, in this room, you're certainly the smartest guy. Overly kind. Uh it took me a long time to figure I still feel like I'm on the bottom rung of actually understanding how money works truly. And even that took me probably two years of like really trying to wrap my head around how does this connect to this? How does this uh so the average person is just Yeah. Let's say they're smart enough. They're not going to spend the time. It's way too much time. They're trying to love their kids, raise your kids, make me daily activities to keep you busy and you're focused and maybe something pops up on your radar because it's a it's a violent threat or it's, you know, it's more easily understood. Okay, look, we got this problem in in in the Middle East. Okay, that's a complex problem. But I I get it. Okay, it's a threat. Or Ukraine Russia conflict. Oh, okay. China even. I mean, I don't think people see down the road the the the the concern there, the threat there necessarily, but certainly easier than they do when you talk about uh money issues and the debt. Um, so I guess, you know, I I'm a somewhat cynical person when it comes to um Washington DC's ability to resolve problems. Oh, that makes two of us. So, yeah, I don't see this changing. That's the problem. This is why. So uh how does debt traditionally get resolved? Through war. War or revolution. So I'll give two examples. Uh debt got discharged in the French Revolution. So they took the rich people and literally cut their heads off. Uh so I guess I don't owe you money anymore because your [ __ ] head just rolled into a basket. Yeah. That that is way number one. So that's very common. And then way number two is World War II where in World War II you had Hitler who was like, "Oh, you're going to bury me under debt. Guess what? I'm just not going to pay it. Oh, NPS, I'll take Czechoslovakia." Yeah. Uh and when then I got Chuckle Slovakia without firing a shot, I realized, "Oh, you guys don't have the will to fight. You guys are fat and happy." I'm not. I'm [ __ ] hungry. I am driven. I'm going to take this over. He literally said, "How do we create our own American dream where people can just expand west?" like super jealous that Americans can do that. Uh so we're going to do that into Russia and we're just going to expand into Ukraine. It's going to be amazing and the German people are going to feel just like the Americans do. It's going to be incredible. We're going to love it. Part of Putin's mindset currently probably and we will certainly get to that. But to finish this thread so uh now you've got at the time the UK Britain is an empire. They're the fat and happy. They are the sterling is the reserve currency, the exact position that we're in now. But they've got an empire. They're everywhere and they're starting to realize, whoa, we're racking up a lot of, drum roll please, debt, trying to run this empire. And now we're fighting against the Germans. And oh my god, we are racking up so much debt with the Americans because they have way better geography and because nobody's bombing them and they're becoming a manufacturing powerhouse, uh, they're the ones. And so we're going to buy a bunch of ammunition from them, do it all on credit. And so from then till now, the pound has lost over 99% of its value. Okay, let that sink in. If you had a $100 in World War II, which is a long time ago, but not exactly that long ago, you would have a penny now. A little bit more than that, but not a lot. So it's like, yikes. This is uh this is how it happens. So you get broken. Even though England won the war, they still lost their status as reserve currency. They lost their entire empire. They were just like, "Well, I I guess we're now a small island again." Yeah. It's just that's how debt gets just discharged. It's just people don't have the will to fight anymore. And so they just FDR drove some very hard bargains too during the course of those negotiations. Exactly. Yeah. Exactly. And that's part of why Trump is, I think, lashing out at China right now. He realizes we sort of still have some cards and so I'm going to play them before they run out. Yeah, it's a cheery thought dude. I am the most optimistic person in my real life. Wait, really? Actually true. To the point people used to make fun of me for being Polyiana. Yeah. And so my whole life I've been like no no no no but this will work. No, no, but this will work. No, no. And then you just get punched in the face over and over and over with things that don't work. And my mission in life is to map what's real. Well, I would say you can't change um nothing's going to happen up on Capitol Hill in Washington DC to impact the the situation regarding the debt. Um if things remain the same right now, by I I think I've always been a big uh advocate for uh term limits because I think one of our problems is look, Dick Durban just retired, right? And and there's big big news. Oh, Dick Dur, what a statesman, right? He's been up on Capitol Hill for [ __ ] what, 44 years, 45 years. Um, that's a problem, dude. Mitch McConnell froze. Yeah. I was like, what the [ __ ] are we doing, right? This is crazy. Well, Biden fro froze. I mean, all these people, I mean, look, you listen occasionally to Chuck Schumer ramble. Um, there's there's a problem here. And I think part of it is not just the fact that, you know, it was never intended to send people up there to have a career so they could become multi-millionaires, which they're all doing, right? It's, you look at Bernie Sanders on his, you know, save the save the working class tour, right? And you think, well, okay, you you want to do an asset trace on Bernie and see how much money he's got is pretty impressive. Or how much AOC has made, you know, since she's been up on the hill. Uh, it's just a self-serving institution, right? So, if you have term limits, at least you rotate. And I think it might help do a couple of things. You you remove some of that special interest. Uh because if you if you got somebody who you think is going to be on the ways and means committee for the next 25 years, you're going to invest a lot of time in that person, you're going to develop very deep relations. If you if you've got maybe whatever give people eight years at the most up on Capitol Hill, you got to think about things a little bit differently. you know, if you're a special interest or a lobbying group. Um, and then I think it also maybe it promotes bigger, bolder, stronger, smarter, more difficult decisions, right? Because you're not going to be up there and you're not overly concerned about getting elected for the next, you know, 30 years. So, I think, you know, I guess my point being is if you want to change the debt issue to some degree, you got to change what impacts it the most. And that's our our the way that we structure who we send to Washington and for how long. Yes. And uh human psychology. So people want entitlements. They want what they want and they're going to vote for people short-term or long term that are going to get them what they want. And that's tough. And this is why uh it takes like real pain. Yeah. But if you're if you're not up there for a career, if you get elected, right, you're going to be I think anyway, maybe I'm completely wrong. I think you're going to be more inclined to tell people we got to change this. You we this is unsustainable and here's what it means. It's a little bit like I mean the current administration again I keep saying the same thing. Love Trump, hate Trump because anytime you mention Trump or the Trump administration, people immediately go into their corner, right? But what I'm what I mean there is look they they came out and said it's going to create some pain right now. Whether you love them or hate them, that's a pretty brave thing for somebody in a position of power to say, right? You got to ride this out a little bit, right? There's going to be some short-term pain here. And but I think, you know, rebalancing trade issues, it's going to have a long-term positive effect. Okay. Well, maybe you get that as far as entitlements go. Maybe you'll get somebody who says, "Okay, look, we can't keep doing this. How about we do this simple thing of increasing retirement age to 68 because the actuary tables have changed over the years, right? or 70 or something. We grandfathering. Who knows? But I think you will get people who are willing to at least speak the truth about some of these issues because they're not sitting there thinking, "My god, this is a good ride. I'm going to ride this son of a [ __ ] out for 40 years." I don't know. Fingers crossed, man. I I would love a diplomatic solution would be lovely. Speaking of diplomatic solutions, why have we not been able to stop the war in Russia, Ukraine? Because Putin doesn't want to. I mean I you know like I know the White House has made Zilinsky to be the villain in all of this right he is the invaded country. Um but Putin right now one of his Kremlin advisers was very I thought very clear talk about speaking the truth he said a couple weeks ago said why would Putin stop now right he sees the US backing away from Ukraine. He's making admittedly slow progress on the battlefield but it's progress. Is he really? Yeah he's I thought it was completely stalled. No it's not completely stalled. It's they are I mean again it's it's World War I progress right you're talking about yards and meters and and and in in territory taking one village you know over the course of a twoe offensive right whatever it might be but their perception is yeah we're we're doing this he's ordered the conscription of another 160,000 troops right um they just had the most devastating you know bombing on Keefe that they've had all year right and um heat you Uh he's he's you know again that the White House came out and said, "Well, we're not getting played." Well, okay, I get it. You know, you don't want to say you're getting played, but Putin is basically stalling, right? Whether you want to call that being played or not, I don't know. But I don't think he he has any interest really in peace right now because of those things. He he if he sees the the US saying we're going to walk away from this, you know, and and and Trump came out and said over the past, I think 24 hours, he said, "Look to Zilinski, you either solve for peace now or we're walking away and then you you can spend the next three years fighting and just lose your entire country." Putin's saying, "Goddamn right, let's give that a go." He's got a 3 to1 manpower advantage. he's managed to get past sanctions with the help of China um and certainly Iran in terms of the drone capabilities. Um so I think that's the problem and and they drew up a peace proposal over the past few days and presented it to Zilinsky and uh I think Witoff is going to talk in Moscow in the next couple of days. Um the peace proposal essentially gives Putin his key demands, right? um recognition of Crimea as Russian. Um let's freeze the battlefront on the existing alliance. So you're talking about 20 plus% of Ukraine and Russian occupation. Um guarantee that they'll never join NATO, right? I mean basically with every with the exception of maybe the idea that we'd have peacekeeping troops on the ground, they're essentially here's a plan. You know, we're giving in to Putin's demands. What the hell? Why isn't Zilinsky agreeing to it? Well, you may not like Zilinski, but if you were in his shoes, you probably wouldn't be inclined to agree to it. Why specifically? Because you're you're you're doing things that look, you've been fighting for three years, you've been invaded, and now you're just going to hand over all of this to Putin. That's what I mean. I mean, it's Do you think he'd be murdered by his own people if he negotiated? Well, I think if if he gave in, signed that peace plan, the other demand that that Putin has been making for the past three years is let's get rid of Zilinski, bring in somebody else. What he means by that is bring in somebody like Victor Orban in Hungary, a Kremlin friendly face. Uh so he would get that as well too. Yes. Because they would they would uh undoubtedly domestically say that's it. you know, let's have elections and get you out of here because you just gave away, you know, Crimea plus 20% of our of our uh country plus which is a very resource part of it. I mean, that's another reason why, you know, Putin, you know, eastern Ukraine from an agricultural perspective, from minerals and resources perspective. It's a very rich part of that country. So, I think he's, you know, Zalinsky understands plus also it's in their national charter that, you know, they will join NATO. They were promised that, you know, also isn't in their charter that you cannot let go of those territories. Yeah. Yeah. So, yeah, he he'd be gone, which again feeds into what Putin wants, right? And and so I think I'm just saying again, you can you can think that Zalinski is a a villain or you think Zilinski's, you know, an idiot or corrupt or whatever you want to. I mean this, you know, the the narrative turned pretty, you know, remarkably over the past 6 months from, you know, look at, you know, the Ukraine fighting and Zinsky fighting and everything. It turned to, well, he's the roadblock here. He's the he's the impediment to peace. Um, do you think that's reasonable in any way? Well, I I no, I look at it in the sense of, you know, what would I do if I was in charge of Ukraine? And I, you know, I'll be honest with you, I'd probably think the same way. I'm I'm not No, I can't sign up to this deal, right? I would rather cuz look, the US says we're going to walk away from this. All right, fine. I'll just, you know, I got to keep fighting because, you know, I'm going to I'm going to lose the country, you know, at some point if, you know, uh, one way or another, you know, they give up and they don't have peacekeeping troops in place in Ukraine and, you know, do we honestly think Putin's just going to say, "Okay, that's it. I'm good with with what I've got over a long period of time." I don't know. I don't think that's his mindset. So, that's the way I look at it from. So, I'm just saying in his shoes again, whether I think he's great or not, I can understand why he's doing what he's doing. I can understand why. And I, you know, and I get it. Look, the White House wants a deal. They just want to say, "Look, we told you we were going to secure a peace there quickly. So, you know, we want it from a domestic politics perspective, we want a deal, right? And so, easiest way to get a deal or to get Putin to the table is to give him what he wants. And then you gotta just try to figure out how to get Zilinsky to give up everything. So I get I get that. You know, once I heard that it was in their constitution that they couldn't give up that territory, uh I mean I guess Zullinsky could go to their parliament and pres or their I don't know if they have a parliamentary system. Yeah, he could go he could he could you could you could work uh internally to try to rewrite the constitution, right? There's some amendment process presumably. But imagine going to your country and or to your population and saying, "You people have suffered immeasurably because we were invaded by Putin's military." Um, and now I want to rewrite the Constitution so we can give them the territory. Yeah. I mean, listen, there is a point at which they fought so much and lost so many, they will do it. Uh, people agree to just about anything if they've suffered long enough. If they're so far on the back foot. Yeah. If But right now, it's it's still, you know, again, they're making some progress, but like I said, it's it's super slow. Who's making progress? The Russians. I mean, the Russian military. So, what I mean is is you're right. I mean, if they're if they were getting their ass kicked in a major way, sure, then your incentive is to say, "We got to stop this ass kicking, right?" But I think they look at it and they go, "Okay, you know, are we going to be losing US support?" Well, it seems that way, but is the EU stepping up in a bigger way. Well, it seems that way. So, maybe their calculus is, well, you know, right now, you know, we're just getting punched in the nose a little bit. You know, we're losing some, but maybe we can turn that around. Maybe. Who knows? But I I just think I get, you know, I get what they're thinking. You know, I don't have to agree with it or disagree with it. I'm just saying this is what I imagine that is is the impediment. And and again, from the US perspective, the Trump administration, I think they're they look at it more from a domestic politics perspective than a geopolitical perspective. How do you think this plays out if the US walks away eventually? Um, I think that the if if uh unless there's some unforeseen event, I think eventually Putin wins. He he ends up in Kev at some point. Um, I don't think that the EU can, particularly when it comes to air defense, um, I don't think that they can fill the gap if if the US were to say we're done. And if they do and they completely shut down all military aid, then yeah, maybe to your point, maybe Zilinsky at a certain point says, "Yeah, okay, I've read the tea leaves. You know, we're going to have to try to get this deal. Maybe this is the best deal we're going to get." Right. But right now, I don't think that's his calculation. Do you know um so I had literally never heard of this. I always thought Trump was misspeaking or just trying to be a dick when he said that um Zalinsky started the war. Like that seems super crazy to me. Uh during our live today, somebody pulled up a video um that purports that there was a ceasefire and the Ukrainians broke the ceasefire by shelling into I think the Dawnbass. Um any credence to that? Is that when was the ceasefire? Right before uh Putin invaded. Oh well, look, Putin was already in eastern Ukraine, right? He had proxy troops in eastern Ukraine for a number of years. He took Crimea back in what 2014. Um so um you know the the you know the the invasion the full invasion yeah sure that was an escalation but Putin was softening the target for some time and you know to your point about Hitler moving on Czechoslovakia. You know Putin took Crimea and what he got he got some angry memo from the Obama administration. Um, and I think he made the same calculation, but he's been look, he's had troops in South Asessia and Georgia for years and years and years, right? He's and he's talked about wanting to reform in some fashion the Soviet Union, you know, not entirely, right? He's not, you know, don't take him literally, but he means in some fashion, right? Um, he wants that buffer zone against NATO. Um, and people say, you know, it's it's it's the US and Ukraine's fault. it's the EU's fault because, you know, they talked about, you know, uh, Ukraine joining NATO and, you know, it it, you know, it became part of their charter that they would eventually join NATO and and so they're saying, well, it's their fault being aggressive. That's why Putin invaded, but, you know, I'm not signing up to that thought process. That sounds just ridiculous. Yeah, Putin invaded, right? I mean, it's he's the aggressor. He's the guy. He if you wanted peace, he could actually bring peace, right? he could actually if he if he you know but it's not in his you know it's not in his best interest right now so he's not going to do it. Um but you know was Ukraine corrupt you know has Ukraine been corrupt? Is that why you know for years they you know there was always a barrier to joining NATO because well look at this and well sure. Yeah. Yeah. But going all the way back to the beginning of our conversation you deal with what you got right and I don't know it it's it's interesting. I just don't think I don't think that the White House looks at this the way that traditionally um certainly in the US politicians or the Pentagon or pundits or others look at it, right? This east versus west calculation. Just does my base care. Yeah. Yeah. I said I was going to get a deal. Give me a a deal. A deal and uh let's move on. Right. Um I don't think Do you think this hurts him if he fails to get the deal ultimately? No. No. I think it's more you know what hurts him is if you know the economy goes sideways, right? Or you know we don't get a a decent deal with China and ships keep you know sitting in port and containers keep stacking up and you know small businesses you know get really you know um sideways. I think u that's what what hurts him. you know, Ukraine, Russia. I think it had its moment in the sun. Everybody was, you know, putting Ukraine flags on their front yard and I stand with Ukraine and, you know, the first year or so and and it became a rally and cry. Um, you know, I I just I think most people move on and I think they've they've kind of moved on. So, if he doesn't get a deal, I don't think it's really going to impact his, you know, his his uh polling numbers. Not like it would if if if the economy hits the skids. Yeah, that's for sure. Now, you've said that um he has some level of ambition to reunite the USSR. How worried should Europe be? Should they be arming themselves to the teeth? Like, how should they be thinking about it? Well, I think they are. Well, not to the teeth, but I mean, for them, look, Germany's, you know, agreed to ramp up their their defense spending significantly. 2%. 3%. Yeah. Yeah. They're going for their you and and that's People look at that go a 3%. It's it's it's a it's a psychological shift, right? And so, um, and I think they look at it and particularly, you know, the Baltics, they look at that and think he, you know, they look at it, again, it's it's it's the way that you try to interpret uh Netanyahu and Israel's moves, right? And if you don't at least say, okay, let me let me try to frame this in terms of how they think or or you know, the realities that they're facing, right? then you got a problem understanding what the other side is is thinking, right? It's a business negotiation, right? And I my company spends a lot of time gathering information on who's on the other side of the table, right? What are their plans and intentions and motivations, right? And and so you have to do that. Put yourself in their shoes and you think, "Okay, I get why the EU would would look at this differently than they do in Washington, right? They're right there." And it's all more visceral and and like you said, World War II wasn't that long ago. My dad fought in World War II. I mean, so you know, it's it's not that far removed, although it seems like it sometimes because we keep throwing around, oh, he's a Hitler, you know, I love that one. I mean, now Hitler apparently is just some guy you didn't like that much or you don't like or you don't trust or whatever. It's kind of lost its its uh its bite, you know. Um because we just throw it around. It probably happened with Genghaskhan, too, back in the day. Hey, he's like Genghask, you know. Now she's that guy was a whole different Oh my god. Like that that one's uh read about that if you want to understand the full breadth of the human experience, man. From uh what he did with the Silk Road was incredible. Good on you. Amazing. Brought a unification of basically the known world at that point. Oh, and by the way, you slaughtered your way to doing it. It's like, yo. Yeah. Yeah, that one's true. Well, it's like Stalin. It's like pole pot. It's like I we got a lot of examples out there that we could look at and see the the depths of of human behavior. Um but yeah, I I just think um the EU uh is in the process now of of building up their own defense capabilities because they view this differently than the US does. That's a good thing, right? I mean, that's because maybe that, you know, okay, fine. We, you know, to your point about debt and everything else, we've got to got to figure out ways to spend less, right? And so they should be taking on more of their uh spending, right? there's no reason why we should for decades support their social welfare systems because they don't have to spend on the defense, right? Uh it doesn't make any sense. So yeah, I'm again it's one of those opportunities that arises from things that initially look perhaps a little bit chaotic. Yeah, you brought up Netanyahu and trying to get inside of his mind. Um how do you think about that? It's uh I was going to say let's talk about the easy one. uh like this. Let's talk about something that's not controversial, right? Let's let's go right to the one we can solve here on the podcast. Yeah. How about we talk sports? How's that sound? There you go. Yeah. Um what do you think he's thinking? What's the play here? Should they be backing off at this point? Like what what's going on? Well, let's see. Uh uh Hamas, you know, they're all over the map. They they refused a week and a half ago, they refused the latest ceasefire proposal. Um, now they've put their own forward. I think they they gave it to the Egyptians in Cairo and said, "This is our latest proposal." Um, have you seen the details? Well, it it it provides for the release. I think it's a one-phase step. Basically, it provides for the release of all the remaining hostages and I think there's 59 hostages remaining and maybe half are alive, right? That's their best estimate at this point. Honestly, I don't think anybody really knows because I think I don't think Hamas has complete control over that anymore. I think they've lost control over it. When the hostages were taken, it was a mix of groups that took them, including just like criminal elements that happened to be engaged in this scamper across the border to kill people, right? So it was, you know, Islamic Jihad and it was Hamas and it was various, you know, uh, there's some family criminal organizations inside of Gaza. And so I don't think Hamas actually knows completely, but you know, maybe half our lives. So it it it the their proposal kamas's proposal is okay we'll release those in in one fa in the first phase basically one phase we'll have in exchange they haven't given I don't think yet they haven't given a specific number of Palestinian prisoners that they want released um it will likely be if anything is is true from past releases it'll be in the thousands maybe you know 1,000 1100 1200 something like that um and then there'll be a 5year truce. That's what they're, you know, calling for. That's all very optimistic. Um, a a re-engagement of humanitarian aid, right? Uh, which was for the most part stopped back in March. I think the the aid that goes into Gaza, um, the dirty secret there is most of it ends up with Hamas uh, for financial purposes. Then they resell it. uh they control doing it out that maintains their power, their grip on power. Um so they're very keen. They've been they've been having some cash problems. You know, the reports are that they haven't been able to pay their fighters uh in a timely basis. That's a problem. Although you can imagine with the devastation, you know, over the past year, they've also got a somewhat a bottomless well of new recruits that they can count on uh to replenish their base. So, um, but they're also saying, "We're not going to give up our weapons." So, there's no disarmament. And that's been a that's been a no-go for, um, for the Israelis for some time now. So, they're saying, "We're not going to give up our weapons." They may be putting that in there because they really don't care about, look, I think they feel like the only reason we haven't been completely destroyed as an organization is because we still have some hostages. So when you talk about leverage points, that's kind of their only leverage at this point. Um, so I think maybe there's there's some gamesmanship here where they throw that no, we're not giving up our weapons, and they're doing that because they know that it won't be accepted. So you look at that um, and look, the the Palestinian Authority, which has always been at odds with Kamas, they've come out and bered Kamas, said, "Just give up the the damn hostages. Move on, right? stop it. Um, meaning, you know, stop giving the IDF the reason to continue their occupation and their offensive on the ground and the the continued destruction that that causes and civilian casualties. It's a it's a god- aful situation. Um, but I think it's helpful if you, you know, you step back and say, "Okay, let me put myself in the mindset of of Hamas. Let me put myself in the mindset of the IDF. try to understand what their what their thinking is, right? Um um you know, you don't have to agree with one or the other. I'm just I'm just saying that's that's where it stands right now in terms of the latest proposal. Um I don't think it's going to fly. And then there's a lot of you know, there's domestic pressure on Netanyahu at home. You know, um he doesn't seem interested in bending to it. So I think he he feels as if his course of action here is to continue. Um maybe they get a deal with Hamas, maybe they don't. I think he's been pretty clear about that. If we don't, we're going to continue. Um they'll do everything they can to try to get those hostages back, but you know, um it's it's a goddamn mess and but then it has been for generations. So, you know, we tend to always approach every conflict like this and think, well, we've got to solve it without thinking, well, you know, is it solvable at the end of the day? Um, and then you got the Iranian regime sitting over the top of it, you know, pulling the strings on everybody from Hamas to the Houthis to Hzbollah to Islamic Jihad. Um, and so then you could argue, well, you can you can, you know, put lipstick on a pig, you know, and solve this little problem here, but are you solving the big problem? Because the Iranian regime is, you know, their stated objective is the removal of Israel. U, they've created these proxy groups with the same stated objective. So until you deal with the Iranian regime in some fashion, and the hope has always been that the population would rise up and do it internally, which it would be a great way for it to happen, obviously. So what are the odds? Not good. God, I sound I sound so cynical. Uh yeah, you know, we've been hoping for that for for a long time, right? They've had a couple of major protest movements. You know, there was never any real meaningful support to those movements. Um and you know but there's some indications that the you know the population not just the middle class or the educated population which you know has been uh more increasingly disgruntled with the regime in Iran for years now but they've always gotten their base from you know the outer outside the cities and the sort of the poor populations the agricultural side of things. There's some indications that those people are also starting to get fed up, right? Um, personally, I think the only way to do this is you got to keep the screws on as far as the economic sanctions go, right? Um, and if the Mullers feel like they're losing their grip in a serious way, then they'll they'll maybe change their mindset. But because that's really all they want, hold on power. You know, that's all any of them want. That's what Xi Jinping wants. That's what Putin wants. It's everybody, I guess, in charge. That's what they want. Now, it seemed for a while like people were hoping that um certainly that the that Hamas had gotten fat and happy and that they weren't going to be pushing an agenda, but if they're really underneath what Iran wants, is there any indication? I mean, it does certainly doesn't seem like it now, but what odds are there that Iran just we've had enough, we just want stability and they ease off the gas of we got to get rid of Israel. Yeah, that's that's a great point. I mean, it may be we may be seeing some of that right now because they have shown some willingness to talk about their nuclear program. Uh although they've said kind of like with Hamas saying we're not going to disarm, the Iranian regime has said, you know, we're not going to give up uranium enrichment. Not going to happen. Now, they got what six 650 pounds of enriched uranium at 60%. And getting from 60%, that's the heavy lift. Getting up to 60% is the heavy lift uh process. getting up to 90% or weapons grade purity on on that is that's a relatively quick process and they you know they appear to have uh at least according to people that you know are are monitoring this much closer but the IAEA and some others say look they basically got all the components they need for a bomb and so you know their breakout time is probably right around the corner frankly but they appear to be interested in having some dialogue there've been two going on three rounds of of discussions indirect discussions taking place between the US administration and the regime their foreign minister who is it Abasari. Um and so you know that's interesting right because they may be looking at this and thinking okay we've we've had our proxy groups take such a hit whether it's or the Houthis now and certainly Hamas that maybe it's time to step back a little bit. I don't think I don't think they're thinking is now we want peace and we're going to give up on our objective. I think they're probably from a strategic point of view thinking let's regroup, right? But we need some time. So where's the pressure coming from now? A Trump administration being more aggressive with sanctions again or just the quote unquote defeat in Palestine. I think it's I think it's the I think it's a combination of those things. I think they realize the Trump administration again to what we talked about earlier is keeping them guessing a little bit more. Um they're concerned. They're not quite sure where he's going with this. Um they're seeing some military buildup, right? We moved two carrier groups now out in the region. We've got B2 stealth bombers sitting on Diego Garcia, right? Um now you could say, okay, well that's to deal with the Houthis. or maybe it's to, you know, support some, you know, larger scale Israeliled offensive on their nuclear infrastructure in Iran. So, I think they're they're they're not quite sure, you know, again, the thing about, you know, the B administration, you know, was they were readable, they were consistent, you knew what they were going to do. There was never a surprise with with any of that. So, because you had a track record, you could look at Biden's eight years with Obama, right? And so I think that, you know, gave them some comfort, but so I think there's there's an element there. The sort of the degrading of their proxy groups certainly plays into it. Uh, you know, that the changeover in Syria, I mean, that was a, you know, a big surprise to everybody in the region, right? And not just the US or our allies. Everybody out there was like, "What the hell just happened?" I mean, it was like almost overnight. So, I think there's there's there's elements here that say, well, maybe now is a good time if we can get them. I wouldn't take our foot off the gas. That's what they want. They want a relief on the sanctions, but I'd keep the the foot on the gas there while we have these discussions and then see I'm not saying we should trust them down the road. But if we could get a deal that actually provides for verification on their facilities. We didn't have that with the 2015 JCPOA deal um because they were able to keep facilities off of the inspection list. So they they made that decision and we agreed with it, right? And then John Kerry would talk about, well, trust would verify. Well, sure you can verify the facilities that they allow you to look at, you know? So if we had a full transparency on that, then great, we should do that, right? You always want diplomacy. You always want dialogue. you always want talk. Um, so when I kind of denigrate Putin and talk about, you know, how this thing is includ I I think I I'm I'm pessimistic about a long-term solution out there just because history tells us it's probably not going to happen. Right now, having said that, we are seeing the Saudis, Jordanians, and others. Look, they're not going to be unhappy if the mullets go away, right? They'd be pretty happy to see a change in in that because what do they want? I mean, well, you know, they they in in in part they want a more stable region to allow them to focus on their economies to keep their populations happy. So, you know, things may be changing slightly and and providing a more optimistic, you know, landscape so that we could actually get something done. But um as far as an internal uprising inside of Iran, uh I don't think that's going to happen. Low odds. Yeah. Uh so the the theocracy side of Iran, um where are we at on that? Is the leader I forget his name. Is he how many? Yeah. How many? Yeah. Uh is he getting old? Like do we have any hope of like could pass away of natural causes and we don't have to worry or is there already people filling in behind him? Like how much of this is uh great man theory of history and how much is he goes away the next one just comes right in. It's the latter. I think could be a son. Um more problematically it could be if he and he is he is old. I mean they're already you know they've been dealing with this succession issue for a while now. Um there's been talk about his his uh son taking over, but the IRGC, the the Revolutionary Guard Corps, um which is sort of the the enforcer for the Mullers. Um and they also have their fingers in every aspect of Iranian government and the economy, right? They make a great the IRGC makes a great deal of money, right? It's it's there's an element of it that's just basically a financial enterprise. So, they've got real vested interest in staying in power. Um there is some talk that maybe they take if Kami dies then the RGC is more involved in determining the next leadership uh structure and and that's not necessarily a good thing right um so yeah there's there's been talk about it um wouldn't be surprised if all that happens you know within the next year so it's it's you know I don't wish I don't wish ill health on anybody not even but um I'm just saying that the reality is look he's getting older and he's reportedly had some health problems now you know Putin reportedly has had health problems there been people talking about him you know for some time but the intel is not all that good and he seems to be you know chugging along so u but that's always it's interesting it's always a calculation um when you're dealing with uh other countries particularly those that are hostile to your interests is evaluating the health of whoever's in charge and then understanding really digging into and spending a lot of time there's elements within the intel organizations that spend all their time evaluating what that next leadership structure looks like right uh what those relationships are like uh you know who is likely to land where and then you're maybe you're trying to set the table right establish relationships with people you think are it's you know it's it's fairly you know common sense I suppose but there's a lot of resource put into it all right join me in putting a tinfoil hat on for a second. Oh yeah, here we go. Uh, are we gonna talk UFOs? I hope so. No, you got a take, man. I know literally nothing about UFOs. Uh, but the when I look at the thing we were talking about at the beginning that you've got espionage, whether from China or somebody else, uh, that certainly Russia and China have realized that Americans are easy enough to sway their opinion through social media if nothing else. Uh and one of the most divisive things right now is Israel Palestine. Um when you look at the just radioactive like way that people clash over this, um does that just all feel natural or is there something sort of pushing that division? Well, there's certainly elements pushing it, right? And and part of it, look, Iranian the Iranian regime has a very active um cyber operation, right? disinformation campaigns. Um others, it's in the best interest, I guess the best way to put this, it's in the best interest of countries that aren't aligned with with the US or have our interests at heart um to create division and chaos, right? So whether they're doing it based on um politics, partisan politics, whether they're doing it based on race, right? whether they're doing it based on a geopolitical issue like the the Israel Palestine conflict. Um yeah, you can guarantee that some of what you're seeing out in social media, there's something underlying it, right? There's there's something bigger than that. It's not just some individual sitting there, you know, spouting off. You know, I'm I'm not saying that everybody's opinion is being driven by a a a nation state, but there are elements or groups within those intel services that are actively working to influence hearts and minds, right? Based on what they think to be easy targets, right? During BLM, that was an easy target. Man, we're going to throw out some some [ __ ] and see, you know, look at this. Now, we've generated people are, you know, uh and they're doing the same thing that like an influencer would do, right? that that that intel or disinformation unit in Russia, they're going, "Oh, look at that. We got 2,000 likes on this. Let's work that issue." Right? They're making the same calculations. I can't believe I never thought about there's like a social team over there that's checking stats. Yes. What's working? What's the engagement? How do we troll these guys? It's no different than a than a um like an advertising campaign. What's working? What's sticking? You know, who's watching? Are they looking at and just clicking through? I mean, this is what they they're doing. It's the same thing that you would do because it just makes sense. It's a lot easier in the old days when you wanted to influence arts and minds in that fashion, right? What would you do? Well, the media was radio, media was newspapers. So, maybe you go out and recruit a handful of uh of journalists, newspaper writers, and then you'd start seeding articles out there in the local press, right? And and they'd have like a a lean in a certain direction, right? You're trying to create or drive a narrative. And so, back then it was it was clunky. It was a heavy lift, right? let's build up a network of of journalists, you know, that we can use or radio individual. Let's get some of these things in there. It was slow process. Now, technology makes it so much easier. Spin them up. So much easier. And um and you know, as you pointed out, you know, earlier in in our conversation, people aren't inclined, right, whether it's in the US or overseas where you're trying to influence opinion, people aren't inclined to go, I wonder where this came from. You know, what was the ultimate what was the original source of this? just don't do it. So, usually you get a pretty quick hit. You know, given your background in the CIA, when you look at um the campus protests, I've heard a lot of people say like, "Oh my, these are organized. This is not authentic." Um does it give off like sta not staged but orchestrated vibes or does that seem truly ground up? Some of No, some of it's orchestrated. I don't I don't really believe uh at this stage I'll tell you why, but I don't necessarily believe that anything's really a grassroots movement anymore. I always I mean I hate to say it I you know okay fine if there's a local tiny little community issue and you're okay fine what I mean by that is um let's take a let's take an issue um mining we talked about mining earlier in regulatory policy very sensitive issue here in the states people don't you know most people don't want to mine in their backyard so I'm so shocked I know it is shocking surprising that diamond mine in Russia looks cool that's right how about a cobalt mine Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Let's dig up the local park. Um so but if you've got let's look down in in a place like Florida, right? U phosphate mining, right? Um now you can't do large scale agriculture in part without phosphate. You know, it's fertilizer basically a component. So um you know there there's always been you know real pressure on the the state house down in Florida for example to say no you know we don't want to do mining. stop that. We want to go after any any mine that's there. Um even though it's probably not in our best interest from a national perspective, economic or security perspective, uh to stop mining things that are critical to our interests, but it is in the interests of a place like China, right, or another country that um Morocco or wherever that that's big in phosphate. Um, and so you'll see a a grassroots grassroots movement. And then if you dig hard enough, you'll realize that what uh a place like or or at least the the the folks that think about this within the Chinese regime, what they realized some time ago was that it's very hard to to impact federal policy in in the US, right? going through DC and navigating that. It's not as difficult to influence local policies, city or state. I have some town council that, you know, you've got somebody lobbying for a a mine in that area. Well, I'll bet I could probably get that town council to change their opinion or the state house to change their opinion if I work this. Right. Right. So what I'm saying is then you'll get you'll get money coming in or you'll see you'll see the different you'll see linkages between finance or legal support or communication support and if you dig hard enough you'll realize that and again I'm not saying every case I'm not you know I'm not saying spooks behind every door but if you imagine that it's not in their best interests to have some impact and then think about well how are they going to do that well you drill down you realize that yes I and I can influence a town council a lot quicker than I can influence Washington DC. And if I get that town council to say, "No, absolutely not. We're not going to do any mining here. Um, they push it up to the state house, maybe you get something that's even broader in that state. That's a big win at a relatively low cost." And yet it started out by going, "Oh, look, the community is rising up and they're trying not to do this." And same with, you know, maybe oil and gas, right? You could argue the same thing. We've seen that over the years. And you know, I mean, I've been running an intelligence and investigations and security firm now for going on 24 plus years, right? So, we've seen a lot of things. And again, not to see a spook behind every corner, but you always have to imagine, okay, are there other interests that are, you know, that will benefit from this? And often times the answer is yes. And it's so again, I think um um I know it makes me sound uh paranoid, but it's just based on experience. Yeah. I mean, uh, if you're not making a blanket statement that it's everything, being aware of the fact that this kind of thing happens, I think is, uh, it makes more things in the world click into place. Yeah. Certainly when I look at the division and like you can, uh, feel when something's like really body. I mean, if you spend as much time on social media as I do, you start being like, hold on a second. Like, this comment feed feels so weird. um what is it about the clash between um Israel and Palestine that like lights this off? Like why are the Jewish people so often like well I forget who said it but uh might have been Douglas Murray. When people start calling out about the Jews, your society's in trouble and and that is just repeated over and over and over. Yeah. Um it's a a great and complex question uh to go before I do that I finish a a thought with the um question you had about the campus protests. So what I'm saying there is yeah some of it's just organic right sure you've got and some of it's informed uh organic you've got people genuinely concerned and and worried and they feel bad and they want to get out there. You got some people that are just there because they want to be part of a community, right? You got people that are like, "Yeah, sure. I'll be part of this, right?" And then and so they get to university and they, you know, it's like the old story of, you know, you send your kid off to Brown and they come back and after the first year and they hate capitalism, you know, and they want to tell you all about it and okay, fine. So, you've got some folks that just enjoy being part of that community and they want to get out there and beat a drum. Uh but then you've got a part that's definitely organized and whether it's you know um you know justice for Palestine or any other group that's out there is funding that goes into this. There's organization that goes into it. They you know it's just it's not just some uh well-meaning informed heartfelt you know kids that want to go out and protest this. There's there's something behind it. And so but it's but it's a combination of those things right and that's and and that's not being unreasonable to say that. And it's also um reasonable to say, well, it would be interesting to know who is behind these groups, right? And who where does the money come from? Where does the organizational ability come from? Who's driving them? Their knowledge of media, right? And and how do they all know what not to say, right? And and early days of the campus protests on this issue, you'd get kids saying all sorts of things. And then shortly thereafter, they got a little bit more buttoned up because somebody was driving that narrative and saying, "No, don't don't say that. In fact, don't even answer. you direct them to your campus media spokesperson, right, who will answer in a more informed fashion rather than saying, "Well, I just don't like them," right? Um, so yeah, and then and then you get the groups like I was walking down the streets of New York past a public library one time, big massive protest and again some very well-meaning people and then some who are there for, you know, other agendas and they're more organized and focused um and uh some anti-semitic, some not. Then you see signs like um you know Koreans for Palestine or queers for Palestine. And I thought, well, that's an interesting thought. Um, has anyone been to Gaza? And have you se seen what the the environment is like in in in some of those countries towards some of your own personal, you know, uh, well-meaning beliefs? I I just I'm having a hard time, you know, putting those contradictions together. So, uh, it is it it's it's fascinating. Um, I don't know what the spark is. There's, you know, when when it's gotten this deep and you're talking about so many years of animosity, I I have no idea. it's way above my pay grade to break down and understand what the you know what is it how because it'd be great if you could you know maybe if you get to that level then maybe you could actually find a solution um you know I I'm I'm very cynical that that ever gets resolved. So we'll kick the can down the road again. Get a ceasefire at some point I'm sure because it will be in one of their best interests to do it and then someone will blink and we'll get a deal. but you're just putting a band-aid on a sucking chest wound, right? You're not solving the problem. So, it's just uh one of those situations that arise from time to time that will have to over an extraordinarily long period of time play itself out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I that's very very unsatisfying as an answer. Um, I give I give a fair number of talks or speeches around the the country and and my wife, who's the greatest person I'll ever ever meet, um, she always says, "Try not to bum everybody out completely, right? Try to try to leave them smiling somehow, right?" And I'm like, I with a medley of show tunes or what do I do to to do that? Because, you know, the world is the way it is, right? I think it's a very resilient world. So to your point about well we just ride it out you know it we get these moments in time with these various locations and you get a flare up and we all imagine it's going to be the absolute worst that it's ever been or like the in civility and the partisan politics in the US. Oh my god, this is the worst it's ever been. No, it hasn't. You know, Civil War was pretty bad. Um so we've seen worse. Um I tend to maybe I'm just grasping on to optimism. I don't know. But I do think it's a very resilient world and you know things do work out because I think there's a certain survival instinct that kicks in. Sometimes it takes a lot. You like you said you got to hit the bottom but ultimately I think we find it. So I don't think I guess by that I mean I don't think we're heading to a nuclear confrontation anytime soon because humans will check themselves. Yeah. Yeah. I think so. Maybe if I'm What do you think about Iran? If they got a nuke, do you think that they would use it on Israel or do they understand that the response to that would be so severe that they're just I Yeah, I honestly other than just to be in a bigger position, I don't see what the pursuit is because if they drop a nuke on Israel, bro, it is game over. No, I agree with you and I think so I think you're on to the right point which is I think they're it cements their their position, right? It gives them leverage which everybody wants. Um and it um you know it kind of cements their ability to I don't I don't think necessarily to pursue the destruction of Israel. Um they've tried that for years now through their proxies, right? And I think what's happened with their proxy groups because it allowed for supposed deniability on their part um has surprised them to some degree. I think that the the aggressiveness um has um has caught them uh offguard and caused them to recalibrate. But I think I I don't think that they would use that. I think the danger is it creates a sort of a domino effect. The Saudis would certainly pursue it. We're already in conversations with the Saudis about their nuclear energy program. Yeah. Uh they've wanted a a civilian program for some time in part because they're setting the table. They're worried about, you know, what happens when Iran says, "Hey, we're a member of the club." And so you would get others in the region. Now it becomes more of a problem because now you're you're increasing the potential for a an event, a mistake, right? Something that you can't predict necessarily. Yeah. Um, so I think yeah, uh, that's that's the danger. Not that they get the the bomb and and the next day they drop it on Israel because I I agree with it. They want to stay in power. So yeah, I mean, if I'm So to your point, put yourself in their shoes. If I'm in their shoes, I know better than to drop the bomb. But I also know that uh it is a possibility that Israel continues to try to disrupt us. And if this escalates enough, I want to have that in my back pocket. I don't want to be in a position like the Ukraine where a stronger force can come in and invade them because they don't have. But yeah, from a nuclear proliferation standpoint, that strikes me as um very unal. Yeah, you would grow the the new club relatively quickly at that point in in terms of the regional actors and given the number of of conflict spots out in that region, that's a bad thing. So yeah, I mean I I agree with the idea that you we've got to we've got to stop them. we've got to in some fashion whether it's through a a better deal uh you know eventual relief from sanctions whatever it might be you know you're making decisions it's sometimes you choose it's operationally speaking sometimes you're taking the least worst you know operational choice right and yeah you're making information or decisions with imperfect information right but um I think it's right to pursue that to make sure that you know if we can we we get a deal now if we don't you know the option that's on the table right now is a military option [Music] and you know Israel has talked about well we would degrade them so that they can't you know it would push the breakout period like a year down the road really that's all you're pushing it you're going into a potential you know military confrontation that you can't predict an outcome to get one year you know relief uh so I'm not sure about that calculation. Yeah. What do you think about what's going on with the Houthis? So, another Iranian proxy. Uh, US has been unabashed about smashing them in the face. Um, where do you think that goes? Is this a thing that we're doing to curry favor with Europe? like why given that whatever if um Vance's math is correct and only 3% of our commerce goes through there um are we doing it as a signal to Iran like hey we're looking at you while we do this or well I think there's an element maybe a small element of that um look we're protecting international trade routes which is very important you know from a no matter who's in charge in in in the White House um that should be a key concern um is the the, you know, free travel of trade. Um, look, I tell you, the only country that hasn't gotten a problem in this is China. And, you know, the the Houthis came out early and said, "We won't attack Chinese flagged uh or owned vessels." And there's good intelligence, good reporting that shows that the Chinese uh again the the their intel apparatus in the PLA appear to have provided them with um targeting information. Yo. Yeah. So, okay. Because you ask yourself, well, why would the Houthis say, you know, we're going to back off of, you know, targeting any Chinese ships? Well, there's got to be some quid proquo. And, you know, if they're providing them with some assistance on identifying targets or at least providing clarity on what these vessels are, who's moving through the area, um, because, you know, the Houthis don't have the best, you know, naval traffic control systems. So, they're getting their information somewhere. And the reporting is that it it appears to be coming from the Chinese. And there's a there's a trade-off there, right? They there was one Chinese vessel attacked and um the Houthis came out immediately and said it was a mistake, right? It was a it was uh apparently had just transferred ownership to a Chinese entity. Uh I think it was still Panameanian flagged at the time. Um and that's it. That's the only one. And they they said sorry about that. So you look at at this and you think, okay, well um again, you know, um I'm not sure where I was going with that other than I just find it interesting that um you know, they always the the Xiinping and and his foreign ministry and others, they they want to portray themselves as as uh disinterested mediators of peace around the globe, right? We just want peace, right? Well, that's [ __ ] Of course, they're they've got their own specific interests, right? I mean, every country does. the US, which also sounds like the US's stance. Yeah, exactly. And so you, you know, people roll their eyes and go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, US is doing this, too, or whatever. Well, yeah, that's just the way it works, right? And so, but don't don't believe, you know, the Chinese regime when they say they're just interested in mediating global peace. They've got a hand in in just about everything, right? So, I think um it is interesting, but with the Houthis, I look, we've we've degraded their their weapons uh stockpiles pretty well so far. they've shown some uh pretty impressive resiliency, right, in continuing their their targeting, their attacks. Um, but that's a I think that's a minor issue, frankly. I I mean, it's it's occupying the military's focus to some degree, and it's certainly taking up time on signal chat groups. Who hasn't who hasn't sent air strike plans to their wives in the past? I know I have. Yeah. Um Yeah. Um, think about that, by the way. I think it's fire him immediately. No. Um, I you know what? I I I I question the the judgment of a number of the folks who were allowing themselves to be part of a signal chat group where they were talking about things like this. You've got government provided comms. They can be a little clunky at times. Um, you can discuss these things through approved channels. Uh, I get it. Everybody wants ease of communications, right? Uh Signal being a commercially available app. Some people will say, "Well, but it was behind a government firewall." And so I was like, um, you know, don't underestimate, you know, um, whether it's China, Russia, North Korea, Iran, or others with motivation and ability, their ability to access information that they're looking for, they want. It's an incredibly aggressive uh space. And so I think it was an awful mistake. I think they should have admitted it right off the bat. This was a mistake. They got very defensive and certainly he's gotten defensive over the second goround. Um I do I think he should be fired. Um you know above my pay grade. Do I think he should have been nominated in the first place? Eh, you know, also above my pay grade. I would I'd like I always like to see people with a lot of experience, a wide range of experience. Do I think he's the most experienced person that they could have tagged? No. But you know what were they looking for? They were looking for loyalty. you know, almost all those people that they've they put into those positions, one thing that they've got in common is they've been insanely loyal to Trump over the past first term and and then the intervening years. And I think they were after that first term, I think, you know, that was a priority. Who's going to who's going to stand with us regardless, right? And so, I get it. I understand why they were nominated. I'm not, you know, not sure that they've put the most experienced people in some of those positions. That's a very diplomatic way to put it, I suppose. Um, I do know you shouldn't be using no matter whether it's by a government firewall, not a commercially available app to uh communicate anything. And they're saying, look, it wasn't classified information. Okay. Yeah. I mean, maybe you're parsing words, you know, was it top secret? I don't know. But if you're referencing um air strikes or attack plans in any fashion, you know, not necessarily an attack plan as it's as it's technically referred to within the military, but you know, just keep your yap shut and talk through approved channels. That's shouldn't be that difficult. And it, you know, it erodess confidence to some degree amongst, you know, junior ranks. um if you're doing things it's it's like when people started writing books um when they got out of senior positions right uh in the military and intel community and you know eventually that creates you know whether you want it to or not or whether you believe it does it does create a certain mindset that says well they're talking you know why shouldn't I so then you get somebody at a junior rank somebody comes out of enlisted guy and says I'm going to write a book during my time in the SEALs or whatever um people coming out of the agency say I'm going to write a book about my time in the agency think, okay, but I think the same with this. They look at it and they think, well, that doesn't seem very buttoned up. So, you know, next time I've got to get a hold of somebody quickly, maybe I'll use Telegram or something. I I don't know. Anyway, that's it's a rambling answer to your question. Well, going uh to something that I think is potentially pretty um important. We had effectively an open border for a while. What do you how do you assess the level of danger? Should we be paranoid? Uh were foreign nationals coming across or was it just people seeking migrant work? It's a combination. People seeking a better life, people seeking, you know, immediate employment somewhere. Um you had people that were being trafficked. Um you had uh criminal elements, cartel elements. I'm sure that you had again, you know, you say things like this. I'm going to I'm going to say this. Look, you had a large number of of Chinese males coming across the border uh particularly in the uh San Diego sector. Were all of them PLA intel operatives? Of course not. Right. Would the PLA look at this and go, there's essentially an open border down there. It's an opportunity. So, doesn't cost us much. Let's use this opportunity to maybe insert some folks who it could be very innocuous. we want you to do a wrecky on a on a facility or tell us something that you find of interest uh related to the power grid or you know look at the water treatment facility there and you know northern California you know wherever um it doesn't have to be give me the nuclear codes right to be of interest to an operation like the Chinese regime so um yeah certainly there were some people that came across that had nefarious intent in that regard certainly the cartels were were getting their people across um what what would the cartel's goal be? Well, there that's revenue streams, right? So, human trafficking. Um they were making uh massive amounts of money off of uh floor fees and and um just the the the it's a large scale business, so you're moving people across whether they're Chinese, whether they're from Haiti, whether they're from Venezuela, whether it doesn't matter. Um there's a revenue stream there that is fairly well organized and they were making billions of dollars off of this. And then you got the drug smuggling which has always been sort of their number one, you know, uh revenue stream. And that's actually as the numbers have dried up. There were 95% fewer crossings in March of this year than there were the previous year. Right? So the numbers have dropped dramatically. And what does that mean? Well, that means the cartels have to adapt, right? because they're all about cash, making money. So now they focus more on what they've always been their bread and butter, which is the movement of drugs. And we're already seeing more uh drug busts, more effort by the operation by the cartel operations to uh move gear across the border. So that's not a surprise. Um yeah, if if you don't have a secure border, um you can't as a as a government, as a federal government tell your citizens that you're doing your primary job, which is keeping them safe. You just can't because you don't know who's coming in, right? Maybe one person. Well, as we saw from 9/11, you don't need that many people, right? Um to create a a whole hell of a lot of tragedy. So, you know, I I it never struck me as as something that should be difficult to understand. And it clearly it wasn't a problem. You know, that in short order, the current administration has enacted policies that have stopped the flow, have dissuaded people from making the trip to begin with. And in reality, for a lot of those people, protecting them, right? because a lot of those people end up on bad situations or they get trafficked or whatever it may be and then they get turned around and sent home now and they're not inclined to make that trip. So, um I'm all about border security, do it the right way. I don't know, you know, about, you know, the issue of okay, well, what's the Constitution say about this particular issue? I you know so the you know the the insane amount of attention that they've given to this cat down in El Salvador that was deported strikes me as perhaps the left you know I get what they're saying about this is this is why we think that was a bad idea or needs to be rectified. I just think they picked the wrong target. So anyway um yeah I I I'm glad to see the the added security on the border. I think it's I think it's very important because again look every other nation does this right? Um, even the EU is now rethinking their open border policies. They have to. They have to. Yeah. Um, if you offer entitlements or and or you have a culture like having open borders is going to be a problem. People will for sure come for the entitlements. Yeah. And then also there's just integrity to the culture. If you at all care uh about your culture, you want to make sure that the people that are coming in are going to adapt to the culture, right? They have to look like you, but they have to share values. And if you don't share values, man, you're in real trouble. Yeah. And that's the whole issue of assimilation. Um, you know, if you don't if you don't expect or insist or or create an environment uh where you expect the incoming people to to assimilate, I agree with you 100%. You got a serious problem. And now the the UK as an example, they actually celebrated sort of because I think they thought in their minds, look, how self-righteous are we? were celebrating diversity, but they were telling people, "No, you're if you're coming here from wherever, um, you know, pick pick a place, Afghanistan, Iraq, wherever, then you're Iraqi and you should celebrate that, right?" And they almost for years had this policy and they had a name for it, I forget, but it was like, you know, celebrate where you come from, you know, and maybe eventually, okay, great, you're part of the UK society, but that wasn't their primary focus. And they've created this environment now where there's a there's a lot of folks there who just don't feel invested in the game, right? They don't feel part of the UK because they were told they don't have to be, right? And and it wasn't in their, you know, their makeup to that to be their first thought was, okay, I'm here now. I've got to I've got to be part of this. Uh and when they're told otherwise, then sure, great. you know, um, and so I I it's it's no surprise. But anyway, um, I think, you know, does the Trump administration sometimes do things, whether it's with immigration or other issues, where it's a self-inflicted wound because they don't necessarily message it properly. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe. So, they they are a move fast and break things kind of organization yet and they're going to drive some people nuts. Yeah. I mean, we'll see if he if they make mistakes and they rectify it, great. if they just move fast and break things, those things that they break are going to build up over time and they're going to lose their credibility. They will lose the midterms and then it's game over. So, we'll see. I I don't think Trump is constitutionally capable of reigning it in. Uh so, we'll see. But I also think that people end up barking up the wrong trees. Um the thing with immigration that I am just absolutely shocked by. So I this is always a dangerous thing to talk about, but uh when I look at America and I look at uh the formation of Israel, I see basically very similar things where you've got one group of people that come somewhere where there are already people uh and slowly over time you just bring more of your people and whether it's through smallpox like in the case of just absolutely weakening the Native Americans and then uh just warfare and then if you want to talk about how we uh under Pulk, President Pulk ended up taking from sea to shining sea, uh we also had to take over a huge swath of what would otherwise be Mexico. And even while it was happening, our own generals were like, "This is a stain that America will never be able to wash off itself." And of course, over time, people just forget. Yeah. And it's like, "These are the borders. It is what it is." And everybody moves forward. So, I could not be more proud to be an American. But I also am not going to lie to myself about how America came to be America, right? Uh and so same thing with Israel. It's like, hey, it exists now. Good luck getting it to not exist. Like they're going to fight really hard. Yeah. Uh but similar thing. Yes. They uh that was their ancestral land. But it wasn't just them. And so they just I mean it it is a game that works. They kept importing people until they got to the point where they are economically powerful which then allows you to be uh politically powerful and then all of a sudden you have a state and so to pretend that that didn't happen is deranging and I don't understand why people don't acknowledge that people are going to feel some kind of way about that. Yeah. But then you have to say but it is what it is. We are here and so if you attack we are going to retaliate. But that's why I'm like hey UK, hey Europe, guess what? look at how this played out with America to just let a whole bunch of people come into your country. Uh over time they go, "Hey, we've now imported enough people. This is a great place. Really like it." Yeah. Uh and we have a different value system and so we're going to do things our way. Yeah. Uh it's not like Americans came over and adopted the ways of the Native Americans. They came over with their culture intact, said [ __ ] you. Like we're prepared to fight for this. They did and won. And so if this happened time and time again, right? Literally, this is history. And so, if you are cool with that game, fine. But people are acting like that's not how this stuff plays out over time. And I'm shocked by that. I'm just like, uh, what's happening right now? Yeah. I don't know why they would imagine that it doesn't. Maybe they think that we're in such a special time that we've stopped that pattern of history and now we can just do something differently. And I think that's probably, look, every generation thinks they're going to do things better, right? They always think they're going to solve a problem better. Um, you know, look at Afghanistan, right? We knew exactly what the problems were that the Soviet Union had when they were in Afghanistan. And then we just turned right around and and repeated that, right? We couldn't control the the cities, right? Or sorry, we couldn't control the countryside. And we couldn't, you know, figure out the the fraud element within the government. You couldn't figure out how to create more of a federal system. You couldn't figure out, you know, how to find leaders that could, you know, hold things together. Um it was a real it's a real sh and we knew that from a very very recent case study with the Soviet Union. You went in there thinking we're going to do it because it's us. Yeah. Right. We're going to do it better. Yeah. And they're going to love this. They're going to love democracy. Right. People do not understand frame of reference. Yeah. People have a frame of reference. They grew up in a certain system and that changes their perception of a million little things and you coming over and saying do it like this. It just won't feel right. This is why the game is if you want to take over a territory is you have to uh import enough people or if you don't mind ruling by just absolute hammer fist force uh then you can do uh like Genghaskhan where him and Alexander the Great would both be like oh like we love you guys and this is amazing but by the way we just slaughtered so many of your people and this exact took over right and so you can [ __ ] around and find out if you want, but if you're going to do it through the nonviolent means, you have to import the people that already have that value set and then it will work. Yeah. And but you're not going to switch people's value sets. That's how you get insurgents. And so it's just like looking at the world that seems to repeat over and over and over and over and over. Yeah. Uh well, I think we see it a little bit in in in Ukraine uh with Russ uh Putin's like let's let's set the table. let's get people in, you know, and he's always considered Ukraine basically part of Russia anyway, but his feeling has been that look, I'm going to have enough people in here who are on my side that eventually I'm not going to need a military, you know, occupying every major urban center. Um because you're already now you've you now you've kind of fallen under my umbrella and that'll be fine. So I You identify as Russian. You identify as Russian. Yeah. So u yeah I I don't know. I think people don't do a very good job and by that I mean people just don't learn from um history very well and I think it is because it's human nature to think we can do it better and maybe there's some benefit in that it kind of gives you that confidence to try something perhaps but I think for the most part we we don't um we don't look at patterns uh however you put it we don't look at at at um case studies that are staring us in the face and I think that's a real problem we're looking at you look at Syria now Syria's got every bit of opportunity to fall into a Libya situation. Libya is a horrible hot mess. So, right after you Assad fell and Assad was a butcher. His dad was a butcher. Um, so rightly so, people were going, "Yay, Assad fell, you know, and oh, now we're going to get we're going to get this federal government and they're going to respect all, you know, religions and it's going to be great and uh, you know, fine. I get the optimism or the desire for optimism, but we probably want to be a little more pragmatic." Yeah. Even just looking at America, the founding of America was uh shocking to me in that uh it was something like six or eight years after uh in I think eight after no more like 12 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence. I think that's correct. 1776 to uh 88 is when we finally ratified the Constitution. So you got 12 years 12 years before uh we actually become a country from the time that we say okay we're willing to fight for this. So I didn't realize even after the war ended how many years it took him like another four years to actually like get it locked down and get the states to agree. And when I looked at that I was like oh damn like this really is a brutal process and it's so fragile through that whole time that um creating another American experiment I don't think is going to happen very easily. Yeah I no I I agree it's a it's a sort of a conflation of events. um that have to all fall together in and almost in a in a in a in a perfect storm. But I guess but I think that um we were on a very bad path um with the open border essentially open border policy. I don't know the previous administration would refer to it that way, but it's basically what it was. you know, when you're talking about millions of people coming across on a on a constant basis and you're trying to not just from a national security perspective or from, you know, the criminal element or whatever that may be embedded in there and and it's wrong to talk about all those people and say, you know, getting all the, you know, worse people, of course not. You're getting a lot of people who just actually want something better, right? and they're living in very awful conditions and they see this and they they see sort of a welcome sign out there and like you said they see entitlements and they think great why wouldn't I make this trip but um you know I think that you can't you can't sustain that over a period of time and people always say well we're a country based on migration or immigrants and yeah that's true but um there was also a sense of well in the sense of um sure we had we had there was it was more No, you had no entitlements. It was no entitlements. It was less I would argue it was a little bit less diversity. A lot of European, you know, migration. Even like set that aside for a second. Let's say it was the world's most diverse thing ever. And yes, we clearly were founded on uh immigrants for sure. However, it was so different than what people mean by immigrants today. Uh you rolled up and first of all, you the odds of you dying like 30% or something on the journey on the journey. So it's like you might not even make it. Yeah. Uh you get there. no entitlements whatsoever. So, this is a if you can make it here, you can make it anywhere kind of thing. Yeah. Uh if the weather didn't get you, if you didn't starve to death, uh you were going to have to potentially fight depending on how early you come over. Uh because Native Americans were not exactly like, "Hey, welcome." Uh so, not after the first few encounters. Yeah. That this may not be going the way we wanted to. So, it's like that is a very different kind of immigrant. Yeah. I think look, I think I think also to your point about you know, the the way that the country was built, you know, going way back in time, it's a lot messier, right? Whether we're talking about the history of the Middle East or we're talking about the formation of the US, whether we're talking about the the you know, slavery, it's a lot messier than people would would want to necessarily think about, right? It's it's um you know, where did slavery start? Who was involved in that, right? Well, it wasn't just a a bunch of white southerners, right? And that it's got a lot longer of a history, right? You look at the, you know, American Indians and their use of slaves and taking of slaves. And you look at Africa and how they they were, you know, at the front. So that's that's an example. You look at the Middle East and you think about, you know, how how problematic it all is, right? In terms of it's not it doesn't lend itself, I guess, is what I'm saying, to an easy solution. It's not one side good, one side bad, right? It's it's but we don't have the time or the the interest or the inclination to to say, "Okay, it's a complex problem. let me understand all sides of it, right? Um, so then it becomes, oh my god, I'm I'm embarrassed about the formation of the US. I'm so embarrassed and we have to we have to suffer and and and apologize on a constant basis. [ __ ] it. I'm not apologizing. I think I'm, you know, it's it's a it is what it is. It's not there's some ugliness to it and I think we should all learn about it and you should study it, right? You don't whitewash it, but at the same time, you don't sit around full of angst, right? I mean, from my perspective, you you try to make things better, right? You do what you can in your little orbit to to be a good person, to try to help people, to try to be the best you can. I'm not going to sit around and angst over, you know, how the US was formed. Um, or, you know, the past. I'm going to be aware of it and, you know, you work hard to make sure that you do the right thing. But, yeah. Anyway, and and I I I don't know where I was going with that other than I thought it was your like uplifting show, Mike. I like it. That's what it was. God damn it. It was uplifting, wasn't it? It is. See, you you did your wife very proud. Yeah. Nobody Nobody Nobody ever said that about Mike before. He's uplifting. Um Yeah. Anyway, no, you look, life is simple, right? You got you I tell this to our boys all the time. You don't have that many options on the decision tree, right? Don't make life more difficult than it is, right? Um, you got to oftenimes make decisions with less than perfect information, but always, you know, you try to do the right thing, whether it's for religious purposes or not, regardless of whether you believe or not, hey, you're playing the odds. You're, you know, maybe you get up there, you were an, you know, atheist all your life. You you die, you find out that there is something bigger up there. Well, if you tried your best during your life to be nice and good and do the best you can, hey, it paid off. You know, maybe whatever's up there will will reward that and you that's great. If not, then that doesn't matter, right? But you still did the right thing or tried to do the right thing. It's not that tough. And then you work hard. And the one of the few goddamn things you can control in life is how hard you work, right? Um, you know, I tell that to to uh the middle boy all the time. He's a basketball player. He loves basketball. Has worked very hard at it. He's never going to be 6'10, but god damn it, that kid works harder than anybody else on that team, right? And always has and wherever he's at, whatever program he's in. And you can control that, right? And and same with the other kids, you can you can make that effort and always and there'll be a place for you if you just keep that in mind and it's and it doesn't break your back working harder than most because a lot of people don't work that hard, right? And you know, we've populated the world with with enough average people, right? So I think if you're a parent, you're trying to raise kids, you got to set the bar higher. Say, I'm not here to raise average, right? That's do what I can. I'm not expecting Olympians. I'm not expecting, you know, that that's not the point. But you got to whatever it is that sparks you, you got to work as hard as you possibly can on that because that's that's what that's what everybody deserves, right? You need to do that uh to make a mark or to leave a make a difference, right? Life's short. So, you got to work hard. I love it, man. Where can people keep up with you? Um, well, they can come by the Idaho compound, just knock on the door, say hello. We'll pour some bourbon. Um, it there's uh the X or the what used to be known as Twitter. uh by everybody's favorite uh technologist Elon Musk I guess is uh uh ATM MB company man and then uh the company is Portman Square Group. It's an intel and investigations and security services firm should you ever need that. Um and then uh I hope people will will uh pay attention to the president's daily brief. It's our uh podcast every day in the morning for about 20 minutes in the afternoon for 10 minutes. It's the PDB. Uh, and we basically just highlight three or four critical stories around the globe. We try not to tell you how to think about them. We just tell you what's happening. You guys can think about it the way you want to. Um, and we have uh at uh President's Daily Brief is our YouTube channel and so you can get all the episodes there and our weekend show that has guests and and insight. I appreciate you letting me bang on. I realize I've just taken 30 minutes to talk about, you know, how to get in touch with me. Great. But anyway, that's it. Yeah. Awesome. All right, everybody. If you haven't already, be sure to subscribe. And until next time, my friends, be legendary. Take care. Peace. If you like this conversation, check out this episode to learn more. Tomorrow, the president is going to get a briefing from the CIA on his desk. What should be in that briefing? That's a great question. Uh, it's it's going to be uh a different briefing than it was yesterday, which is it goes without saying, but at the same time,