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Tucker Carlson: State of America, leaving Fox News, Media Control, Politics, and more

December 01, 2023 / 02:09:08

This episode features Tucker Carlson discussing his departure from Fox News, the motivations behind his new independent journalism, and the current state of American society. Key topics include corporate media influence, political dynamics, and societal cohesion.

Tucker Carlson shares his experience of being fired from Fox News, stating he was never given a clear reason for the decision. He speculates on the various factors that might have led to his dismissal and reflects on the pressures from advertisers and corporate interests that shape news coverage.

The conversation shifts to the broader implications of American society, with Carlson expressing concerns about the disproportionate influence of affluent, educated individuals on public discourse. He argues that this leads to a disconnect from the real issues facing the majority of Americans.

Carlson also discusses the importance of national cohesion and the need for a shared understanding of what it means to be American. He emphasizes that without a common identity, society risks fragmentation and conflict.

The episode concludes with Carlson outlining his mission as an independent journalist, aiming to provide honest perspectives and engage with a global audience on pressing issues.

TL;DR

Tucker Carlson discusses his firing from Fox News, societal issues, and his mission as an independent journalist.

Video

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this is Sax's big day there he is oh
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there's T oh look at the smile on Sax's
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face this is the greatest day in the
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history of the all in look at how happy
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s
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is s by the way I'm I'm not ashamed of
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that come on I'm honored oh wa
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s getting this heated up quickly how
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threatened do you feel right now this is
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the highest rated host in in cable
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history this is the world's true
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greatest moderator exactly yeah no doubt
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no doubt absolutely Zach where is this
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in relation to your marriage and the
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birth of your children don't ask it's
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right up there up there he's like what
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children it is for
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me let your winners
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[Music]
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ride
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David and instead we open source it to
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the fans and they've just gone
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[Music]
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crazy all right everybody we've got got
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an amazing guest for you today here on
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the Allin podcast Sachs his dream has
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come true Tucker Carlson is with us
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today you know Tucker he was the number
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one TV host for much of the past decade
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including last year when shockingly he
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was fired from Fox News on April 24th
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reason for the firing it's never been
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pinned down but maybe we'll get into it
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today and we're going to find out what
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is motivating a post Fox News Tucker who
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has obviously launched show on X the
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platform formerly known as Twitter he's
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done 42 episodes and Counting he's had
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everybody from Donald Trump Andrew Tate
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Dave
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pory and the newly elected president of
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Argentina on the program so welcome to
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the all-in podcast Tucker
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Carlson thank you for having me it is it
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is a legit honor to be here two-part
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question to kick us off here first have
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you figured out why you were fired from
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Fox and let's get into that a bit and
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second given that you were the number
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one host from for much of the past
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decade and I think probably in the top
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five highest paid of all time what's
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motivating you now what's the mission
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here as an independent journalist take
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those two questions in whichever order
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you like I I don't know why I was fired
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I mean it kind of is an Agatha Christie
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story there are like so many suspects
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you know what I mean um but I I don't
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know I was never told I can only
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speculate there were lot of different
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things going on I had a lot of opinions
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that were
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unpopular you know with people who might
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have influenced my show getting canceled
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so I I I really don't know I will say
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you know right after it happened people
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said well how can they fire the top Guy
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and because that's what it is I'm
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certainly not the first high-rated host
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to get fired it's not only about ratings
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there a lot of different factors it's a
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big company you all have worked for and
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run big companies and you know it's
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there's a lot of complicated stuff going
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on and um and it's never exactly clear
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you know why things happen the way they
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do but I was not shocked by it I mean I
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was shocked by it in a short term sense
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I didn't expect to have my show canceled
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that morning but um but I was not
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shocked at all uh when I thought about
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it for a minute I'd expected that you
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know you can't kind of give the finger
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to
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everybody um and persist in a in a
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corporate job so I no hard feelings I
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and I and in fact I said that on the
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call when I received the news it's it's
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not my company
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and I never felt like I had a right to
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be on the air I was I was working at the
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pleasure of the family that runs the
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company who treated me very well and and
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um and they wanted me off and so I was
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off did you ever have moments where
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somebody Taps you on the shoulder and
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says Advertiser XYZ is getting
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uncomfortable or we're trying to lend
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this new Advertiser and right they want
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you to shape things in one re did you
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ever feel that pressure is that or is
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that just a thing that is kind of like a
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boogeyman that doesn't actually exist oh
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it well it it not only exists it defines
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news coverage especially on Pharma you
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know because Pharma is the biggest
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Advertiser in television as I know you
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know and so for sure I mean if you know
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fizer is sponsoring your show you're not
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going to question the V I mean it's kind
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of that simple uh so absolutely and of
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course that's why they're the biggest
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advertisers so they can shape news
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coverage I mean that's that's the point
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but um I personally never had a single
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person say to me don't say this that I
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recall I haven't thought about it too
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much but that certainly I was there 14
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years and I I didn't have that
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experience
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regularly or at all really that I can
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remember and and I think you know my
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producers may have been told that but it
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it didn't ever get to me because I was
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always really clear which is I I always
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said out loud to the supervisors there
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you know I work for your company I don't
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own this network all I can control is
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what I say if you don't like what I say
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don't have me on TV but as long as I'm
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on TV I'm going to say what I think is
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true and in a million cas cases I said
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only part of what I think not because of
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my employer but just because you
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shouldn't actually say everything you
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think I mean I have some crackpot views
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too or I have resentments that I didn't
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want to work out on the air I mean I did
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you know you're strain yourself and you
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want to as you do in your personal life
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but on no question of principle did I
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ever pull back because I just I wouldn't
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do that and again I was just super clear
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if you don't like what I'm saying take
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me off the air but I'm not going to you
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know tow a line and because I was so
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clear about that I I just think they
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didn't think it was worth having some
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kind of dispute with me and to their
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great credit for the time that I was
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there and I said this many times in
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public like I took positions on the
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Ukraine war on the covid vaccine on the
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co lockdowns among other issues that I
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think you know I've been V Vindicated on
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pretty conclusively on the origins of Co
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and all of those were super unpopular on
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January 6th which was so hated at the
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company where I worked that people a
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number of people including on air people
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four that I can think of resigned in
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protest test over my over me suggesting
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that actually was more complicated than
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it looked and there were a bunch of
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federal agents in the crowd how can you
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say that are you claiming a false flag
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well no not I wouldn't use that phrase
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but like this is something weird going
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on here well I've been Vindicated on
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that that sounds like I'm bragging I'm
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not I'm just stating
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factually that uh I said things that
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were truly hated by a lot of the people
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who worked there and they let me keep
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saying them so it's kind of hard to
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complain really at this point right
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again it's not company just from a
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business standpoint I think it's weird
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for a company to fire their top
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performer and to do so without giving
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any notes I mean if any of us had a
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superstar executive or a superstar
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engineer like a 100x
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engineer working at one of our companies
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and like day in and day out they were
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you know hitting every Milestone and
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crushing it like if you had a problem
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with them you would give them a note you
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would just like try to say hey can we
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just like so I just think from like a
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business standpoint it's so weird it
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just seems like self-destructive and I
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think it was I mean their ratings really
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cratered in the Wake right of making
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this change maybe they've come back a
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little bit but I don't think it's ever
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been the same I just think it's a crazy
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way to operate a business so yeah it's
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their right I mean they can do whatever
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they want but I don't understand it as a
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way of doing business well I don't
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understand it as a way of living either
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I mean you know you everybody in the
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course of life whether is a a parent or
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an employer or just a friend has to
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deliver uncomfortable news or disagree
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with with someone that you deal with and
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you have a moral obligation to explain
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the disagreement you you can't just you
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know Levy the penalty and leave it at
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that you have to explain why you're
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doing that and and I think that's it's
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it's incumbent on us morally to do that
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I wasn't that mad about it actually
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because I know the rules of that
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particular business which are are really
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harsh and and I've been in it you know
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my whole life and so I've seen a lot of
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people as talented or more talented than
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I meet bad ends and in you know for
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reasons that I thought were not
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justified and and I I know them all
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really well so I you you work in a
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business like that you know what it is
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you know the black car is going to show
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up at 3: a.m. and toach you to lanca and
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that's just what it is you know what I
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mean you can't kind of whine about it
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you know well how much of it was the you
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know this is a family-owned
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business and the patriarch obviously
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pioneered opinion-based you know
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journalism entertainment commentary and
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the younger ones maybe were on the other
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side of the political aisle and maybe
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were not as I don't know Cutthroat or
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maybe didn't share the same philosophy
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of uh their dad what was your
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relationship like with the the new
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generation with rert Etc and how much
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did that play into it do you think well
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my my relationship with the father and
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son who are directly involved in in that
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company was from my perspective very
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strong and um I will say this about the
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murdocks they're very polite I mean
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they're really kind of very Anglo almost
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elaborately polite in a way that I'm not
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mocking I'm complimenting and um they're
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not confrontational they're not nasty in
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the way that they deal with people
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directly and and I prefer that as sort
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of a way of communicating with people so
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I got along with them very very well I
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always liked them and they were very
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nice to me elaborately nice to me and
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always gave me assurances of my right to
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say what I thought was was true and so
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again I can only speculate I will say
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though and you see this with Trump
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especially
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I don't think I'm anywhere near as
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divisive As Trump obviously I'm not as
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powerful As Trump I'm not the figure
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Trump is but one thing that maybe Trump
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and I have in common is were really
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disliked by a certain set of people you
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know affluent people Highly Educated
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people people who work at NOS government
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Finance you know really kind of hate a
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certain brand of politics so it's not
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being conservative you can be
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conservative in the sort of you know I
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work at Ko or Heritage or I you know we
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need to get back to free trade or
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whatever that kind of thing the Mega
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night Forum policy that's all fine but
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if you start asking questions like well
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why doesn't our country act in its own
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interest there's something about that
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that's uniquely offensive to them and to
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that whole class of people now I could
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not have more contempt or loathing for
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those people having grown up among them
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I know how repulsive they are so you
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know their their hatred of me is I wear
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as a badge of honor it actually makes me
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happy but it's hard to take I would say
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I me again I'm I'm just speculating in
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my specific case but I know more broadly
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like it's very hard to have lunch at the
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Four Seasons in
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Jackson during the winter because
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there's some private Equity wife who's
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going to scream at you on your way to
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the men's room because that world hates
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you and so if you live in that world and
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you're employing someone like me you
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know you hear about it I guess that's my
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point you hear about it like what that
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guy's a
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Nazi like who wants to deal with that I
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want to actually pull this thread I
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would love your perspective on the state
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of American society just less on the
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political spectrum of Republican versus
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Democrat but just just observe for us
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Tucker what do you see in American
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society where are we as a society what
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has happened what is happening well this
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isn't an 8 Hour podcast I could actually
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give you my very lengthy theories and
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views on that but I will just say one
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thing that's I've been thinking about a
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lot recently I just have been had my
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college roommate staying at my house and
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um you know we're of course the same age
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known each other our whole adult lives
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he's been very successful and he lives
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in a you know an enclave of very very
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successful people and and so we're we're
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familiar with this culture and we were
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talking about American and he's from an
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immigrant family so he's got a kind of
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broader perspect I would argue a broader
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perspective on like America he's 54 as I
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am and we talking about how obviously
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this is not a democracy it's not even a
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sort of decent uh fa simile of a
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democracy it's to call it a democracy is
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like ridiculous actually but it's even
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worse than that our politics and not
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just our politics but our public
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conversation reflects the very specific
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and parochial concerns of a tiny tiny
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group of people which is middle-aged
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affluent women who tend to be very angry
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and tend to um mostly with their
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husbands but probably for other reasons
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too and exercise this like wildly
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disproportionate power over what we can
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talk about and think about and and the
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rules that the rest of us live by it's
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just kind of amazing and he happens to
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live in Jackson Wyoming so and I go
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there you know to ski and to fish and I
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have for a very long time and I always
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say to him I can't go anymore cuz I
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yelled at at lunch over my elk chili or
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in the lift line or whatever or at the
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you know Westside Market literally a a
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relative of mine yelled at me while
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buying bananas in the you know the
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Westside Market she lives there and I'm
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thinking what is it about this group of
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people that hates me so much when again
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I know them really well I'm related in
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some cases to them so and I'm not quite
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sure but I just I I see our politics and
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our concerns which if you take three
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steps back are like insanely picky like
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trans black lives matter well I never
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said they didn't but like if that's your
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main public policy objective to
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celebrate trans black lives in a country
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of 360 million people it's got a lot of
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big problems you are not seeing the
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whole picture so like what is that and
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what it is again is the disproportionate
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influence of a class of people and their
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Neurosis I wouldn't even say policy
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concerns but like there are things
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they're worried about and their weird
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personal ticks and like the result of
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years of therapy and ssris on their
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brains like that kind of controls our
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whole conversation and my friend was
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saying because he's really smart he's
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like yeah but the good news is this
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can't last because it's just too stupid
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and at some point very soon the country
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is going to revert to the place that all
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countries begin which is in a
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conversation about things that matter
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like who comprises the population do we
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have enough water where are we on energy
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exactly how are we going to manage these
00:14:01
complex relationships with other
00:14:03
countries like the things that you know
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the stuff of government the stuff of
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resour of well of of course resources
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but like just the basic questions that
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should dominate the consciousness of any
00:14:14
of any country and should dominate our
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public conversation it's like our public
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obsessions are getting increasingly
00:14:20
irrelevant actually increasingly it's
00:14:23
like crazy as our problems get bigger
00:14:26
conversation the conversation becomes
00:14:28
more in as the problems get bigger thank
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you exactly so when you look at that
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that cohort's disproportionate impact
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and then you translated for example last
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night there was um I guess like a almost
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Riot protest when folks were trying to
00:14:41
light the Christmas tree in
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Rockefeller Center I guess and there was
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like a huge Pro Hamas I think somebody
00:14:49
checked me if that's is wrong protest
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and then people were pushing back on the
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cops and all of this stuff and all these
00:14:54
folks were trying to do was just like
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the Christmas tree can you connect the
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do how does that Cort get to it no but
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it it's actually a branch from the same
00:15:04
tree Christmas tree in this case um
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because that whole conversation well I
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think it's interesting and I think it's
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you know geopolitically significant and
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and I've you know been to those
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countries and I know people there so I'm
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like interested in it and there's a lot
00:15:17
to care about and be interested in but
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the displacement of all of our public
00:15:22
passions onto a conflict in a foreign
00:15:25
country however important that conflict
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may be really kind of tells you a lot
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it's like in other words yeah I care
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what's happening between Israel and
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Hamas I have views on it which are
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probably pretty mainstream views
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whatever I don't have any very
00:15:39
interesting views on it but it it's a
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little weird for your entire country
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thousands of miles away to be so
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preoccupied with that conflict that they
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miss big history changing events
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happening like in their own country and
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I think that's again a species of the
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same problem we are unable to the the
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problems that confront us are so big
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that we can't deal with them and I and
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actually my wife and I had this
00:16:01
conversation the other night I was for
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years a magazine writer and I have to
00:16:04
file every Friday I work for Bill
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Crystal at the Weekly Standard and
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obviously I regret that but it was
00:16:09
interesting at the time and I have to
00:16:10
file the story every week and and I'd
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stay up all night because I'm very lazy
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and I put stuff off and I'd stay up
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every Thursday night all night and my
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had recall it's going to the pr you know
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it's going to the printing press in
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Pennsylvania this was back when it was
00:16:22
in print and you got to file it and
00:16:25
right around 8:30 a.m. on Friday morning
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I would have this overwhelm in urge to
00:16:29
rearrange the books on my shelves in my
00:16:31
library by title or by subject I like
00:16:34
have all these weird kind of like
00:16:36
librarian fantasies about rearranging
00:16:38
books which in know on a normal day like
00:16:41
why would you do that and better things
00:16:42
to do but as my problems mounted and I
00:16:45
couldn't like write the lead I wanted I
00:16:48
would transfer all my anxiety onto
00:16:50
something I felt I could control or that
00:16:51
was of lower Stakes less consequence and
00:16:54
I think that's kind of what we're seeing
00:16:56
a little bit like we care more about
00:16:58
Foreign Wars and trans lives as like the
00:17:02
obvious things that hold our society
00:17:04
together start to fall apart cuz like
00:17:06
how do you even deal with that am I I
00:17:08
don't know if I'm being very articulate
00:17:10
but that's what's happen sense what do
00:17:12
you put on the top of that list of
00:17:13
things we should be focused on tuer oh
00:17:15
God I mean but but from my perspective
00:17:18
by far one two three this is what
00:17:20
America needs to put its energy on it's
00:17:22
not even close National cohesion and by
00:17:25
which I mean something specific what
00:17:27
does the majority of the country have in
00:17:29
common with one another because look if
00:17:31
it it it the Arc of the last Century's
00:17:34
his American history is super super
00:17:36
interesting so you have this massive
00:17:38
influx of immigration you know the Ellis
00:17:41
Island generation late uh
00:17:45
18th 19th early 20th century and it's
00:17:49
both good and bad we only remember the
00:17:50
good but there was a lot of social
00:17:51
volatility like a lot like the mayor of
00:17:53
Chicago got shot in his house there was
00:17:55
bombings on Wall Street like the whole
00:17:57
the wobblies the the anarchists like the
00:17:59
foot soldiers that were were immigrants
00:18:01
working class European immigrants and
00:18:04
part of the problem was there were just
00:18:05
a lot of immigrants and I mean Saku and
00:18:08
Vetti you know who shot the shot the
00:18:11
clerk in uh was it Brockton Mass anyway
00:18:14
it was in M outside Boston they had been
00:18:16
in the country for just a few years and
00:18:18
they immediately got sucked into radical
00:18:19
politics well why was that well because
00:18:21
they weren't kind of bought in or rooted
00:18:23
in or hadn't been fully assimilated into
00:18:25
American society so then you have the
00:18:27
first world war and we basically shut
00:18:28
down immigration and we have this period
00:18:30
of settling we're like all Americans
00:18:32
let's think through our Civic religion
00:18:34
what ties us together and then that
00:18:36
leads into to October of 29 and you do
00:18:38
have this National crisis that lasts for
00:18:40
more than a decade and we didn't blow up
00:18:42
and we had a successful you know the CCC
00:18:44
we like had these big programs which
00:18:46
I'll say this as a conservative kind of
00:18:48
worked in keeping people fed and focused
00:18:51
it gave them purpose kept the country
00:18:53
from from collapsing during the Great
00:18:55
Depression if that happened now when
00:18:58
when there is no broad agreement on what
00:18:59
it means to be an American no agreement
00:19:01
at all on what we all have in common I
00:19:03
don't think we can withstand it actually
00:19:05
I really don't and I'm not even
00:19:07
convinced it matters as much what that
00:19:10
Civic religion is as it does that we
00:19:12
have one if we don't have anything that
00:19:14
ties us together when that day comes and
00:19:18
you know what I mean when the economic
00:19:20
crisis comes because it's coming like
00:19:22
what's that going to look like it's
00:19:23
going to be very scary and I so that's
00:19:26
what I'm most worried about by far how
00:19:28
do you define national cohesion I guess
00:19:30
maybe then like what are the few
00:19:31
elements that you think America needs to
00:19:33
agree on as a as a majority wake me up
00:19:36
from a deep sleep and ask me what it
00:19:38
means to be an American okay and then do
00:19:40
the same to a thousand other people and
00:19:42
we'll just do a survey on it and do the
00:19:44
majority of those people give the same
00:19:46
answer and if they don't like so this is
00:19:50
okay this I mean I have all so many
00:19:52
theories God don't I'm I'm going to
00:19:53
control myself but I would just say one
00:19:54
other thing which is we overestimate
00:19:57
people ability to metabolize change it's
00:20:01
you know I'm not like a strict darwinist
00:20:03
or anything but I do sort of believe
00:20:04
that over time people adapt to their
00:20:06
environment and that you know in US is
00:20:10
you most of our abiles are inborn like
00:20:12
that's just true sorry I have dogs I
00:20:13
know that and people just haven't you
00:20:17
know the world didn't change that much
00:20:18
from you know 460 or whatever the
00:20:21
sacking of Rome until the Renaissance it
00:20:23
just didn't and then the Industrial
00:20:25
Revolution to now has been like such
00:20:27
massive change that is driving people
00:20:28
insane people can't handle Relentless
00:20:31
change and technologists love Relentless
00:20:33
change and I like a lot of technologists
00:20:36
a couple are really good friends of mine
00:20:37
but their anomalies a lot of them are
00:20:39
literally autistic I'm not attacking
00:20:41
them I'm praising them but they're
00:20:42
different from most people you know
00:20:45
right but you know like they can handle
00:20:47
it they can like they want a world
00:20:49
that's totally different from today's
00:20:51
world tomorrow they flux they they they
00:20:53
thrive in that flux they like they do
00:20:55
right but they
00:20:57
don't they don't understand how rare
00:20:59
they are and if you impose that on a
00:21:02
society and you don't ever have a period
00:21:05
where you pause and let things settle
00:21:07
you will blow up that society and the
00:21:09
Chinese who I don't admire for many
00:21:10
things at all uh know this and I admire
00:21:14
that about them they think that change
00:21:15
for it its own sake is dangerous now
00:21:17
they think it's dangerous to their power
00:21:18
and they're absolutely right but it's
00:21:19
also dangerous just to like the idea of
00:21:21
a society what is a society and so um
00:21:25
anyway I can go on and on and on but
00:21:27
that that's my main concern let me
00:21:29
propose a theory and see if you react to
00:21:31
it I think that there's a big
00:21:33
orientation in society where it's
00:21:36
constantly about trying to shift the
00:21:38
power dynamics that everyone always
00:21:40
feels like they don't have something
00:21:41
that someone else has and that other
00:21:44
person that has it for some
00:21:46
reason um is advantaged in a way that to
00:21:49
them always feels unfair and everyone
00:21:52
feels this way everyone that's right
00:21:53
you're you're the top of the food chain
00:21:55
you feel like someone else has something
00:21:57
you don't have and it's unfair and the
00:21:59
system is set up that way no matter
00:22:00
where you sit and as a result of that F
00:22:03
and and by the way this goes back I get
00:22:05
I get whack super philosophical on this
00:22:07
stuff but like buddhism's always had
00:22:08
this point that like the desire that
00:22:10
humans have is the one thing that causes
00:22:13
all of societal suffering Behavior
00:22:16
everything but it all comes down to this
00:22:17
it's that you see that someone else has
00:22:19
something you desire it and then you
00:22:21
want to change the dynamic of how the
00:22:23
system how Society is organized to uh to
00:22:26
fix that the thing technology if you
00:22:29
think back the Catapult gave an
00:22:30
advantage to an army that allowed them
00:22:32
to win in a war so did the rifle so did
00:22:35
the nuclear bomb that ultimately
00:22:37
technology was the enabling force that
00:22:39
allowed a rapid shift in power dynamics
00:22:42
and all technology ultimately creates
00:22:44
leverage for the creator of the
00:22:46
technology initially and then it
00:22:47
diffuses to everyone but that is perhaps
00:22:50
why I this is a a theory I have which is
00:22:53
that there's generally pessimism towards
00:22:56
technology because it creates unfair
00:22:59
advantages that shift the power Dynamic
00:23:01
too quickly yes um and too
00:23:03
advantageously and it's also why I think
00:23:05
you don't hear a lot of support for
00:23:06
technology from most of society because
00:23:08
technology creators are such a small
00:23:10
percentage of society so I don't know if
00:23:13
that that resonates with your point but
00:23:14
for me it's
00:23:15
always I think that's really smart and I
00:23:17
think it's indisputably true ABS
00:23:20
absolutely I will say you're making an
00:23:23
argument in addition to many other
00:23:25
things against tribalism because
00:23:28
tribalism
00:23:29
accentuates these pre-existing impulses
00:23:32
in people which again like all impulses
00:23:34
are just inborn like the human nature is
00:23:36
immutable so let's just start there it
00:23:38
cannot be changed AI will not change
00:23:40
human nature it'll change everything but
00:23:41
but human nature and you know envy and
00:23:46
you know the fact that the fact that
00:23:49
Prosperity is a relative measure above
00:23:52
starvation so it's like there's a famous
00:23:54
Russian proverb like you know I've got a
00:23:57
cow my neighbor has a cow he gets a cow
00:24:00
now he has two cows I kill his cow right
00:24:03
totally right it's just right so so but
00:24:06
but tribalism especially in a country
00:24:08
like ours which as noted doesn't have a
00:24:12
working majority of people with obvious
00:24:14
connection to each other it really
00:24:18
really exacerbates that a lot and
00:24:21
because it makes it more obvious so it's
00:24:22
not so all of a sudden it's not just
00:24:24
like hey the smart kids are richer they
00:24:26
have two cows it's it's like the Jews
00:24:28
are richer or the Indians are richer or
00:24:30
the whites are richer or whatever you
00:24:32
know it's like just name the group and
00:24:35
that once you go down that road you know
00:24:37
it's it that that leads to violence and
00:24:40
mass violence actually a lot of people
00:24:42
listening right now Tucker are probably
00:24:45
a little bit confused hearing you talk
00:24:47
about cohesion of the country when most
00:24:49
people would look at uh you know the
00:24:51
tribalism as almost most manifested in
00:24:56
cable news you and Rachel mat every
00:24:58
night we're you know number one and
00:24:59
number two in the ratings taking either
00:25:01
side of the tribe so is this something
00:25:03
that's evolved and how did your time and
00:25:05
cable news inform you to this because
00:25:08
most people would say like wait isn't
00:25:10
Tucker and Rachel like isn't that aren't
00:25:12
those those the two tribe leaders I
00:25:14
think I think there are dumb people who
00:25:15
think that um but no here's the
00:25:18
difference my My Views um wait you
00:25:20
talking about me oh no I'm not including
00:25:22
you that I'm not including you no I'm
00:25:24
not including you no no no no sh fits
00:25:28
I'm ask onal of the audience thing to
00:25:31
say I'm sorry it's all good it's all
00:25:33
good sucker why should you be any
00:25:35
different than the other
00:25:37
panelists no I I love and not only do I
00:25:40
love I don't always love but I certainly
00:25:43
think that reason disagreement is
00:25:45
essential it's the alternative to
00:25:47
Violence by the way that's what that is
00:25:49
debate and politics are the alternative
00:25:51
violence you get two choices we're going
00:25:52
to do it by arguing about it or we're
00:25:55
going to do it by force okay so so I
00:25:57
absolutely think it's essential to
00:25:58
debate things um because if we don't
00:26:01
then we just have to shoot each other
00:26:02
and I'm against that but that's very
00:26:05
different from tribalism because
00:26:08
tribalism is based on things that you
00:26:11
can't change so for example in 2002 I
00:26:14
hosted a show on CNN and it was the
00:26:16
runup to the war in Iraq I was
00:26:18
uncomfortable with the idea that we
00:26:19
would be invading Iraq to respond to an
00:26:22
attack on America that had nothing to do
00:26:24
with Iraq I did think that didn't make
00:26:25
sense but I was sold on the idea finally
00:26:28
by someone and I foolishly uh pared the
00:26:31
bush administration's line on that so I
00:26:33
was a proar person for a time then I
00:26:36
went to Iraq and I changed my views
00:26:38
completely so I I switched sides
00:26:40
completely and I wound up on the other
00:26:41
side anti-war in Iraq and that took
00:26:44
about a week I I was born a white man
00:26:48
you were born whatever you are
00:26:49
everyone's born whatever they are that
00:26:51
can't change so if we Stoke division
00:26:54
along lines that can't be changed then
00:26:57
we're really at a culdesac our
00:26:59
differences can never be resolved you
00:27:01
will always be what you are you can't
00:27:03
change it and the same for me and so
00:27:06
those are the things that wind up
00:27:07
becoming generational conflicts Civil
00:27:10
Wars Rwanda and so I've always been
00:27:13
against that my entire life and my
00:27:15
entire time on Fox I argued against that
00:27:17
I think affirmative action is completely
00:27:18
not only immoral because it's an insult
00:27:21
to the idea of America which is like the
00:27:23
people who do the best get the most but
00:27:26
it is also a recipe over time for
00:27:29
violence and I made that case I've made
00:27:32
that case every single day you know
00:27:35
since David and I had lunch 30 years ago
00:27:37
I've never not thought that I've always
00:27:39
had the Dr Seuss view of race relations
00:27:42
which is we should deemphasize race and
00:27:46
Elevate you know Merit achievement hard
00:27:49
work character the things that we can
00:27:51
control and um and but the other side
00:27:54
has gone and by the way liberals used to
00:27:55
agree with me that used to be a liberal
00:27:57
position within my lifetime and then all
00:27:59
of a sudden became a Nazi position and I
00:28:03
you know that's just a manipulation of
00:28:04
language but the truth is on the race
00:28:07
stuff which is what matters over time if
00:28:09
you convince people to hate others on
00:28:10
the basis of their race you've committed
00:28:12
a massive sin and you've done a lot to
00:28:13
wreck our country that's coming from the
00:28:15
left I'm sorry that's just true just to
00:28:17
connect these ideas I think that is a
00:28:18
major source of our division is one of
00:28:21
the reasons why people have a hard time
00:28:24
saying what it means to be an American
00:28:26
is because there are dueling visions of
00:28:28
what it means to be an American the left
00:28:30
has been trying to change or rewrite
00:28:32
American history so for example the key
00:28:35
year in American history the founding of
00:28:37
the nation was not 1776 with the
00:28:39
Declaration of Independence it was 1619
00:28:42
right this is the base of the whole 1619
00:28:45
project of the New York Times is that
00:28:47
the founding of the nation began with
00:28:48
the importation of Slavery to the new
00:28:50
world that was the key year and so I
00:28:53
think there's been an effort for a long
00:28:54
time on the part of the left to rewrite
00:28:56
what it means to be an American and and
00:28:58
to rewrite American history it's
00:29:00
actually in a weird way it's the
00:29:02
opposite of what dong shaing did in
00:29:04
China where dung basically he flipped
00:29:07
the the doctrine over there from
00:29:09
communism to capitalism he didn't
00:29:11
outright declare it he said that you
00:29:14
know it doesn't matter whether a cat is
00:29:16
is white or black as long as it catches
00:29:17
mice and they didn't change the name
00:29:19
they didn't change the party it's still
00:29:22
the Chinese Communist party they didn't
00:29:23
change the flag but he did a hot swap at
00:29:25
the back end to capitalism
00:29:28
and you know they changed what the
00:29:29
country was about in that economically
00:29:32
it worked out great for them I think in
00:29:34
a similar way in the United States they
00:29:36
haven't changed the flag they haven't
00:29:37
changed the name but there is an attempt
00:29:39
to hot swap the back end of what it
00:29:41
means to be an American and I think this
00:29:44
is the root of the conflict I mean I
00:29:46
agree with that completely and I don't
00:29:48
think we've thought through what it
00:29:50
means to
00:29:51
change you know out of out of many one
00:29:55
to out of one many I I think that's um
00:29:59
we've set ourselves up for something
00:30:01
really really scary for again for for
00:30:03
violent conflict cuz I don't see how
00:30:05
that that resolves itself you know you
00:30:08
wise people understand this in a diverse
00:30:11
Society plural society whatever you call
00:30:13
it in society where you know you got a
00:30:14
lot of different people with a lot of
00:30:15
different backgrounds and shades and
00:30:16
religions and all this stuff you need to
00:30:19
deemphasize the things that divide us
00:30:22
inherently and emphasize the things that
00:30:24
unite us like that's not hard and it's
00:30:27
it's also so obvious that if you're not
00:30:29
doing it my first question is why are
00:30:31
you not doing that I mean why are you
00:30:32
not and and that kind of explains the
00:30:35
true loathing that I have for the people
00:30:37
in charge on both sides because like if
00:30:40
you did that in your household with your
00:30:43
children your kids would be in rehab or
00:30:45
jail or dead it's that obvious like you
00:30:48
would never do that to your kids so why
00:30:50
would you do that to your population
00:30:52
seriously freeberg you had a question
00:30:54
well where does responsibility lie there
00:30:55
Tucker what's the mechanism for doing
00:30:57
that CU we often and I
00:31:00
find in conversations everyone says the
00:31:03
government should and I often question
00:31:05
why the government should
00:31:07
anything in my in my life in in in my
00:31:11
social settings in How I Live how I do
00:31:16
business does the government the federal
00:31:19
government in the United States have a
00:31:20
role in responsibility to do what what
00:31:24
you're suggesting we need to do in the
00:31:25
United States or is it the media or is
00:31:29
it social leaders or is it Business
00:31:33
Leaders or is it local governments who
00:31:35
is responsible ultimately for creating
00:31:37
the social cohesion necessary for the US
00:31:40
to enter a new era of prosperity and and
00:31:44
why is that the right group to be
00:31:46
responsible well look I would say well I
00:31:50
it's a great question and I would say
00:31:51
New Era of pro era of prosperity I don't
00:31:54
think that's really the goal we have
00:31:56
prosperity um and I think it's a real
00:31:58
question as to
00:31:59
whether but do people want Pro I mean I
00:32:01
think there's actually a lot of evidence
00:32:03
that human beings sort of hate
00:32:05
Prosperity actually we're not designed
00:32:07
to be prosperous and the second we are
00:32:09
we invent climate crises to to to make
00:32:12
us less prosperous I mean that's really
00:32:14
what that is right but anyway leaving
00:32:16
that aside
00:32:17
um it's it's incumbent on all of us
00:32:20
anyone with authority anyone with a
00:32:21
voice anyone with money and it's really
00:32:23
kind of as simple and and I do think you
00:32:26
know government is kind of the last to
00:32:27
fall in line it's it's really as simple
00:32:30
as making things socially unacceptable
00:32:32
we certainly I grew up in a world where
00:32:33
people smoked on airplanes okay now that
00:32:35
was banned by the FAA but it was also
00:32:39
made totally socially unacceptable you
00:32:41
couldn't light a cigarette in someone's
00:32:42
kitchen you just wouldn't think to do
00:32:44
that in the same way that you wouldn't
00:32:45
think to give the middle finger to an
00:32:47
old lady which is not actually illegal
00:32:50
but nobody would do that because it's so
00:32:51
appalling in the minds of everybody and
00:32:53
everyone's happy to say what what the
00:32:55
hell are you doing and and I feel the
00:32:56
same way about the race stuff it's like
00:32:59
oh you know race this race that someone
00:33:01
should say whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa stop
00:33:04
that there's part of what you're saying
00:33:05
which I think is which I really agree
00:33:08
with which is this idea that we have
00:33:10
gone as the human race okay from having
00:33:13
to make major adaptations over the Arc
00:33:16
of our Evolution as a species to now
00:33:19
what you're kind of saying is we're now
00:33:20
dealing with all these minor adaptations
00:33:22
and it kind of breaks the entire
00:33:25
circuitry of the brain which is like we
00:33:27
had to fight to evade the animals to
00:33:29
feed ourselves ex to build a machine to
00:33:32
all of a sudden go from an agrarian to
00:33:33
an indust these were huge
00:33:36
adaptations and now we have all of this
00:33:39
almost Surplus in
00:33:40
excess and it's a little bit of a heads
00:33:43
scratcher for a lot of people because
00:33:45
now all the adaptations that are left
00:33:46
are very minor in shape because all of
00:33:49
these other things that would rather
00:33:50
occupy your time sustenance survival
00:33:53
resiliency are taken off the table I get
00:33:55
that the other part of of what you say
00:33:58
which is very reneer Ard which is like
00:34:00
hey there's all this copying of people
00:34:03
and desire there's going to be violence
00:34:05
if we don't figure out how
00:34:08
to decharge
00:34:11
it what do you think we need to do in
00:34:15
order to do that discharge how do you
00:34:17
get these people to stop focusing on the
00:34:20
small order bits and how do we
00:34:23
reorganize people to focus on the big
00:34:25
order bits so that
00:34:27
we minimize this risk of violence we
00:34:29
minimize the one group of immutable
00:34:32
traits fighting another group of
00:34:34
immutable traits how does that happen do
00:34:36
you think you know I'm I'm I'm pretty
00:34:37
pessimistic about about a a a country
00:34:41
this big and we say the country I mean
00:34:43
like when I talk about the country I'm
00:34:45
talking about people I know or grew up
00:34:46
with or people who speak my language I
00:34:48
mean the country is so big that
00:34:50
something can happen in New Mexico
00:34:51
something big can happen in New Mexico
00:34:53
or San Francisco for that matter and
00:34:54
like people don't even know so like but
00:34:56
in General I would say um you know it's
00:35:00
hard to see changing course before we're
00:35:03
forced to um and so I you know I do
00:35:06
think you think basically there has to
00:35:08
be a moment
00:35:10
of something that's so egregious that
00:35:13
causes a national reconciliation of some
00:35:15
kind essentially that says hold on a
00:35:16
second you want know you want to know
00:35:18
what I really think which is like kind
00:35:19
of crackpot but I know that it's right
00:35:21
yes I I do think the problem is is is
00:35:24
prosperity and I've noticed this as a
00:35:26
middle-aged man as I've gotten older and
00:35:28
I know people who've been successful um
00:35:31
in some cases very successful and I've
00:35:32
noticed that um when they succeed when
00:35:35
they get everything they want they
00:35:36
destroy themselves I've noticed this
00:35:38
again and again and again it's you are
00:35:40
the dog who caught the car and and it's
00:35:42
and actually it's more than just having
00:35:44
idle time there's something there's a
00:35:45
metaphysical quality there's there's
00:35:47
there are factors here that I don't
00:35:48
understand that are are are deeper
00:35:51
actually but I just notice it there's
00:35:53
something about affluence that that over
00:35:57
time convinces people to kill themselves
00:36:01
and you see it like in a literal sense
00:36:03
in the euthanasia numbers out of Canada
00:36:05
and out of see you see it in a literal
00:36:08
sense when you look at you know the
00:36:09
incidence of diabetes as correlated to
00:36:11
GDP that's exactly right exactly you
00:36:13
look at these emerging economies and as
00:36:15
GDP cranks the first thing that happens
00:36:17
is heart disease cranks up and diabetes
00:36:19
cranks up because to your point Tucker
00:36:21
they start to enjoy the prosperity of
00:36:24
their earned life but they're not
00:36:26
enjoying it that's the thing the other
00:36:27
thing you see is they stop having
00:36:29
children which is a form of suicide
00:36:31
you're not
00:36:32
reproducing you know what I mean there's
00:36:34
no other culture who has left a written
00:36:36
record in history that didn't see having
00:36:38
children as like the the primary first
00:36:40
of all the primary source of wealth and
00:36:42
not just because they worked on your
00:36:43
farm but because they exist and and so
00:36:45
do your genes um so if you start to see
00:36:49
every it's not just a matter of culture
00:36:51
it happens in non-Christian Japan it
00:36:54
happens in post-christian Spain it
00:36:56
happens in in South Korea with
00:36:59
A7 replacement rate you know
00:37:02
reproduction rate s so um what is that
00:37:06
and again it's the same thing it's that
00:37:09
affluence kills you and if you don't
00:37:11
believe it fast for three days fasting
00:37:14
by the way is a feature not just of you
00:37:16
know Christian history every religion
00:37:19
and every culture that I'm aware of um
00:37:22
has acknowledged fasting as an important
00:37:24
religious ritual why is that why would
00:37:26
foregoing food be so important well try
00:37:29
it for 3 days and experience you know
00:37:32
you're quivering like a tuning fork you
00:37:34
your sensitivity just explodes there's
00:37:36
something about eating too much
00:37:37
literally satisfying the most basic need
00:37:40
of all which is for calories there's
00:37:42
something about that that kills you and
00:37:44
there's something about forgoing it that
00:37:46
enlightens you it's like super
00:37:48
interesting so I I and I'm look there's
00:37:50
so much I don't know I'm the last person
00:37:51
you want to listen to these are deeper
00:37:52
waters that I'm qualified to wait in but
00:37:55
my senses tell me very very strongly
00:37:57
that the core problem is having too much
00:37:59
and I'm not calling for taking things
00:38:01
away I think the global warming [ __ ]
00:38:03
is [ __ ] okay I mean obviously it is
00:38:06
climate crisis it's propaganda but it's
00:38:08
coming out of it's also sincere to some
00:38:10
extent it's not just a power grab by
00:38:12
Davos it's more than that it's people's
00:38:15
gut level sense that we need to have
00:38:17
less because this is killing us and that
00:38:19
is real fre is Tucker said global
00:38:22
warming is uh [ __ ] is I'm just going
00:38:25
to pull anage for I just want I just
00:38:27
want his reaction you just said that
00:38:30
consultant of science let's see no no
00:38:32
but no no I think it's like just on that
00:38:35
topic um you know data shows
00:38:38
temperatures are getting warmer off of a
00:38:40
baseline of 500 years and now things get
00:38:42
war no no no I'm I'm so sorry can I can
00:38:44
I just make a small correction no I'm
00:38:46
not saying it's not getting warmer it
00:38:47
seems to be getting warmer I'm really
00:38:49
saying this whole elaborate theory that
00:38:52
humans are causing this rise in
00:38:54
temperatures and we know how to reverse
00:38:56
it through say shutting down you know
00:38:58
the use of hydrocarbons yeah I mean and
00:39:02
and even if that were true what we're
00:39:04
doing to affect those changes shows how
00:39:06
fraudulent the whole thing is I mean you
00:39:08
you know the whole arguments but I'm not
00:39:09
actually calling into a question that
00:39:10
it's changing temperatures always
00:39:11
changed I live in Maine which was shaped
00:39:13
by the glaciers 10,000 years ago so like
00:39:15
yeah we've had some climate change do
00:39:17
you think that human civilization is not
00:39:19
threatened by the changing climate I
00:39:21
just just this is a quick little point
00:39:23
but do I think well sure I mean it's
00:39:25
threatened in some ways probably help in
00:39:27
other ways I personally hate hot weather
00:39:28
so um you know I don't care for it I I
00:39:31
think there's quite a bit of evidence
00:39:33
that previous that that actually
00:39:37
temperature changes can be much more
00:39:38
radical than we think and I'll just give
00:39:39
you one example that no one's ever
00:39:41
explained but you're aware that there
00:39:42
are all these woolly mammoths found in
00:39:45
case to ice in Siberia and the Soviet
00:39:47
you know early Soviet 1920s expedition
00:39:50
to map all of Russia found these things
00:39:52
and at least one stranded Expedition ate
00:39:54
them okay they ate the willly Mammoth
00:39:57
because it had been frozen so thoroughly
00:40:00
that the after thousands of years the
00:40:01
meat was still edible yeah well the
00:40:03
question is like how did that happen and
00:40:05
I think it was the guy who ran bird's
00:40:06
eye frozen food who was an expert on
00:40:08
freezing meat it's like wait a second
00:40:09
that weighs X th000 PBS it would have to
00:40:12
be frozen extremely quickly and I know
00:40:15
this from hunting too you have to freeze
00:40:17
meat very fast to keep it from spoiling
00:40:21
from the back so how did that happen
00:40:23
well no no for real though cuz it
00:40:24
decomposes very a big animal if you
00:40:26
shoot say a moose or a big deer or a
00:40:29
mule deer you have to open it up
00:40:31
immediately or the meat will spoil
00:40:33
because the bigger it is the more heat
00:40:35
it generates right we know that it's
00:40:36
like okay so how exactly did hundreds or
00:40:40
thousands of large animals get frozen so
00:40:43
quickly that the meat is still edible
00:40:44
thousands of years later that's an
00:40:45
honest question that no one's ever
00:40:46
answered and the only potential or even
00:40:49
plausible answer is temperature changed
00:40:51
so fast it flash froze them well how did
00:40:55
that happen like what no these are
00:40:57
sincere
00:40:59
questions I'll look into it I'll get
00:41:00
back to you I've not heard about this
00:41:03
flash frozen that's interesting no this
00:41:05
reminds me of that Marlin Brando film
00:41:07
you remember where he like goes to an
00:41:08
island and eats the like super rare food
00:41:11
it's like a kodo dragon or something the
00:41:13
graduates Matthew broadrick in it so
00:41:15
good it's like the expedition to Siberia
00:41:17
to eat the flash frozen woolly mammoth
00:41:20
to make a good sequel but it's
00:41:21
interesting I'm going to look into it I
00:41:23
don't know the answer to how and why the
00:41:26
climate here's the point that we have
00:41:28
physical evidence that the climate on
00:41:30
Earth within you know inside our
00:41:32
atmosphere has changed dramatically so
00:41:34
dramatically that it would you know kill
00:41:36
every person who was affected by it like
00:41:39
a number of times that we know of over
00:41:42
the course of the history of the earth
00:41:44
So like um I mean I think there could we
00:41:47
know we could be in for actual climate
00:41:48
change that killed everybody that's
00:41:50
entirely possible but the idea that it's
00:41:52
the fault of the United States because
00:41:54
of you know you driving F1 50 is like so
00:41:57
absurd it's like hard to believe anyone
00:41:58
takes that seriously there's like no
00:41:59
evidence of that actually sorry yeah I'm
00:42:01
generally just an I'm an optimist about
00:42:03
Solutions anyway but you know I think
00:42:06
human Ingenuity has always prevailed so
00:42:08
all this pessimism and
00:42:12
catastrophizing I I I do disagree with
00:42:14
respect to like there is science that
00:42:16
indicates that there are elements that
00:42:17
were kind of affecting things in a in an
00:42:20
adverse way to challenging way but I'm
00:42:22
not concerned about the challenges just
00:42:23
because of where human technology sits
00:42:25
and the things we can do so I'm I have I
00:42:28
have a slightly different point of view
00:42:29
but I I hear you on it I don't want to Y
00:42:32
debate the point sorry chth go ahead
00:42:34
yeah that's a whole another thing yeah I
00:42:35
just want to uplevel this back to
00:42:36
something because I think if I had to
00:42:38
summarize what you're saying is you're
00:42:39
saying chath our society is too
00:42:41
prosperous and as a result that
00:42:43
Prosperity creates um small Fringe
00:42:46
issues that dominate which then creates
00:42:49
an inability for us to be cohesive so
00:42:51
then if we have something that allows us
00:42:53
to be forced to be more resilient
00:42:56
we will actually wake up from this fever
00:42:58
and say hold on guys what are the big
00:43:00
issues let's really figure out what
00:43:02
matters let's get organized and let's go
00:43:04
after those and that both is a healing
00:43:07
of the country but it's almost like our
00:43:08
insurance policy is that kind of a is
00:43:11
that a fair summary if I have to put
00:43:13
what you're saying in a box or is that
00:43:14
well I would I would hate ever to seem
00:43:17
like I'm looking forward to catastrophe
00:43:19
because I I'm not and I I hope I hope it
00:43:22
doesn't unfold
00:43:24
that no I mean I used to drink too much
00:43:27
and I know a lot of people used to drink
00:43:28
too much and you know use drugs or
00:43:29
whatever and some of them didn't get
00:43:31
better till they went to jail you know
00:43:33
as people who drink too much tend to do
00:43:34
over time that never happened to me and
00:43:35
I'm so grateful for it like you don't
00:43:37
need to you know get to the bottom you
00:43:40
don't I don't think that you do I'm just
00:43:43
I'm just really worried that we're not
00:43:44
even having a conversation about this
00:43:45
and but I again would point to I said a
00:43:48
second ago about there's something
00:43:49
metaphysical here there's something
00:43:50
deeper than just you know the the Search
00:43:54
for Advantage which is is a big
00:43:56
motivator among people but there's
00:43:57
something more than that going on why
00:44:00
are we intentionally wrecking the
00:44:03
society and we are and I and I hear
00:44:06
people say well it's because some people
00:44:08
are getting paid and yeah it's not
00:44:10
really an adequate answer it's more than
00:44:12
that there's something going on like
00:44:14
instinctively people want to some people
00:44:17
want to tear it all down and I don't
00:44:20
think it's necessarily so they can
00:44:21
rebuild it to their own Advantage I
00:44:23
think like destruction is the point and
00:44:25
I just watch carefully and I don't
00:44:26
really know what's going on here but
00:44:28
something much deeper than what we're
00:44:30
acknowledging is going on here well I
00:44:32
think it comes back to this point about
00:44:34
I can't get what these other people have
00:44:35
and there's now an insurmountable
00:44:37
barrier that I cannot ever get there
00:44:41
know I mean that doesn't explain why but
00:44:43
hold on that that doesn't explain like
00:44:45
why for example Dustin moscovitz is
00:44:47
supporting revolutionary politics and
00:44:50
Chas I think it's a good example S I
00:44:52
think it does when you have massive
00:44:54
abundance to jamat point about the idle
00:44:56
mind you know DUS moskovitz has achieved
00:45:00
more than any human could achieve
00:45:01
billions of dollars and now he's got
00:45:03
this Surplus and then whatever you know
00:45:06
to to Tucker's Point whatever he's
00:45:08
dealing with personally now becomes this
00:45:10
you know canvas under which he's going
00:45:12
to deploy that wealth in an outsourced
00:45:14
way I think it actually does explain it
00:45:16
it fits more with like luxury beliefs
00:45:18
than with the idea that like scarcity or
00:45:21
Envy is somehow driving it yeah but yes
00:45:23
so those are luxury beliefs and he's got
00:45:26
a huge bankroll therefore it has an
00:45:28
outsized impact as sort of Tucker I
00:45:30
think I think the the luxury point is
00:45:32
once you reach a certain point your
00:45:34
attention can then shift to morality you
00:45:38
when you're starving in a street and you
00:45:40
need to feed your children correct
00:45:42
you're not focusing your whole day on
00:45:44
the morality and better treatment of
00:45:46
others in the world and extending you
00:45:48
know morality to the rest of the world
00:45:50
but when you have that luxury you have
00:45:51
to focus your attention in that sense I
00:45:54
do think that there's this large element
00:45:55
that the term equality gets recast into
00:45:59
every aspect of society which ultimately
00:46:01
leads to this General point of view of
00:46:04
Marxism which is everyone has to have an
00:46:06
equal outcome versus an equal
00:46:08
opportunity and that's where the
00:46:10
prosperity takes this you but I think I
00:46:13
agree with a lot of what you're saying
00:46:15
but I I I I think it's maybe more
00:46:16
profound than that I mean you're
00:46:18
absolutely right that only societies
00:46:20
that have reached a certain point can
00:46:21
afford to think about certain things you
00:46:22
don't see you know Hunter gather
00:46:24
societies don't debate effective out is
00:46:26
M because they're looking for roots okay
00:46:27
so I I agree with that y however if you
00:46:30
look at the behavior of you know some of
00:46:32
the richest people in our society and I
00:46:34
can't speak to Dustin mosit but I I have
00:46:36
the you know I know people like that
00:46:39
what they're funding are not exactly
00:46:41
luxury beliefs they're it's they're like
00:46:43
funding destruction actually and so like
00:46:45
previous generations of liberal rich
00:46:48
people funded things like public
00:46:50
libraries summer camps for poor kids
00:46:52
remember the New York Times used to have
00:46:53
these fundraisers like fresh air fund or
00:46:55
whatever and and people made fun of I
00:46:57
always kind of like that like you have
00:46:58
extra money and like you know help the
00:47:00
poor kids you know whether it works or
00:47:02
not we can debate but like I get it but
00:47:05
Dustin MOS if you're Dustin MOS or any I
00:47:07
don't mean to pick on him but any like
00:47:08
really rich person you and you're at
00:47:09
Baker's Bay or some Discovery property
00:47:12
that you know you and your billionaire
00:47:13
friends go to you might occur to you
00:47:15
like why not build one of these for like
00:47:16
all the poor kids but only poor black
00:47:18
kids get to go to this Resort for a week
00:47:21
and that might be it might work it might
00:47:23
not work like all of American social the
00:47:26
history of American social reform is
00:47:27
kind of species of that like we're going
00:47:29
to help poor people by doing this or
00:47:31
that that's not what they're doing it's
00:47:32
like hey poor people here are some more
00:47:34
crack pipes and like we're it's immoral
00:47:36
to criticize your drug addiction and
00:47:37
what we need are more black people
00:47:39
selling weed or it's cool to set fires
00:47:42
or we can't criticize you for burning
00:47:43
down Wendy's like what that is not the
00:47:47
same thing that is super dark there's no
00:47:51
even possibility of uplift or
00:47:53
advancement it's just the opposite they
00:47:55
know it these are smart people so like
00:47:56
what are we looking at seriously well
00:47:58
Tucker he's in DUS in DUS mind I'm sure
00:48:01
he believes he's doing the right thing
00:48:04
yeah he thinks he's funding social
00:48:06
justice I think like Soros would be an
00:48:08
even better example right where like
00:48:10
it's hard to argue that what he's
00:48:12
funding is not extremely destructive so
00:48:15
the Revolutionary politics are not
00:48:17
somehow coming from below the way you
00:48:19
would expect a revolution to normally
00:48:21
happen they're being imposed from above
00:48:23
by some of the biggest winners in our
00:48:25
society and that is weird that is a
00:48:27
contradiction not you it is it is a
00:48:30
bizarre outcome let's um it's exactly
00:48:32
what you'd expect and it's exactly what
00:48:34
happened in the Bolshevik Revolution I
00:48:36
mean half of the romanof household the
00:48:39
you know Nicholas II who was murdered
00:48:41
with his wife and children in the
00:48:42
basement as you know by the Bolsheviks
00:48:45
his extended household supported the
00:48:47
Bolsheviks rich people who are a small
00:48:49
minority by the way there are a million
00:48:51
different revolutionary groups at the
00:48:52
end of the first world war in Russia
00:48:54
clearly there was going to be a change
00:48:55
clearly the the monarchy was doomed and
00:48:56
there were a lot of different options
00:48:58
and the most radical crazy nihilistic
00:49:00
atheistic option was the Bolsheviks and
00:49:02
they had the support of the rich people
00:49:04
and like including the Zar family so
00:49:06
like what is that it's the same thing
00:49:08
always the same thing it's the people
00:49:10
with the most have the strongest desire
00:49:13
to kill themselves and their society
00:49:15
that's just true it's an interesting
00:49:16
Theory I mean there are some people who
00:49:18
are very thoughtful right you have Bill
00:49:19
Gates or Jeff Bezos who are thinking
00:49:20
about philanthropy in a very thoughtful
00:49:22
way now they could make mistakes of
00:49:23
course but they're thinking Hey where's
00:49:25
the suffering how do I work backwards
00:49:27
from mosquito T to you know vaccines or
00:49:29
whatever you know we perceive is what
00:49:31
they perceive is is the most suffering
00:49:34
they can relieve in the world so it does
00:49:35
seem like it can go either way Tucker do
00:49:37
you think it's because most people that
00:49:39
get very wealthy very fast feel like it
00:49:42
was unfair and they feel guilty and then
00:49:45
they have to like destroy the system
00:49:46
that got them there I think there's a
00:49:49
lot I think that's such a deep point
00:49:50
though because and you I know that you
00:49:53
know you live of among people I mean
00:49:55
you're familiar with this world so and
00:49:56
only someone who is could say that cuz
00:49:58
you're absolutely right rich people are
00:49:59
not all the same if you meet someone who
00:50:02
made his money incrementally over time
00:50:04
he's much less likely to have the desire
00:50:07
you know you may not agree with him on
00:50:08
everything he may be a good person a bad
00:50:09
person but he doesn't want to tear it
00:50:11
down and he doesn't feel especially
00:50:13
guilty for what he has and I have found
00:50:14
just a non-political point but as I get
00:50:16
older I want to spend less time with
00:50:18
people who hate themselves because
00:50:20
they're not capable of loving other
00:50:22
people like that's not a good place to
00:50:24
start actually as a person to hate
00:50:26
yourself or feel feel super guilty it
00:50:28
really isn't you don't end up helping
00:50:30
others when you feel that way but when
00:50:32
you find people who inherited a lot of
00:50:33
money we never talk about that it's a
00:50:35
huge problem in this country I'm not I'm
00:50:37
not arguing for the death tax at all but
00:50:39
I'm just saying as an observation there
00:50:41
are an aw there's a huge class of people
00:50:43
with massive inherited wealth and
00:50:45
they're almost all horrible not all of
00:50:47
them I mean I know you know very well I
00:50:49
know some of them and they're fine
00:50:50
they're some of them are great but as a
00:50:52
class they're awful and they don't help
00:50:54
at all and they're Al super annoying and
00:50:56
dumb and I think it's the well no it's
00:50:59
just true and everyone knows it's
00:51:01
true we're about to do that for tens of
00:51:03
millions of Americans right you know
00:51:04
like we're about to go the largest
00:51:06
generation of wealth transfer Beyond
00:51:08
imagination we're talking trillions and
00:51:11
trillions and trillions so that problem
00:51:13
that you just encapsulated we're going
00:51:15
to Cascade across tens of millions of
00:51:17
Americans which also happen in Japan I
00:51:20
agree and in Japan they have a negative
00:51:22
growth rate as well let let's pivot to a
00:51:25
to
00:51:25
that can I ask you have you been to
00:51:27
Japan recently yeah I was there last
00:51:30
year okay so me too so so I you know
00:51:33
people you always read like all the
00:51:35
libertarian e economists in the Wall
00:51:37
Street Journal they're always like oh
00:51:38
Japan's a disaster negative growth and
00:51:41
then you go to Japan oh it's the best
00:51:43
place you could ever visit it's my
00:51:45
favorite country hands down did you go
00:51:46
to Tokyo did you go skiing in the Secco
00:51:48
where' you go I went to Koto and Tokyo
00:51:50
and I'll be back to ski on the North
00:51:51
Island because it's like why wouldn't
00:51:52
you it's like the
00:51:54
pero I never have but I'm it's
00:51:56
incredible I went last year it is like
00:51:58
25 out of 30 days in January and
00:52:00
February it dumps powder and the powder
00:52:04
is like dust it it's like makes Utah
00:52:06
powder look like heavy it is insane uh
00:52:09
I'm going back if you want to go
00:52:11
February
00:52:15
inred share a room you guys could have
00:52:18
like one this is gonna make SX lose his
00:52:21
mind if Tucker and I go in a but can I
00:52:24
just ask a question like if if Japan is
00:52:27
is is the butt of every joke that
00:52:29
economists tell or the focus of the
00:52:32
concern of econ you know lots of chin
00:52:33
tugging and threading about Japan's
00:52:35
negative growth economy and then you go
00:52:36
to Japan and there's literally not one
00:52:38
piece of litter and four-year-olds ride
00:52:39
the Subway on a company highest function
00:52:41
Society you could imagine but yet birth
00:52:43
rate is going down that's the only thing
00:52:45
the birth rate is a real thing I totally
00:52:47
agree that's probably the product of
00:52:48
getting atomic bombs dropped on you or
00:52:50
and maybe the fact also that like the
00:52:52
highest testosterone males flew their
00:52:54
planes into US Air craft carriers or
00:52:56
whatever I there's probably a lot of
00:52:57
reason but it well that's a real thing
00:53:00
by the way you kill all the high te
00:53:01
males in your Society changes but but I
00:53:04
don't think that we're using the right
00:53:05
measurements and I do think that we're
00:53:07
taking economists a little more
00:53:08
seriously than they deserve because
00:53:10
they're not describing what Japan
00:53:12
actually is which is freaking awesome
00:53:14
and way more functional than our society
00:53:16
despite the massive disparity and grow
00:53:18
you find is every person in Japan takes
00:53:20
their job that they're doing as
00:53:22
incredibly important and has massive
00:53:24
pride in it why when you go there as an
00:53:26
American you're like wait wasn't this
00:53:28
what America was about it's it's it's
00:53:30
really shocking as American because
00:53:31
you're like this is what I want Society
00:53:33
to be I want the person who works in the
00:53:34
Subway or the stock market or the
00:53:36
newspaper to take their job deadly
00:53:38
serious and put their best effort in why
00:53:41
I care about growth rate wait but hold
00:53:42
on why should I care about economic
00:53:45
growth at least as measured in the
00:53:48
conventional sense the only reason is if
00:53:49
you have a lot of debt that's it yes if
00:53:52
if if you didn't have all the debt you
00:53:54
don't care about it you shouldn't care
00:53:55
about economic growth rate with respect
00:53:56
to the measure of prosperity
00:53:58
strange also you know if the pie isn't
00:54:01
getting bigger and people aren't doing
00:54:03
better than that does sew the seeds for
00:54:06
a revolution I mean yeah all this
00:54:08
divisiveness will start to explode if
00:54:11
people don't feel like their
00:54:12
circumstances are getting better off
00:54:14
this is where I mean in this in this one
00:54:16
limited way I guess I'd be in favor of
00:54:18
Rapid change which is the technological
00:54:21
area I mean I'm against revolutionary
00:54:23
politics I'm against that kind of
00:54:25
revolutionary change because it almost
00:54:26
never works out but I do think that
00:54:28
revolutionary change in the narrow
00:54:30
category of technology is ultimately
00:54:33
good for us I know it creates challenges
00:54:35
I know it creates disruption people do
00:54:38
lose their jobs and have to find new
00:54:39
ones but it is the basis for American
00:54:42
prosperity and the basis for our economy
00:54:44
being productive and America having a
00:54:46
powerful military and all those things
00:54:47
so I don't know if this is a difference
00:54:49
between us Tucker but I do think that in
00:54:53
this area of technological change I'm
00:54:55
not sort of a dispositional conservative
00:54:57
Ian this is kind of like like Peter teal
00:54:58
right I don't want us to slow down I
00:55:00
actually I want us to be successful and
00:55:03
it and it feels like actually it's the
00:55:05
people on the left who are generally in
00:55:07
this Camp of wanting to slow us down and
00:55:11
meire Us in regulations and make it
00:55:13
harder to um make progress
00:55:16
technologically uh because it's
00:55:18
something they don't control I I agree
00:55:19
with that I just I guess the net result
00:55:22
is what I care about I think it's if you
00:55:24
talk to old people people which I is now
00:55:27
that I'm getting older and I've talked
00:55:28
to you know older relatives and stuff
00:55:30
like what what bothers you and I used to
00:55:31
think it was you know taking a leak six
00:55:33
times a night but it's really not the
00:55:36
thing that bothers old people I've
00:55:37
spoken to anyway is the change is like
00:55:40
they don't just don't recognize it and
00:55:42
that's really hard for people to deal
00:55:43
with and so all I'm saying I'm certainly
00:55:46
not calling for a halt to technological
00:55:47
progress that would be terrible all I'm
00:55:50
saying is in tandem with those
00:55:52
advancements should be the concern about
00:55:56
people's ability to digest massive
00:55:58
change and like let's keep some things
00:56:00
the same you know you just can't change
00:56:02
everything it's like bad it's super bad
00:56:04
so like maybe we get AI but let's keep
00:56:07
Halloween so you're arguing for
00:56:09
tradition and things that bring bring
00:56:11
people together this country was built
00:56:14
off of uh immigrants obviously and uh
00:56:17
this is one of the most polarizing
00:56:18
issues Tucker in each election cycle and
00:56:22
in the country uh large right now now
00:56:25
what do you what is your vision for how
00:56:28
American Immigration should work here in
00:56:31
the 21st
00:56:33
century ideally or right now right now
00:56:36
and and then ideally let's start with
00:56:38
what would you do right now short term
00:56:40
actually let me if you don't if you
00:56:41
don't mind I'll quickly invert it and
00:56:42
say of course the goal is just a is just
00:56:44
a rational immigration policy whose
00:56:46
purpose is to help your country what
00:56:48
would that so I could see well I could
00:56:50
see an argument for example if you
00:56:51
needed you know I don't know there there
00:56:53
was a time for the guy who was just my
00:56:55
college roommate my best friend um came
00:56:57
to this country from India because both
00:56:59
his parents were Physicians and there
00:57:01
was a lack of Physicians with
00:57:03
de-industrialization everyone was moving
00:57:04
out of the small towns and so we
00:57:06
expedited the Visas of foreign
00:57:08
Physicians most of them were Indians I
00:57:09
think most were Indians his parents
00:57:11
actually came from Africa but whatever
00:57:12
the point is they're Indian doctors and
00:57:14
they came here and they settled in a
00:57:16
little town in Massachusetts a rural
00:57:18
Town dying miltown and it was great it
00:57:21
was great for them it was great for the
00:57:23
town the guy my best friend I mean like
00:57:26
it that's just that's what you want
00:57:27
right we need this and we're going to in
00:57:29
a very smart intentional way um try to
00:57:32
get it on the World Market and we can we
00:57:35
will and I'm totally for that what we're
00:57:37
doing now is throwing open the doors to
00:57:40
anyone who wants to come here from the
00:57:41
poorest countries in the world at a
00:57:43
scale that we can't possibly digest so
00:57:45
how many people are here illegally
00:57:47
working off the books some estimates 60
00:57:49
70 million those are real estimates by
00:57:51
the way not crackpot estimates but the
00:57:53
truth is we don't know we've no no idea
00:57:55
we've completely lost control and we
00:57:57
don't know who these people are I
00:58:00
honestly think most of them are here for
00:58:01
a better life I believe that I think
00:58:02
most of them are probably good people I
00:58:03
think most of them agree with my
00:58:04
politics actually for whatever it's
00:58:06
worth definitely much more than the
00:58:08
private unhappy private Equity wives do
00:58:10
for sure the average guy from Nigeria is
00:58:13
like on my side every Salvadoran agrees
00:58:15
with me so I like that but I also think
00:58:18
it's too much actually at exactly the
00:58:21
moment when native born Americans birth
00:58:23
rates are tanking over 100,000 people
00:58:26
die of fental ODS and we're pushing
00:58:29
euthanasia on the population which we
00:58:31
are you're you basically you're saying
00:58:34
you I've given up on the people who live
00:58:35
here whatever their color or background
00:58:37
and we're just going to import new
00:58:38
people and replace them with new people
00:58:39
that's literally what's happening and
00:58:41
when you say that out loud they freak
00:58:42
out and call you some sort of craz bigot
00:58:44
for saying the word replacement but
00:58:46
that's what it is it's happening in
00:58:48
Western Europe and Ireland particularly
00:58:50
that's what those those riots were about
00:58:52
not that I'm endorsing the riots but
00:58:53
that's what that was and that's like
00:58:55
insane for a government to do to its own
00:58:57
people it's just it's totally insane and
00:59:00
and more than anything it is an
00:59:02
expression of loathing for the people
00:59:05
who live there it's a delution of their
00:59:07
political power it's a delution of their
00:59:08
economic power it's the total
00:59:10
Destruction of the basic services that
00:59:12
they paid for like schools hospitals
00:59:14
roads like those are gone so the last
00:59:17
thing I'll say is people say well
00:59:19
immigrants are coming here looking for a
00:59:21
better life and I believe that having
00:59:23
talked to a lot of immigrants and grown
00:59:24
up around them in Southern California I
00:59:25
totally believe that but the question
00:59:27
for government is am I making the
00:59:30
citizens life better it's like no one
00:59:32
even thinks that so is importing people
00:59:34
making the life so when my friend's
00:59:37
parents came both Physicians to the
00:59:39
little town little miltown in New
00:59:40
England his parents made the town better
00:59:43
for the people who live there they were
00:59:44
the doctors and they were super
00:59:46
successful actually and great people
00:59:48
Tucker can you give us a rundown of the
00:59:51
current political landscape just tell us
00:59:53
I'm just really curious what you think
00:59:54
about RFK Biden Trump VI maybe like 10
00:59:59
15 seconds on each it's so hard it's so
01:00:01
hard I
01:00:04
mean uh I I mean the thing that jumps
01:00:07
out today my view changes all the time
01:00:08
and I don't think Biden can be the
01:00:10
nominee his only point was
01:00:12
to you know stop Bernie Sanders
01:00:15
basically and he's uh outlift his
01:00:17
usefulness so I think he'll be I'm
01:00:19
pretty sure he'll be replaced but um as
01:00:20
on the rep on the Republican side and
01:00:22
the independence you know it's so hard
01:00:24
to know I'm just mesmerized by the love
01:00:26
for Nikki Haley who's like the most and
01:00:30
I'm s and like for example I saw Jamie
01:00:32
Diamond who who I really like and I know
01:00:35
and I have always admired but when Jamie
01:00:37
Diamond starts like freeballing on you
01:00:40
know Nikki Haley and saying nonsensical
01:00:41
things about Nikki Haley I'm like I want
01:00:43
to call him and say you're humiliating
01:00:44
yourself first of all you're way out of
01:00:45
your depth you have no idea what you're
01:00:46
talking about but for another you're
01:00:48
just betraying how completely out of
01:00:50
touch you were and I think Jamie got and
01:00:52
again I say this with admiration for
01:00:53
Jamie Diamond which is long held but
01:00:56
like if you get to a place where you
01:00:58
think that Nikki Haley has a shot of
01:01:00
getting elected in a free and fair
01:01:01
election like you have no idea what's
01:01:03
going on in your own country it's just
01:01:04
embarrassing to say that super
01:01:06
embarrassing explain to the audience
01:01:08
unpack that why is
01:01:09
n it really it's not personal I actually
01:01:12
don't care for Nikki Haley as a person
01:01:13
but that's IMM material Nikki Haley's
01:01:16
program what she stands for what she
01:01:18
believes maybe moral or immoral God Old
01:01:21
Judge it's not popular with the with the
01:01:23
public and it's super easy hers on war
01:01:26
specifically yeah her stands on war and
01:01:27
on economics and and we know that from
01:01:30
looking at the Gallop poll which is a
01:01:31
rolling survey of people's attitudes on
01:01:33
things and in an actual democracy you
01:01:36
would see the leading candidates or
01:01:37
people who hope to become leading
01:01:38
candidates articulate concerns and lay
01:01:42
out views that reflected the concerns of
01:01:45
the population who were going to vote
01:01:46
them into office n the most right now
01:01:50
well Trump is it fair to say Nikki Haley
01:01:52
is basically an unreconstructed bush
01:01:54
Republican I mean her views are
01:01:56
basically the same views as George W
01:01:58
bush she wants to get us in all sorts of
01:02:00
new Wars and I don't even think she
01:02:01
regrets the forever Wars of the Middle
01:02:04
East that were so disastrous I I haven't
01:02:06
heard one word of criticism from her or
01:02:09
remorse that she supported all those
01:02:10
things and on the economic policies is
01:02:13
kind of this like
01:02:14
corporatism it's like the whole Trump
01:02:17
Rebellion never even happened in the
01:02:19
Republican party it's just like it's
01:02:20
just like right back to the past and the
01:02:22
fact that the establish sort of
01:02:25
coalescing around her kind of tells me
01:02:28
that as much as I didn't want to believe
01:02:30
this I think that Trump is still the
01:02:31
indispensible figure in the Republican
01:02:34
party because if you take him away
01:02:37
they're going to revert right back to
01:02:39
where they were they're going to exactly
01:02:40
go right back to the factory settings on
01:02:42
Republicans which is Bush republicanism
01:02:44
Tucker can you just finish the rest of
01:02:46
them RFK VI Trump well I mean I you know
01:02:50
I know VI well personally and I I'm I'm
01:02:54
it's shows I'm out of touch too I mean
01:02:55
you know I'm 54 so I don't have my
01:02:57
finger on every pulse um but so I like
01:03:00
vake actually and and but I see these
01:03:03
surveys where he's not you know he's not
01:03:04
doing well and people don't like his
01:03:05
personality or whatever he's he's a
01:03:08
little overbearing that never bothers me
01:03:10
at all I'm just not put off by that at
01:03:11
all and I'm a little bit confused by why
01:03:14
he's not doing better again that's a
01:03:16
reflection on I've just made fun of
01:03:18
Jamie Diamond here I am doing it myself
01:03:20
like why isn't V doing better I'm sure
01:03:22
there are reasons I just don't I think
01:03:24
his program is solid I think he's
01:03:25
reasonable I think he's smart I don't
01:03:27
think he has some creepy agenda um so
01:03:31
but he's not he's not doing well that's
01:03:32
just a fact uh Bobby Kennedy I know
01:03:36
quite well and and think a lot of him
01:03:39
and uh he's a very he's I think he's a
01:03:40
decent man and a principled person I
01:03:43
think he's smart um you know I'm I I
01:03:47
don't have quite as much confidence in
01:03:49
maybe some of the people around him I'm
01:03:51
not I feel like maybe there are other
01:03:53
agendas that he's not aware of you know
01:03:55
I don't know I can't assess but uh yeah
01:03:59
so that's what I think president Trump
01:04:01
well I mean you know the New York Times
01:04:03
had a a piece I think it was Jonathan
01:04:05
Swan um who's smart and uh had a a piece
01:04:09
telling you what you already knew kind
01:04:10
of but proving it with numbers that
01:04:12
Trump became the nominee in August of
01:04:15
last year
01:04:16
2022 when the FBI went through his
01:04:19
wife's underwear drawer in his house
01:04:20
like that was so insane that even if
01:04:22
you're like I can't deal with more Trump
01:04:24
and he didn't actually do anything and
01:04:25
he put Jared in charge you know like
01:04:27
there are lots of frustrations you could
01:04:28
have about Trump if you supported Trump
01:04:30
and you could be disappointed but the
01:04:32
second the FBI raids his house on a
01:04:35
documents charge and anyone from
01:04:37
Washington as I am can tell you that's
01:04:39
like insane like every that's like so
01:04:42
common it's not if they're charging him
01:04:44
for that that's a joke where are the
01:04:46
felonies he supposedly committed I was
01:04:48
led to believe he like murdered people
01:04:49
and buried them in the Meadowlands do
01:04:52
you know what I mean like that's the
01:04:54
best they got when they did that I I
01:04:57
know for a fact and this piece showed it
01:04:59
but I knew it already a lot of people
01:05:00
are like you know I have mix feelings
01:05:02
about Trump or I don't want to deal with
01:05:03
more Trump drama but if this is allowed
01:05:06
to happen our system won't continue
01:05:08
that's so outrageous that I mean let's
01:05:11
just stop lying about it that's a
01:05:12
political prosecution you can't have
01:05:14
that of the presidential front runner
01:05:17
you can't have that we already did it
01:05:18
with Nixon you can't do that again and
01:05:21
so I think that's the key to his surge I
01:05:23
really do think that who's the
01:05:24
Democratic nominee if you think Biden's
01:05:26
not going to be oh it's Gavin Gavin
01:05:28
Gavin for sure well of course cuz he's
01:05:30
by far the most evil person in the
01:05:32
Democratic party and in the end they
01:05:34
just sort of rise to the peak you know
01:05:37
oil and water man he
01:05:39
just yeah Tucker just just comment on
01:05:42
Gavin uh vetoing the bill that said that
01:05:46
you could kind of remove the parents
01:05:48
remove the child from the parents if the
01:05:50
parents don't affirm the transgender
01:05:51
rights of the child that I think there
01:05:53
was a a lot of folks who sit in your
01:05:55
Camp typically who were shocked and
01:05:57
surprised and said wow I didn't know
01:05:59
Gavin actually you know had a stand had
01:06:01
a span of opinions and this is
01:06:03
interesting to see I mean what's what
01:06:05
like there's no one I know who thought
01:06:07
that um and everyone I know who watched
01:06:09
that thought the same thing they thought
01:06:11
when he met was G which is oh he's he's
01:06:13
going to be the nominee yeah I of course
01:06:15
that's what that was I mean I know I
01:06:17
know Gavin Nome and um you know I think
01:06:20
a lot about Gavin Nome uh many different
01:06:23
things about Gavin but one thing I know
01:06:24
for a fact about Gavin Newsome is he has
01:06:27
the capacity to beat a light lie
01:06:28
detector test Gavin Newsome will say
01:06:31
anything he needs to say and not like
01:06:34
Biden's not like this actually whatever
01:06:36
Biden's fault he's not like this like
01:06:37
Biden would you know he has like guilt
01:06:40
if he's lying to you he gets Twitchy
01:06:43
Gavin nome's Palms don't sweat his
01:06:46
respiration doesn't increase his body
01:06:48
temperature doesn't change nothing
01:06:50
changes in Gavin new when he lies to
01:06:51
your face and they're not that many
01:06:54
people like that actually that's a rare
01:06:56
quality like to lock down the state to
01:06:59
keep people's kids from getting an
01:07:00
education and to arrest people for
01:07:02
surfing and then go have dinner at The
01:07:04
French Laundry like most people couldn't
01:07:07
do that they' just be like you're saying
01:07:08
he's a sociopath just he can lie and not
01:07:11
care I'm not a psychiatrist but I so I
01:07:14
don't know that I don't really know the
01:07:15
category and I'm not going to diagnose
01:07:16
him but I'll just say in 50 years of
01:07:18
being around a lot of people I've met
01:07:21
very few who can behave that way very
01:07:23
very few it's very usual quality and of
01:07:24
course it's probably useful in politics
01:07:27
is he electable is he electable yeah
01:07:29
exactly are the American people going to
01:07:30
see that the way that you see it or well
01:07:33
as you know the system in California
01:07:34
does not include elections I mean it has
01:07:36
nothing to do with what the people think
01:07:38
it's a it's a machine State it's the
01:07:40
most corrupt out of 50 KLA Harris was
01:07:43
like despised by most Californians and
01:07:45
she you know was a sitting us Senator
01:07:48
Diane poor Diane Feinstein my neighbor
01:07:49
in Washington I don't I don't think she
01:07:51
was a horrible person just for the
01:07:52
record but she was non-comp Menace and
01:07:55
like she could have lived well beyond
01:07:56
her death as a US senator so it's like
01:07:59
it's not a democratic State small D
01:08:01
Democratic State it's not run on the
01:08:03
basis of what the population wants it's
01:08:05
a fixed game in California and so it
01:08:07
does make me very uncomfortable that
01:08:09
someone from that political culture
01:08:12
which is an utterly corrupt political
01:08:14
culture an authoritarian political
01:08:16
culture could like enter a presidential
01:08:18
race cuz like clearly what are you
01:08:21
running on if you're Gavin Nome as
01:08:23
native
01:08:24
Californian uh you know I know what the
01:08:26
state was like in 1985 cuz I live there
01:08:29
and it's completely degraded from that
01:08:32
from that time and like how did that
01:08:34
happen well part of the big reason the
01:08:36
big reason is the political leadership
01:08:38
in the state you've got nothing to run
01:08:39
on what are you running have you driven
01:08:41
through La recently like seriously so
01:08:44
the fact that he would get in the race
01:08:47
suggests you know they think that they
01:08:49
can win without the consent of Voters
01:08:52
and that freaks me out
01:08:54
well he'll have the media working on
01:08:55
overdrive for him right I mean they will
01:08:58
turn him somehow into like John F
01:09:00
Kennedy or something I mean they will
01:09:02
paper over all of his flaws and they'll
01:09:05
you know they'll basically write puff
01:09:07
pieces it'll it'll be like Non-Stop and
01:09:09
then they'll be attacking Trump so the
01:09:10
media will put him over the top I think
01:09:12
if he well assuming that we have the
01:09:14
same media that we had in 2020 that's
01:09:17
true but I mean that's why you just got
01:09:19
to pray every night for elon's health
01:09:21
and I mean it too I mean it it's the
01:09:23
only platform at scale in the world
01:09:26
that's pretty you know there's
01:09:27
censorship on it but there's not mass
01:09:29
censorship actually there isn't
01:09:33
and that's the only platform of its kind
01:09:36
at scale it's the only one so let's talk
01:09:38
about that actually so I mean we've
01:09:39
talked in this conversation about how
01:09:41
our public discourse is anain and
01:09:45
self-destructive and divisive I would
01:09:48
add another word to that which is
01:09:50
controlled you know controlled um a good
01:09:53
example of this I think was just on the
01:09:55
Ukraine war David aramia who is
01:09:59
zelinsky's parliamentary leader who was
01:10:02
the lead negotiator for the ukrainians
01:10:04
at Istanbul in the first month of the
01:10:06
war when there was a deal on the table
01:10:08
he just testified basically said in an
01:10:10
interview there was a deal on the table
01:10:12
to shut the war down we just would have
01:10:13
had to agree to make Ukraine neutral and
01:10:16
of course the Biden ministration told
01:10:18
them not to this war is and has always
01:10:21
been about NATO expansion and yet the
01:10:23
party line from the media even as all of
01:10:26
these proof points stack up I mean we're
01:10:28
now on like the 10th person firsthand
01:10:30
witness to say that this is what this
01:10:33
war is all about you still can't get the
01:10:35
media to honestly report this just as
01:10:38
one example okay and I I believe that
01:10:40
this is one of the reasons why you were
01:10:41
a fire Tucker is because you were
01:10:43
literally the only person on mainstream
01:10:46
Network news saying what the war is
01:10:49
really about so this is like one really
01:10:51
big example is that we cannot get any
01:10:53
truth on an issue as big as Ukraine war
01:10:56
so I guess my question for you is like
01:10:59
how does control like that happen like I
01:11:02
I don't really understand it myself we
01:11:03
live in a big what's supposed to be a
01:11:05
big democracy there's supposed to be you
01:11:07
know a lot of uh media channels but yet
01:11:10
they all enforce a certain narrative on
01:11:14
pretty much every issue but even you
01:11:16
know again I'm picking on I think one of
01:11:18
the biggest issues right now which is
01:11:19
this war we've got going on I mean how
01:11:21
does that happen I I don't understand it
01:11:23
how do they maintain that control this
01:11:25
is one of my personal concerns about
01:11:27
technology and about progress of all
01:11:30
kinds which is you don't actually know
01:11:31
where it's going you don't I mean your
01:11:33
best forecasts are mine have very often
01:11:35
been wrong and the you know of course
01:11:36
the promise of the internet was
01:11:39
diversity and access to information from
01:11:41
a lot of different sources unfiltered
01:11:43
information you can talk to people in
01:11:45
foreign countries for free you know
01:11:47
every American will have an encyclopedia
01:11:50
at his fingertips and people are going
01:11:51
to be much more informed um um and no
01:11:54
one will be able to control it because
01:11:56
it's it's free and open and and the
01:11:58
effect has been you know the opposite
01:11:59
there's less I I would argue there's
01:12:01
been uh less Freedom uh in information
01:12:06
than there was 30 years ago how did that
01:12:09
happen I mean that's it's a very comp I
01:12:10
mean you guys are much better situated
01:12:11
to answer that question someone should
01:12:12
think about that I think but the bottom
01:12:14
line is there are just not that many
01:12:16
pipelines actually you know in
01:12:18
television there were three big news
01:12:19
channels cable you know broadcast kind
01:12:22
of receded an importance it's mostly
01:12:23
about prostate health now and um so
01:12:26
there three big channels two of them on
01:12:28
one side one was on the other and then
01:12:30
there were the social media Giants but
01:12:31
there are not that many of them and they
01:12:33
were all locked down and they were all
01:12:34
riddled with
01:12:36
Intel in some cases actual saled Intel
01:12:40
officers Matt Tai's amazing reporting
01:12:42
has shown this not just American either
01:12:44
from foreign countries the whole thing
01:12:45
was an OP it was insane and um and you
01:12:49
know you could I'm not going to beat up
01:12:50
on Fox news but there was a kind of an
01:12:53
fairly narrow band of acceptable views
01:12:55
allowed on that channel is that control
01:12:57
yes it is and so there there really was
01:12:59
no remaining place with scale where
01:13:02
someone with a dissenting view could
01:13:04
give it voice and that's just crazy it's
01:13:07
the opposite of what we were promised
01:13:09
but whatever not to whine about it but
01:13:10
the existence of X where anyone around
01:13:14
the world or in most countries anyway
01:13:15
can get for free a whole range of
01:13:18
opinions that aren't controlled that
01:13:21
changes everything like the the the
01:13:24
Primacy of control of information in a
01:13:26
war cannot be overstated like that's you
01:13:29
can debate whether it's more important
01:13:30
than ammunition but it's right up there
01:13:32
you know and um so I think this election
01:13:35
if that platform stays free for the next
01:13:37
12 months you know I think we have a
01:13:40
shot at at least of a real election but
01:13:41
if it does and I think they're going to
01:13:43
do whatever they can to shut it down we
01:13:44
also have web- based shows podcasts and
01:13:47
that even predated a little bit Elon
01:13:49
taking over you know X there's there is
01:13:52
a self-correcting mechanism here if you
01:13:54
feel too controlled like maybe perhaps
01:13:56
you felt or you felt pressure at Fox I
01:14:00
don't want speak for you if you did then
01:14:02
all of a sudden Joe Rogan Allin podcast
01:14:04
whatever podcasts all emerg and now your
01:14:07
show on X and I'm sure it's going to be
01:14:09
on other platforms as well maybe you
01:14:10
could speak to what you think the impact
01:14:13
of a post Fox Tucker Carlson show will
01:14:17
be and how will you be able to sort of
01:14:21
shape the show differently if at all and
01:14:23
the mission here that was my first
01:14:24
question we never really got to which is
01:14:26
post Fox post money post Fame what is
01:14:30
Tucker Carlson's mission statement going
01:14:32
forward what is your goal just the same
01:14:34
the same as before and I should just be
01:14:36
extra clear I I wish I could tell horror
01:14:39
stories about Fox you know forcing me to
01:14:41
take some line or other but they they
01:14:42
really
01:14:43
didn't but you know they didn't want the
01:14:45
show anymore so that kind of tells you
01:14:47
but anyway the point is uh my intent in
01:14:50
hosting that show is the same as my
01:14:52
intent in hosting the show we're about
01:14:53
to launch on X which is you know do your
01:14:56
best to say what you think is true bring
01:14:59
perspectives and information that you
01:15:00
don't think are widely covered to a
01:15:02
larger audience and you know try and
01:15:04
stay firm in that admit when you're
01:15:06
wrong like just be honest it's it's
01:15:08
actually not it's you know I got in this
01:15:10
business because I hadn't graduated from
01:15:12
college and my father's like it's it's a
01:15:14
pretty pure meritocracy in journalism
01:15:16
you should do it and it's also pretty
01:15:18
simple no no real skills required just
01:15:20
be literate which I was and is the show
01:15:22
going to evolve a little bit because
01:15:23
you've been doing this experiment you've
01:15:25
done about 40 episodes well here's the
01:15:26
way here's the way that it already has
01:15:28
evolved so I I got laid off in in April
01:15:31
and I you know I like to I like to fish
01:15:34
and bird hunt so I did a lot of that and
01:15:35
then I was like H I need to do something
01:15:37
so I've been stuck in a studio for all
01:15:40
these you know many many years I
01:15:42
couldn't really go anywhere and I went I
01:15:44
took seven foreign trips in four months
01:15:46
I just went to all these places where I
01:15:47
knew people I was interested in what was
01:15:49
going on and I just found it amazing two
01:15:51
things I found amazing one the view of
01:15:54
America the Vantage you get from a
01:15:56
foreign country on what's happening in
01:15:57
your own is completely different there's
01:15:59
also a lot the whole world is
01:16:00
reshuffling in my view after the Ukraine
01:16:03
war February 2022 really did change a
01:16:06
lot um particularly with respect to
01:16:08
America's place in the world that's
01:16:10
worth covering and the second thing I
01:16:11
learned once I started putting videos up
01:16:13
on X was that it's International I mean
01:16:17
I was just shocked by that I mean
01:16:18
because think about it I mean I'm
01:16:19
working for a US News Channel it's one
01:16:22
of three US news channels I've worked
01:16:23
for CNN was International but I was on
01:16:25
CNN us so I'm just used to thinking
01:16:27
about America being viewed by Americans
01:16:29
having a conversation about this country
01:16:31
I had no experience at all of a of an of
01:16:34
a big International audience and that
01:16:37
platform has that and so I was amazed by
01:16:40
that and so um we're going to continue
01:16:42
to cover the rest of the world I'm going
01:16:45
over to Dubai in February
01:16:48
interviewing heads of state over it's
01:16:50
just so it's just so interesting there
01:16:53
going on it's like crazy people and this
01:16:55
is not a political point this is like a
01:16:57
human point that bothers me almost more
01:16:59
than anything politically which is the
01:17:01
death of curiosity it's like people are
01:17:04
not curious like what the hell I thought
01:17:06
the technological Revolution would would
01:17:08
set off like explosions in the brain of
01:17:10
every person like what is that I want to
01:17:12
learn more and it had exactly the
01:17:13
opposite it's like L me to sleep with
01:17:16
Tik Tok don't tell me more I don't want
01:17:17
to dble double down on what you already
01:17:19
know what you already believe over and
01:17:20
over and
01:17:22
over know I'm less certain in my beliefs
01:17:25
I know that I know less than any time of
01:17:27
my life and I'm much more interested in
01:17:29
many more things than I've ever been I
01:17:31
think that's normal and I think there's
01:17:33
something like in the water or something
01:17:34
that's making people not care the UFO
01:17:37
thing like what whatever you views of
01:17:39
that like well what is that shut up and
01:17:42
that's normal people don't want to hear
01:17:43
it why I don't know whatever I don't
01:17:45
want to preach I mean postco we still
01:17:47
don't have an accounting of what
01:17:49
happened and do what do you think about
01:17:51
the the the clip yesterday of Elon let's
01:17:54
play it for 45 seconds and then get your
01:17:56
response talker Carson apology tour if
01:18:00
you will that this had been said online
01:18:03
there was all of the criticism there was
01:18:04
advertisers leaving we talked to Bob
01:18:06
Iger stop you hope uh don't advertise
01:18:11
you don't want them to advertise no what
01:18:13
do you
01:18:15
mean if somebody's going to try to
01:18:17
Blackmail me with advertising blackmail
01:18:18
me with money go [ __ ]
01:18:21
yourself
01:18:25
but go [ __ ]
01:18:28
yourself is that
01:18:30
clear I hope it is hey Bob here in the
01:18:34
audience well well let me ask you
01:18:38
then that's how I feel all right Tucker
01:18:40
your response to the good for you the
01:18:42
old G FY I mean I interviewed people
01:18:48
every week for over 30 years and so I
01:18:50
know what it is to interview dro My
01:18:53
Perry excuse me and I know you know I
01:18:54
know I have a lot of experience
01:18:55
interviewing people and I've interviewed
01:18:56
Elon you know and I don't understand how
01:18:59
the the New York Times character fussy
01:19:01
little guy from The New York Times like
01:19:02
how could you not laugh like what he
01:19:05
just told Bob ier to [ __ ]
01:19:07
himself don't get me started you and I
01:19:09
are in say Andrew rorin is amongst the
01:19:12
weakest of moderators and interviewers
01:19:14
but he's just what a what a fussy little
01:19:16
douche like that's the moment just like
01:19:19
you erupt total like are you joking Elon
01:19:23
Musk just told Bob haer to [ __ ] himself
01:19:26
like I'd be texting my wife unable I
01:19:29
know um no of course I love it I love it
01:19:32
I I am in the Iger thing I you know I
01:19:36
don't hate Bob Iger or anything but like
01:19:38
I keep hearing from people you know
01:19:40
mutual people I know who know Bob Ager
01:19:42
very well that he's like very serious
01:19:43
about running for president and it's
01:19:45
like if you really think if you're bober
01:19:47
you can run for president you have
01:19:48
anything to offer people or they want
01:19:50
you to be president like you're pretty
01:19:51
out of touch so I like that
01:19:53
but you know big picture I'm I'm really
01:19:57
I'm not just saying this because it it
01:19:59
you know aligns with my interest of some
01:20:00
kind I mean it I'm worried about the
01:20:03
pressure that's brought to bear on that
01:20:05
platform on this platform on X because
01:20:07
it's the only one the only big one you
01:20:10
know huge one international one tens of
01:20:12
millions of people hundreds of millions
01:20:13
of people like they have to they meaning
01:20:16
the people who would like to maintain
01:20:17
the status quo kind of have to shut it
01:20:20
down and I am just so hoping that you
01:20:26
know I can help in any way and that all
01:20:28
decent people whatever their views add
01:20:31
their voice to a chorus that says no you
01:20:33
can't shut down the one big Free Speech
01:20:36
platform in the world you can't do that
01:20:38
because then it's just dictatorship
01:20:39
you're not free if you don't have free
01:20:41
information and you can't say what you
01:20:42
really think you are subject to a lot of
01:20:44
these advertising attacks they they went
01:20:47
after Fox and your show specifically and
01:20:49
and and it worked they got people to not
01:20:51
advertise on
01:20:53
yeah so these advertising boycotts do
01:20:55
Work Media Matters whatever you
01:20:57
whoever's doing them so I'm curious what
01:21:00
you see the business model being for
01:21:01
your show and then how you hope to be
01:21:04
resistant to it are you going to just go
01:21:05
straight up subscription and hope that
01:21:07
half your audience or 10% of your
01:21:09
audience pays and you put half out for
01:21:11
free half out for sub what are you
01:21:12
thinking you got to have a subscription
01:21:14
component to it and of course we're
01:21:17
selling ads against our content um and
01:21:21
we'll be doing that on x and on
01:21:23
tuckercarlson.com where we'll be hosting
01:21:25
the sub the subscription part of it um
01:21:28
of course we're selling ads we're you
01:21:30
know we'll have Network ads too I mean
01:21:32
there are lots of different things you
01:21:33
can do um but in the end you you have to
01:21:38
have some subscription component if
01:21:39
you're going to do it at scale I mean we
01:21:41
brought our whole staff almost our whole
01:21:42
staff from Fox with us so we got a bunch
01:21:45
of people we've got you know bigger
01:21:48
Ambitions than have been on display so
01:21:49
far and um and we you know you got to
01:21:53
have more information and and I would
01:21:56
just say this about just having been in
01:21:58
this one business my whole life the
01:22:00
range of stories is the problem it's not
01:22:03
that the stories are all totally
01:22:05
dishonest some are dishonest but some
01:22:07
are not they're technically true but
01:22:09
they're taken from such a small pot of
01:22:13
stories that it's like it's crazy
01:22:14
there's all this stuff going on and it's
01:22:16
just not I mean I was completely
01:22:18
obsessed and remain obsessed with the
01:22:21
industrial sabotage of the northstream
01:22:23
pipeline it's like that's like that's
01:22:25
that's a major historical event like you
01:22:27
just you just ended the EU you just
01:22:30
hobbled the economic engine of Europe
01:22:32
which is Germany and like who did that
01:22:35
and there were like very few stories on
01:22:37
that that's like a very big deal and
01:22:40
again back to the Curiosity thing but
01:22:41
it's more than that it's like they
01:22:43
people sort of know what where not to go
01:22:46
and I just feel like that's first of all
01:22:48
that's soul death you're not a free man
01:22:52
if you're that constrained in your
01:22:54
thinking if you're letting somebody else
01:22:55
tell you what you're allowed to think
01:22:57
how can your wife how can your wife even
01:22:58
sleep with you at that point she no one
01:23:00
can respect you if you live like that A
01:23:03
B you can't have a democracy you can't
01:23:05
have a free country under those
01:23:06
circumstances so I don't think I'm
01:23:08
overstating it and so we're going to try
01:23:10
to I hope be one of many different
01:23:13
similar efforts to just add to the sum
01:23:16
total of information an analysis of that
01:23:17
information well the end of the end of
01:23:19
democracy and sex would be kind of rough
01:23:21
I think yeah go ahead J yeah yeah I have
01:23:23
a final question and and I'm not trying
01:23:25
to be a conspiracy
01:23:27
theorist
01:23:29
but if one of the presidential
01:23:32
candidates called you and said Tucker be
01:23:34
my
01:23:35
VP and replace kamla Harris I mean I
01:23:38
don't think I could do that she's a
01:23:40
historic first Tucker would you consider
01:23:43
it if Donald Trump gave you that call
01:23:45
well of course I would consider it I'd
01:23:47
can I mean you have no idea how
01:23:49
open-minded I am I would consider
01:23:51
anything
01:23:53
but I mean the truth is I kind of don't
01:23:56
respect people who do stuff like that I
01:23:59
really believe I've got a lot of
01:24:00
theories which I will not inflict on you
01:24:01
but which I do inflict on my own four
01:24:03
children and my main theory of life is
01:24:06
that you should do what you are designed
01:24:07
to do I don't believe this whole you can
01:24:09
be whatever you want to be thing I think
01:24:11
it's a absurd lie I think we're made for
01:24:13
certain things we have certain aptitudes
01:24:15
they're inborn they can we can hone them
01:24:17
and we need to through practice
01:24:20
repetition but it's very
01:24:23
I I think it's a it's it's a sign of
01:24:24
hubris which is always the death of
01:24:26
particularly of men huis thinking you
01:24:28
have more power than you do when midlife
01:24:31
you're like well actually what I really
01:24:33
want to do is direct it's like you just
01:24:34
one best actress honey go back to acting
01:24:37
and I've never been involved in politics
01:24:39
I've never I I haven't even voted in all
01:24:42
elections I'm serious so like the idea
01:24:44
that I'm going to at 54 like run for
01:24:47
national office I is a
01:24:49
little you know what I mean like I don't
01:24:51
take my quite that seriously I mean I I
01:24:54
can't imagine doing something like that
01:24:55
Reas I ask question is that if we're at
01:24:58
least the the Republicans will now prove
01:25:01
that we've lived in a 12year era of a
01:25:04
non-traditional candidate that was
01:25:06
essentially a media personality that was
01:25:08
able to then curate a plurality of
01:25:11
support right that's right and there's
01:25:12
going to be something that comes after
01:25:14
him and so I'm just trying to get a
01:25:16
sense of if it's not you it's probably
01:25:19
to be very honest somebody like you
01:25:21
right
01:25:23
just talk to us about that for just a
01:25:25
second I completely agree with you and I
01:25:27
I love your characterization of trump as
01:25:29
someone who's from a media background
01:25:31
because that that's closer to the it's
01:25:32
I'm not diminishing I'm from media
01:25:33
background so I'm not attacking it but
01:25:35
that's a lot closer to the truth than
01:25:38
most characterizations Casino magnet
01:25:41
developer is a media guy you he had lots
01:25:43
of businesses but he was a media guy he
01:25:45
had the top show in NBC and so I think
01:25:48
you're absolutely right my concern is
01:25:52
that and I have pure contempt for the
01:25:54
professional political class I've
01:25:55
written a book about it I've expressed
01:25:57
it daily for a number of years now and
01:25:59
that's real however I think that there
01:26:02
you know these are complex systems and
01:26:04
it's better to have someone who
01:26:06
understands the systems in an Ideal
01:26:07
World administer the systems because
01:26:09
he's more effective at doing so um and I
01:26:12
also think that once you decide that
01:26:15
like hey let's just go crazy and you
01:26:18
couple that with true social disorder
01:26:23
like you get to a place where you can't
01:26:24
buy anything at CVS because it's chained
01:26:26
up because shoplifting has been
01:26:28
legalized as it has been in California
01:26:31
what you're going to get is fascism
01:26:33
because people can't live in in that in
01:26:36
they can't live with chaos like that's
01:26:37
the one thing they can't deal with and
01:26:38
I've covered a couple of wars and that
01:26:40
was my main conclusion the main problem
01:26:42
with war is not that people get killed
01:26:44
it's that people have to live with total
01:26:45
uncertainty and craziness and that's
01:26:47
incompatible with what people want like
01:26:50
that's the that's the worst thing you
01:26:51
know we're all going to die dying is not
01:26:53
the worst thing the worst thing is
01:26:55
living in chaos and we're starting to
01:26:57
live in chaos and so the return to order
01:27:00
is what scares me I think it'd be very
01:27:01
easy and I do think Gavin Newsome is a
01:27:03
fascist I think he's the kind of person
01:27:04
who would have no problem no hesitation
01:27:07
about using the doj to C to imprison his
01:27:10
political opponents now Biden is
01:27:11
imprisoning his political opponents but
01:27:13
at least they're lying about it Gavin
01:27:15
Newsome is the kind of person would be
01:27:16
like well yeah you're you're a threat to
01:27:18
the general order and you're going to
01:27:19
jail and I think because we're in a
01:27:22
moment of chaos right now people kind of
01:27:25
want that actually I think one of the
01:27:27
purposes of degrading and confusing our
01:27:30
society is to make way for
01:27:32
authoritarianism even more than we have
01:27:33
now um so that kind of freaks me out
01:27:37
actually I personally my what I would
01:27:39
really like is a kind of colorless you
01:27:43
know boring non-charismatic like Gerald
01:27:47
Ford Mike Pence without their views both
01:27:50
of those men were bad men in my opinion
01:27:53
but someone like that who could govern
01:27:55
without making it about himself and
01:27:57
restore the country to a sense of
01:28:00
rules-based order that's what I really
01:28:02
want and I but I'm probably going to be
01:28:04
denied that Tucker I I feel like one of
01:28:07
the one of the other consequences of the
01:28:09
way things have gone is that the
01:28:10
solution has always been to throw more
01:28:12
money at the problem and we've got this
01:28:13
kind of out ofc control fiscal condition
01:28:16
what's your point of view on the fiscal
01:28:18
condition of the us as a priority of the
01:28:20
federal government that is priority and
01:28:24
you know do we need to shrink government
01:28:26
shrink overall discretionary spending do
01:28:28
we need to cut these entitlements do we
01:28:30
need to do it all and how do we get
01:28:33
there given that everyone gets elected
01:28:35
by telling people I'm going to give you
01:28:36
more stuff and then this just kind of
01:28:39
Cascades for decades until eventually
01:28:41
bad [ __ ] happens well who's going to buy
01:28:43
our debt I mean that's that's like it's
01:28:46
scary it's so
01:28:47
scary um you know this is of course the
01:28:50
problem with democracy I mean I think
01:28:52
since you know from the Roman Republic
01:28:53
until 1776 like how many democracies
01:28:56
were there
01:28:57
exactly let me do the math on that I
01:29:00
approximately zero in that range and
01:29:02
this was the critique of course in
01:29:05
Europe of democracy at the time is not
01:29:07
that it gave too much freedom to the
01:29:09
average
01:29:10
person but that it would result in
01:29:13
tyranny and when the majority discovered
01:29:15
it could steal the goods of whomever it
01:29:18
wanted Legally Legally um you would wind
01:29:21
up
01:29:22
dictatorship I mean this is like a very
01:29:24
well trod path but I mean but I hope it
01:29:27
doesn't get to that I'm not making
01:29:28
argument against democracy I'm just
01:29:29
saying it's a little bit harder to
01:29:31
perpetuate than we thought that it was
01:29:34
and um and this is kind of the fear that
01:29:37
people have had for hundreds of years
01:29:38
the condition is the manifestation of
01:29:40
that structural problem yes yes that's
01:29:43
exact exactly that's exactly right let's
01:29:45
end on this uh Elon clip from yesterday
01:29:48
just about virtue like to get your
01:29:50
reaction to this Tucker Tesla has done
01:29:52
more to help the environment than uh all
01:29:56
other companies
01:29:58
combined would be fair to say that
01:30:00
therefore as a leader of the company
01:30:02
I've done more for the environment than
01:30:03
everyone any single human on earth how
01:30:06
do you feel about
01:30:09
that feel about that yeah no I'm I'm
01:30:11
asking you personally how you feel about
01:30:13
that because this goes we were talking
01:30:14
about power and influence and I'm saying
01:30:16
I'm saying what what I care about is the
01:30:18
the reality of goodness not the
01:30:19
perception of it and what I see all over
01:30:22
the place is people who care about
01:30:24
looking good while doing evil [ __ ] them
01:30:28
your thoughts on ver signal versus that
01:30:31
was like it was like it was like the
01:30:34
hand of God massaging my central nervous
01:30:36
system like every arous Zone which just
01:30:40
heightened awareness like that I I
01:30:43
couldn't Rel full Chiropractic release
01:30:46
wow so dirty I'm sorry no but I just I
01:30:49
so vly agree and I don't even like
01:30:51
Electric cars I don't think they help
01:30:53
the environment I didn't even agree with
01:30:54
that part I just love his point which is
01:30:57
the point which is what actually matters
01:31:01
is what you do it's not what you think
01:31:03
it what matters is helping other people
01:31:05
and I also think that the fact that
01:31:07
Andrew rorin has a television job shows
01:31:10
this is not a meritocracy like I don't
01:31:12
know how he got that his response his
01:31:15
response to that was like he didn't even
01:31:17
he he can't even like I'll just kind of
01:31:19
say this is like so inside baseball but
01:31:22
it's literally what I do for a li have
01:31:23
done all my life yes that's what we do
01:31:24
talk interviewing people yes is to
01:31:28
listen to them Larry King I used to fill
01:31:30
in for Larry King at CNN he was number
01:31:32
one 9:00 p.m. all this stuff the first
01:31:34
time I filled in for Larry King there
01:31:35
was no research on the guests I had two
01:31:37
guests no research and I said the
01:31:38
producer Larry was like in Cabo with
01:31:40
wife number seven and I said where's the
01:31:42
research oh Larry doesn't do research so
01:31:45
I do the show when fine and I called him
01:31:46
after I was like dude you do no research
01:31:49
he goes and he was number one most
01:31:50
dominant figure in cable news by far and
01:31:53
he goes no I just listen someone says
01:31:56
something weird I pause and I said wait
01:31:58
wait a second wait a second wait a
01:31:59
second you killed someone in 1962 why'd
01:32:01
you kill him you follow up you're
01:32:04
present in the interview yes and then
01:32:07
you follow up based on what this guest
01:32:09
said notice how Jason's interrupting you
01:32:10
right now sorry go ahead Tucker
01:32:12
listening to what Tucker said and
01:32:13
reflecting back to him what he said is
01:32:15
what game real that's right it's a cqu
01:32:19
jal's treating this as validation
01:32:22
absolutely there's story to this Tucker
01:32:24
that you don't need to know about but I
01:32:26
can tell it's it's tantalizing it is oh
01:32:29
it is it is trust me H well let's end
01:32:31
here I you know we have a lot of fans of
01:32:34
not only there about 18% crossover
01:32:37
between all in and your work Tucker and
01:32:39
they send me images of you out there and
01:32:42
about in the world and uh we just I just
01:32:45
got this one in my
01:32:46
DMs I don't know what's going on what's
01:32:48
going on here is that a park in New
01:32:50
Hampshire where you
01:32:52
guys is the run out of these yet that is
01:32:56
so you know what I'm not that's kind of
01:32:59
hunky I'm just being honest yeah it's a
01:33:01
lot going on here well listen we got
01:33:03
Vineyard Vines t-shirt the the the
01:33:06
romance is now complete Tucker we'd love
01:33:08
to have you back on a regular basis
01:33:10
actually so fun that was super fun that
01:33:13
was great and I'm sorry for talking too
01:33:14
much you guys spun me up into a frenzy
01:33:16
but I appreciate it I understand I
01:33:18
understand why you were number one in
01:33:20
media I that was so fun enjy it thank
01:33:23
you really really good thank you very
01:33:25
much Tucker thank you yeah thank was
01:33:27
amazing Tu good luck with the new launch
01:33:30
everybody go to tuckercarlson.com and
01:33:32
when the subs come out on day one give
01:33:34
them a sub okay sub be Tucker sub didn't
01:33:38
come out exactly how I wanted to sure
01:33:42
you can sub for Tucker Z are you gonna
01:33:44
be a sub for Tucker ax are you
01:33:47
subbing I'm gonna Dom for Tucker Oh God
01:33:52
po all right thanks tuck see you guys
01:33:56
what' you guys think that was fun that
01:33:57
was great yeah let's show you de socer
01:33:59
for Tucker I'll be honest like can we
01:34:01
get him on group chat I mean this can
01:34:02
you imagine being on group chat with
01:34:04
tuck such a fun guy great guy he's a
01:34:06
great Entertainer and you know what he's
01:34:08
into I know he's right-wing conservative
01:34:10
but he's actually I think a first
01:34:11
principal thinker who thinks for himself
01:34:13
we we didn't get into January 6 we ran
01:34:14
out of time but you know he he was you
01:34:17
know not happy about that he wasn't
01:34:19
happy about election denial I think he's
01:34:20
intellectually regular wow J what do you
01:34:23
think Jam I really liked it I like
01:34:24
talking to people that have opinions
01:34:26
that force me to like actually rethink
01:34:29
about how I think and yeah it was I
01:34:32
think the the most impactful thing that
01:34:35
he said to
01:34:36
me which touches upon my own life was
01:34:39
just how one feels when you have a
01:34:42
little bit too much too early versus
01:34:45
grinding slowly and compounding success
01:34:47
over many years I think it does create
01:34:50
in moments
01:34:52
an element of self-sabotage I lived it
01:34:54
in my own life so that totally resonated
01:34:57
this idea that there's just so much
01:34:59
abundance that causes people
01:35:01
to not really fight over the big issues
01:35:04
and then fight over the The Fringe
01:35:06
issues I I do think that there's an
01:35:08
element of huge truth in that it was
01:35:10
really really good I think like that
01:35:12
this is probably one of the very few
01:35:14
ones that we've done that I would listen
01:35:16
to over again totally I'd say that was
01:35:18
like one of my favorite episodes or
01:35:19
probably my favor top five just just as
01:35:22
a listener I just enjoyed listening the
01:35:24
whole [ __ ] time the thing I I just
01:35:25
wanted to I could hear him talk for
01:35:27
hours probably I know I didn't want to
01:35:28
talk I didn't have anything to say I
01:35:29
just wanted to chill and hang out like
01:35:30
listen that's great yeah me too have you
01:35:32
done Tucker show jth yet they asked me
01:35:35
to do the show in December which I
01:35:37
couldn't do and at some point in the
01:35:39
spring I will do the show but then I was
01:35:41
like can you come on our show and there
01:35:44
you go doing it right it's amazing yeah
01:35:46
that was amazing SX didn't you like go
01:35:48
on his show no I've been on Tucker show
01:35:50
a couple of times when it was on Fox and
01:35:52
one appearance was about chasa buin you
01:35:54
know the da that we got tossed out and
01:35:56
then go team I I went on a couple other
01:35:59
times I think one one was about the
01:36:00
economy I was on a show a couple of
01:36:02
times for you know short segments but
01:36:04
anyway I thought I thought what was
01:36:05
interesting about this conversation was
01:36:07
that it was much more philosophical than
01:36:09
I was expecting yes we we touched on a
01:36:11
few like policy issues but we spent most
01:36:15
of the time talking about his deeper
01:36:18
clinical diagnosis of American culture
01:36:21
and American discourse and I would say
01:36:25
that one of the things that's maybe
01:36:26
unique about his take and I mean
01:36:29
definitely different than mine is it's
01:36:30
much more
01:36:31
psychological than metaphysical even
01:36:34
metaphysical and psychological I mean
01:36:36
like I don't really ask too many
01:36:38
questions about why people believe what
01:36:40
they believe I just sort of take it as a
01:36:41
given and then discuss whether they're
01:36:44
right or wrong whereas he actually sort
01:36:45
of psycho analyzes why people have the
01:36:49
views that they have and and um you know
01:36:52
what I mean it's it's actually kind of
01:36:53
interesting that whole methodology for
01:36:55
whatever it's worth resonates with me I
01:36:57
mean I think it's very it's the reason
01:36:59
early on I really gravitated to Renee
01:37:01
Gerard because I thought it demonstrated
01:37:02
a lot of how people behave to me in in a
01:37:05
language that I could understand so when
01:37:06
Tucker describes problems in this
01:37:08
context to me it's very powerful just
01:37:10
because that is how I kind of frame
01:37:12
things as I think humans are driven by
01:37:15
psychological incentives and I think
01:37:18
that there is something very worth
01:37:20
exploring here which is these Western
01:37:22
cultures get so prosperous that the big
01:37:25
things we don't fight over so then we
01:37:27
fight over the little things or we have
01:37:28
to invent things to fight over and The
01:37:30
Virtue signaling he kind of brings up in
01:37:32
his own personal experience which is hey
01:37:33
I go to Jackson Hall I'm getting
01:37:35
accosted you know in line at the lift
01:37:37
people's wives are upset at me the
01:37:38
husbands are upset at me the hedge fund
01:37:40
people these are all people of
01:37:41
incredible wealth incredible privilege
01:37:43
who have extra cycles and instead of
01:37:45
having a debate over the issues in good
01:37:48
faith full contact debate like we do
01:37:50
here
01:37:52
they just want to vilify people and you
01:37:53
know I tried to listen to him and say
01:37:54
hey what what does he get right here now
01:37:57
I obviously think he's wrong about
01:37:58
climate change I thought that was
01:37:59
Bonkers but I do think he he understands
01:38:01
human nature pretty well from doing 30
01:38:03
years of interviews yeah it's definitely
01:38:05
worth exploring Jason this idea that the
01:38:08
more successful people get the more
01:38:09
self-loathing there is and then it
01:38:12
manifests in some you know really
01:38:14
destructive ways I think especially if
01:38:15
you don't have a foundation once you get
01:38:17
successful enough there's very little
01:38:19
progress I think a lot of human
01:38:20
happiness comes from ress progress
01:38:23
exactly right's the purpose well there
01:38:26
just there's just no higher order bits
01:38:28
you buy the house that's a huge
01:38:30
accomplishment but then when you buy
01:38:31
your second house or third house I think
01:38:33
the diminishing returns are severe yeah
01:38:35
Sever and then and then these things are
01:38:37
just baggage they're like Al yeah and
01:38:39
then you're spending all this time
01:38:40
dealing with headaches you know exactly
01:38:42
what's your progress what's your
01:38:44
progress what's the purpose in life I
01:38:45
mean saxs when you bought your 6 house I
01:38:47
mean
01:38:48
how you cut that just busy uh
01:38:51
reorganizing the US political
01:38:53
establishments I think he's making
01:38:55
progress you know in his own way SX is
01:38:56
making progress yeah yeah well I I you
01:38:59
know
01:39:00
he's where does he sit on the political
01:39:03
Spectrum today saak because you and he
01:39:05
are both yeah because you're both kind
01:39:07
of outcast in the Republican party now
01:39:09
right like I would describe Tucker as
01:39:11
probably the most influential
01:39:14
populist in you know on the on the right
01:39:18
so there is a sort of populism well
01:39:20
there's a populism of left that I guess
01:39:22
was Bernie Sanders before he to you know
01:39:26
maybe like five eight years ago whatever
01:39:28
describe us describe for the audience
01:39:30
your perception of populism you know on
01:39:32
the left and the right and what they
01:39:33
share and what what they don't share
01:39:35
kind of thing because this does seem to
01:39:36
be the emerging party I think we would
01:39:39
all agree is that people are sick of
01:39:41
these extremes and they want something
01:39:42
new and the something new seems to be
01:39:46
populism well one way to think about
01:39:49
populism is is just to democracy
01:39:51
populism is the word that the elite
01:39:53
gives to democracy they don't like so
01:39:56
for example vast majority of the country
01:39:59
wants our border sealed for some reason
01:40:01
the elites don't want that so that's
01:40:03
labeled populism I think the vast
01:40:05
majority of the country regrets the
01:40:07
forever wars in the Middle East and
01:40:08
doesn't want us getting involved in more
01:40:11
Wars this sort of hyper
01:40:12
interventionism I think that's like a
01:40:14
major part of of the platform and then
01:40:17
of course I think the third big area of
01:40:19
reevaluation was around our free trade
01:40:21
policies you know they
01:40:23
really ended up hollowing out America's
01:40:25
industrial capability and exported a lot
01:40:28
of manufacturing jobs globalization to
01:40:30
to to China the globalization so yeah I
01:40:32
think on the
01:40:34
right big picture I would say the
01:40:36
populism is a nationalist reaction to
01:40:40
the hyper
01:40:41
globalization that happened that was
01:40:42
encouraged by the elites over the past
01:40:44
few decades and he he hit on that he
01:40:46
said you know at some point are the
01:40:48
politicians going to match what the
01:40:51
people want and they they call this
01:40:52
getting to Denmark high functioning
01:40:55
governments in the
01:40:57
nordics you know tend to reflect what
01:41:01
the candidates reflect what the people
01:41:03
want right and we seem to have this kind
01:41:04
of broken here we we have one other
01:41:07
story people have wanted us to comment
01:41:08
on when we had our week off so I thought
01:41:10
we get into the Open Eye thing I just
01:41:12
wanted to point out I don't mean to make
01:41:14
this like a love triangle sacks but
01:41:17
Tucker and I did go skiing last year we
01:41:18
we tried to keep it but now that it's
01:41:20
out you know here it is I'm sorry about
01:41:23
this but we were actually in this Echo
01:41:25
at the same time so it's gonna come out
01:41:27
at some point we might look how old and
01:41:31
nasty those ski clothes are oh yeah well
01:41:34
you know what we're both very woke and
01:41:36
we don't want we're fure signaling that
01:41:38
we don't we want to recycle so we bought
01:41:40
all this
01:41:41
uh on eBay I thought that was Phil HTH
01:41:44
on the left I guess that's job that's me
01:41:47
before I was inic face all right let's
01:41:49
do the open eye AI thing if you guys
01:41:52
have time can we go over this real quick
01:41:54
I don't want to we can I just wonder if
01:41:55
the story is stale but I mean I I think
01:41:58
one of the things we can do here is just
01:42:00
sort of now that the three acts are
01:42:02
complete we can actually talk about the
01:42:04
epilog just to for for people who
01:42:07
have I think the epilog's about to drop
01:42:10
but yeah well that's that's what we'll
01:42:12
get at I think we're still in the second
01:42:14
act here I don't think this is over by a
01:42:16
long shot all right so let me AR let's
01:42:18
see why I'm curious why that is I'm
01:42:19
gonna architect tuim moth Act One Sam's
01:42:22
fired act two chaos for a week we were
01:42:24
off you know what were all the reasons
01:42:26
act three obviously just yesterday Sam's
01:42:29
back I think il's out Microsoft's an
01:42:31
observer on the board so I guess the
01:42:32
epilogue trof is what we want to know is
01:42:35
what happened why did this all happen
01:42:37
was there a major breakthrough was it
01:42:39
Sam doing deals with masi yoshian or in
01:42:43
the Middle East to make uh you know AI
01:42:45
chips what do if we if the epilog does
01:42:48
drop or if like you're saying this is
01:42:50
the second act and the third Act is
01:42:52
going to begin whichever metaphor you
01:42:54
want to use what will it say jam up I
01:42:56
think we can all agree on what happened
01:42:59
which is that the employees realized
01:43:02
that in the absence of leadership
01:43:03
business leadership that the Enterprise
01:43:06
value of that company was going to
01:43:09
disintegrate and what would have been
01:43:12
imperiled was an 86 billion dollar
01:43:15
valuation secondary so I think the
01:43:18
employees did what was in their best
01:43:21
interest and it makes the obvious and
01:43:24
logical sense which is we need to circle
01:43:27
the wagons and get the business
01:43:29
leadership of this company back into
01:43:31
this place so that the value of the
01:43:34
Enterprise is sustained they did that so
01:43:37
I think this valuation is going to hold
01:43:41
I think the secondary is going to happen
01:43:42
so I think like from that
01:43:44
perspective whatever was supposed to
01:43:47
happen there happened so what are the
01:43:50
interesting threads that are left
01:43:54
over we don't yet have a full accounting
01:43:57
of what precipitated all of the all of
01:44:00
the decision- making at the board number
01:44:03
one number two is the person who seemed
01:44:06
to be the Principal
01:44:08
inventor is now no longer on the board
01:44:10
and I think based on Sam's blog post
01:44:13
could probably no longer be at the
01:44:15
company that seems like an important
01:44:18
thing and then the third thing which I
01:44:20
found odd was Brett Taylor who I worked
01:44:23
with at Facebook who I've known for a
01:44:24
long time very sober reasonable guy puts
01:44:29
out his
01:44:31
own addendum to the blog post that
01:44:33
basically says his chairmanship of this
01:44:36
board is purely transitory H what do you
01:44:40
take what's what is that yeah what do
01:44:41
you take from that my takeaway is
01:44:44
whatever's happening is still TBD
01:44:46
there's enough question marks that look
01:44:48
I told my friends on the board without
01:44:50
saying who it was whatever you guys do
01:44:53
the most important thing that you need
01:44:54
to do is you need to retain great
01:44:56
counsel and make sure that there and I
01:44:58
said this publicly make sure that
01:45:00
there's phenomenal dno insurance and
01:45:03
make sure that there aren't any issues
01:45:06
where you could be held personally
01:45:08
liable for whatever happens in the
01:45:09
future piercing of the Val the corporate
01:45:12
Val yeah now that's a generic thing that
01:45:14
I think all corporate directors should
01:45:16
do I think it's even more important here
01:45:19
because you have a non-standard
01:45:21
governance structure that could change
01:45:25
and it could change because the people
01:45:27
involved want it to change but it could
01:45:29
also could change because the government
01:45:31
says hey hold on a second this should
01:45:33
never have been like this in the first
01:45:34
place I'll give you an example of that
01:45:36
you know at Facebook there was a moment
01:45:38
where we divested all of our IP to a
01:45:40
subsidiary in
01:45:42
Ireland and for tax reasons and there
01:45:45
were two signatories to that deal it was
01:45:47
me and
01:45:48
Zuck and six or seven years later this
01:45:51
is long after I left Facebook the IRS
01:45:53
says hold on a second you misvalued
01:45:55
these assets we're owed X billions of
01:45:57
dollars in taxes it was a huge long
01:46:00
drawn out thing so at a minimum if
01:46:04
there's Great Value created here there
01:46:05
will be consequences with respect to tax
01:46:08
and who paid what and if you have the
01:46:11
shielding of a nonprofit entity there's
01:46:13
theoretically a lot of taxes that could
01:46:15
have been paid that not so all of this
01:46:17
to me says a lot of really open Curious
01:46:20
threads which means it's not the
01:46:21
epilogue yet we're probably somewhere at
01:46:23
the end of act two fredberg uh my
01:46:26
question to you is there's been
01:46:28
speculation that there was an super
01:46:30
intelligence AGI breakthrough possibly
01:46:33
and that's what spooked everybody and
01:46:35
maybe the claim that Sam wasn't
01:46:38
forthcoming with the board was that he
01:46:39
didn't tell him about it the second
01:46:41
thing was there's been some forchan
01:46:43
posts again this is pure speculation
01:46:45
that maybe the AI they're working on
01:46:49
could break in some way encryption and
01:46:52
that would have been CA a really chaotic
01:46:54
Global moment what are your thoughts on
01:46:58
those three potential items or more are
01:47:01
any of those possibilities in your mind
01:47:03
Dave freeberg no idea I can that yeah go
01:47:07
ahead sex goad s you take a out so I
01:47:09
think the best theory on what actually
01:47:11
happened here what precipitated all of
01:47:13
this was broken and a piece by Reuters
01:47:16
and what it said was that there was a
01:47:19
letter to the board that was written in
01:47:21
the few days before Sam's firing by the
01:47:25
board in which they were raising
01:47:26
concerns over the development of qar
01:47:29
which was a new breakthrough at open AI
01:47:32
that allows these language models to do
01:47:34
math and previously uh llms just weren't
01:47:38
very good at math it would sort of
01:47:39
predict the next word but that wasn't
01:47:40
actually based on mathematical reasoning
01:47:43
qar actually allows the AI to do math it
01:47:46
understands mathematical reasoning
01:47:48
supposedly the capabilities only at a
01:47:50
grade school level right now but it is
01:47:52
highly accurate and it can be scaled up
01:47:54
with more computing power and I don't
01:47:57
think it was coincidental that Sam was
01:47:59
supposedly in the Middle East seeking to
01:48:01
raise billions of dollars to create a
01:48:02
new chip company basically new
01:48:04
specialized chip or ASC to perhaps run
01:48:06
these types of models so they were going
01:48:08
to scale up this capability and what
01:48:11
mathematical reasoning allows you to do
01:48:14
is unlock a whole new problem set so for
01:48:16
example in chemistry in physics in
01:48:19
computer science and cryptography
01:48:21
encryption an encryption all these
01:48:23
things mathematic mathematical reasoning
01:48:25
underpins all of these disciplines and
01:48:29
so it does represent a major new piece
01:48:33
towards AGI and so I think the best
01:48:36
theory about what happened is that the
01:48:40
board but I'd say specifically Ilia um
01:48:43
had a panic or moment of Panic or
01:48:47
concern you know freak out or whatever
01:48:48
concern whatever about this and it
01:48:52
combined with probably underlying
01:48:54
concerns that the board had about Sam's
01:48:56
other activity because he's got his
01:48:57
fingers and a lot of so it hits two of
01:49:01
the three potential reasons you know
01:49:04
putting aside any personal Behavior
01:49:06
would seems like there's no personal
01:49:07
Behavior here so it's those two right
01:49:09
right so they fire him but they
01:49:10
apparently didn't really think it
01:49:11
through at all and these are not it's
01:49:15
not a professional board yeah that's
01:49:17
constructed I don't know I think Adam
01:49:19
Adam is
01:49:21
but the other two were considered
01:49:23
technologist and then the two others who
01:49:25
were you know from nonprofits they just
01:49:27
not very familiar and so what happened
01:49:29
is they took this drastic action but
01:49:30
didn't explain it and with each passing
01:49:32
day it became more glaring that they
01:49:35
would not explain it so the pressure
01:49:37
sort of built on the company to explain
01:49:40
itself and provide a good justification
01:49:43
for this and then meanwhile I think Sam
01:49:45
just ran a textbook counter C operation
01:49:49
here I mean they got Hearts emojis there
01:49:52
was that aspect of it but disguise
01:49:55
behind the velvet glove of all these
01:49:57
hearts and saying I love you and all
01:49:58
this stuff was the iron fist the iron
01:50:01
fist was they got over 700 of the 770
01:50:05
open AI employees to sign a petition
01:50:08
that they were going with Sam and Sam
01:50:10
went to Microsoft and set up shop so the
01:50:13
threat to the board was I'm going to
01:50:14
take the whole company with me and set
01:50:16
up shop over at Microsoft and that was
01:50:18
sort of the compelling threat basically
01:50:20
all the employees threatened to to quit
01:50:22
and go with Sam and so the board was
01:50:24
under immense pressure and then at the
01:50:27
same time you got the sense that Ilia
01:50:30
was under a lot of personal pressure
01:50:32
from his friends from people he knew at
01:50:33
the company it's not probably irrelevant
01:50:36
that there's about to be a huge cash out
01:50:38
there's about to be a big secondary at
01:50:40
a86 billion valuation so all these early
01:50:43
employees were about to make a lot of
01:50:45
money in any event for all of these
01:50:47
reasons I think I I don't think IL is
01:50:49
motivated by money I think he's
01:50:50
motivated by wanting to keep open AI
01:50:52
intact I think that he must have had a
01:50:55
moment where he realized wait a second
01:50:56
what we've done here in throwing out Sam
01:50:59
is destroying the company and then he
01:51:01
recanted he basically apologized and
01:51:04
signed that petition and at that moment
01:51:06
it just became a fat comp plea that Sam
01:51:07
was going to get his job back and so
01:51:09
that's basically what happened now in
01:51:11
terms of the
01:51:12
epilog where I disagree slightly with
01:51:14
chth is that although they still have to
01:51:18
form this board they're going to form a
01:51:19
n person board and they only have three
01:51:21
members so far I think the conclusion
01:51:24
here is it's sort of a foregone
01:51:26
conclusion which is the board can never
01:51:29
fire Sam again I mean they're they're
01:51:30
not going to go through that again
01:51:32
therefore he has total control it would
01:51:35
take a lot it's would tell you a lot so
01:51:36
I think that Sam has won and he's going
01:51:38
to consolidate his control over the
01:51:41
company by the way I thought he already
01:51:43
had control I thought that yeah you
01:51:44
outlined that in the that he had control
01:51:47
apparently he did not do you think he
01:51:48
makes
01:51:50
AIT do you think it just it AIT and then
01:51:53
says hey we'll amount of the equity or
01:51:56
whatever to this nonprofit but we're
01:51:57
going to we're just going to flip this
01:51:58
thing and and separate it out and clean
01:52:00
up the original sin I think apparently
01:52:02
there's like tax problems with doing
01:52:03
that but I but I think that what happens
01:52:05
is look they already have this
01:52:07
for-profit LLC entity which is where all
01:52:10
the investors have have basically put
01:52:11
their money into and they've gotten
01:52:13
shares or membership interests or some
01:52:16
sort of profit interest synthetic shares
01:52:18
whatever synthetic shares Phantom shares
01:52:19
and then the vast majority of that is
01:52:21
owned by this Foundation the nonprofit
01:52:23
Foundation that I always thought was
01:52:25
under Sam's control but apparently it
01:52:26
wasn't I think it now will be I think
01:52:28
that I just think that what's going to
01:52:30
happen in the next few months is that
01:52:31
Sam will consolidate his control because
01:52:34
he's proven that he has a total loyalty
01:52:36
of the troops and they're behind him and
01:52:38
there's no choice so why won't he get
01:52:40
everything he
01:52:41
wants yeah all of the all of the smoke I
01:52:46
think leads to the fire that you point
01:52:47
out which is there was some great
01:52:49
advance
01:52:50
there was some deals going on and those
01:52:52
things it matches what the board said we
01:52:55
didn't feel like we was being
01:52:56
forthcoming with us and it could be on
01:52:58
two issues like that it just totally
01:53:00
makes sense it locks the puzzle pieces
01:53:02
in place Dave let's assume that they
01:53:06
have now not only done language models
01:53:08
predicting the next word and and you
01:53:10
know understanding that but there is
01:53:12
some reasoning going on here and they
01:53:14
understand math and it understands how
01:53:16
to do the next math problem I don't know
01:53:18
if we put that under reinforcement
01:53:19
learning it's obviously very different
01:53:20
than language
01:53:22
models explain what you think if that is
01:53:25
what's happening here with the Q project
01:53:27
what that could mean on a scientific
01:53:29
basis I don't know enough I'm sorry I
01:53:32
gotta I mean this is why we love you
01:53:33
because you're honest when you don't
01:53:35
know jamat anything here as we wrap in
01:53:38
terms of watching this whole
01:53:40
brewhaha I think it's probably not the
01:53:43
end yeah yeah more drama I think there
01:53:47
probably will be more drama yeah I mean
01:53:50
of drama did you see the article this
01:53:52
morning where they started saying all
01:53:54
the houses that Sam bought he bought all
01:53:56
these houses and so I think there's a
01:53:58
lot of investigators digging around now
01:54:00
trying to figure out all the backstory
01:54:02
because the board was and so forth
01:54:03
coming with what happened and why they
01:54:05
made this decision there's a lot of
01:54:07
people digging around trying to figure
01:54:08
out more about Sam than may have been
01:54:11
you know looked into in the past so this
01:54:12
will reveal all sorts of new threads
01:54:15
that'll start to become part of the The
01:54:17
Narrative it's unfortunate I think that
01:54:20
technology the progress is what really
01:54:23
matters here not all the kind of
01:54:25
personal people stuff it's weird I also
01:54:27
the the other comment I'll make I
01:54:29
thought one of the the biggest takeaways
01:54:30
for me on the whole drama last week was
01:54:32
that the employees basically got their
01:54:35
way employees got together voted and
01:54:38
said this is what we want and the board
01:54:40
did what they wanted and it really um I
01:54:42
think sets another precedent much like I
01:54:44
think Elon said a really big presedent
01:54:46
in Silicon Valley when he came in and
01:54:47
slashed heads at Twitter um the
01:54:50
precedent that it it triggered a lot of
01:54:52
other Executives to start to think well
01:54:53
maybe that's possible and I should think
01:54:55
about doing you know more cost savings
01:54:57
and so on this is another interesting
01:54:59
precedent where an entire employee base
01:55:02
gets together and says we want X and the
01:55:05
board acquiesced and said here you go
01:55:07
you can have X does that mean that other
01:55:09
startups and other companies are going
01:55:11
to start to see employee groups band
01:55:12
together saying we want X in a more
01:55:14
vocal public way possibly well I mean
01:55:18
freeberg this is not a new Tac
01:55:20
right but look if the employees are
01:55:21
willing to sign a petition on mass and
01:55:23
you get over 90% of them supporting
01:55:25
something and then you also threaten to
01:55:28
all set up shop somewhere else I mean
01:55:31
boards usually respond to that pressure
01:55:34
yeah but look I think that it's very
01:55:36
clear that Sam has the support of the
01:55:38
troops I'm not questioning that but I
01:55:40
think it would be a mistake to just see
01:55:42
this as some sort of spontaneous ground
01:55:43
swell I think there was clearly like
01:55:45
some organization to it like I said I
01:55:48
think he ran a textbook operation there
01:55:51
yeah and wasn't it Paul Graham who said
01:55:53
something like if Sam were dropped in an
01:55:55
island of cannibals like kind of a lord
01:55:58
of the fly situation he'd be the one to
01:55:59
come out on
01:56:01
top he's like really he's in his element
01:56:03
don't don't just assume look this is all
01:56:06
covered up by hearts and I love you I
01:56:08
mean I've never read a corporate
01:56:09
announcement with the word love in it
01:56:11
more times this was not about love and
01:56:14
hearts all you know this is there's some
01:56:16
he's a warless corporate in fighting
01:56:18
here yeah he came out on top but look
01:56:21
the board was totally incompetent I mean
01:56:22
listen if if a board is going to take a
01:56:26
drastic action of firing the founder CEO
01:56:29
when everything is going great I mean
01:56:32
because everything's been going great at
01:56:34
open AI it's incumbent on them to
01:56:36
explain their actions and there needs to
01:56:38
be they do that why there need to be why
01:56:41
didn't they do that even as a c their
01:56:44
reputation I'm saying it was totally
01:56:46
incompetent yeah they should have
01:56:48
dropped it yeah hm well no what I'm
01:56:50
saying is either there's a Smoking Gun
01:56:52
or there's not I don't think you should
01:56:54
take an action like this ever unless
01:56:56
there's a Smoking Gun and if there is a
01:56:58
Smoking Gun you need to communicate that
01:57:01
right and I think with each passing day
01:57:02
that they didn't communicate it people
01:57:03
came to the conclusion There Is No
01:57:05
Smoking Gun and so my guess is there is
01:57:07
no Smoking Gun and they were overly
01:57:09
Hasty about taking this action yeah this
01:57:12
could have been a very simple discussion
01:57:14
hey Sam can we work on you telling us in
01:57:17
advance when you're going doing deal
01:57:19
making so we can be in alignment on it
01:57:22
like there seemed like there was
01:57:23
something that could have been done that
01:57:25
wasn't firing him know yeah I mean like
01:57:29
you could you could put somebody on a
01:57:31
pip you could do all kinds of
01:57:33
things so taking the step of yeah
01:57:36
letting somebody go in that way with
01:57:38
that
01:57:39
orchestration again I just I just think
01:57:42
that this stuff is too juicy and too
01:57:46
interesting for the details to not come
01:57:48
out oh it will come out yeah the fact
01:57:51
that it hasn't come out yet is crazy I I
01:57:53
would have suspected it would have come
01:57:53
out in the first 72 hours so you think
01:57:55
there is maybe not a Smoking Gun but
01:57:57
there's something no no no I think I
01:58:00
think it's what what we said which is
01:58:02
that the economically rational decision
01:58:04
for all the employees and for Sam and
01:58:06
Greg was to do what they did because it
01:58:09
allows them to get an 86 billion
01:58:11
valuation and a big secondary done right
01:58:13
so that makes complete rational sense
01:58:15
that is the rational
01:58:18
decision that should have happened and
01:58:20
so that did but it doesn't stop
01:58:24
whatever underlying chaos was happening
01:58:28
that caused this decision to exist in
01:58:29
the first place to not come out I just
01:58:33
think that the incentives for that
01:58:35
decision to come out now for example
01:58:37
from the two departing board members is
01:58:39
quite High how do you get this
01:58:41
information from the incoming board
01:58:42
members how do they not say anything all
01:58:45
the new six people will have that join
01:58:47
the board will have to get read into
01:58:48
this thing
01:58:49
right so you're just multiplying the
01:58:51
number of people that knows whatever it
01:58:53
is and it's either going to be David to
01:58:56
your point path a which is the board
01:58:58
didn't know what they're doing and they
01:58:59
acted hastily or you know the
01:59:02
self-preservation of here's what we knew
01:59:04
but it is just going to come out and
01:59:05
leak after leak after leak and then to
01:59:07
your point the pulling the sweater of
01:59:11
all of the other deals that may have
01:59:12
been happening on the side or whatever
01:59:14
all of this stuff now comes out because
01:59:15
it's just too salacious for too many
01:59:17
people the numbers are too big
01:59:19
everything just looks too juicy now you
01:59:21
have this like hidden technology that
01:59:23
could theoretically ruin the world
01:59:26
everybody will be leaking to everybody
01:59:29
and that that's the that's the only
01:59:31
guarantee here which is why I really
01:59:33
think that you have to commend the
01:59:36
leadership team for trying to become
01:59:38
very militaristic about all of this
01:59:41
everybody had the same tweets they said
01:59:44
the same things they use the same hard
01:59:45
emojis I mean it was extremely
01:59:48
well-managed
01:59:49
it it was mantras it's amazing what a
01:59:51
secondary will do to the Troops there's
01:59:54
alignment of the St what was the Mantra
01:59:56
the Mantra was that open AI is nothing
01:59:58
without its employees or something like
02:00:01
that nothing without our team or
02:00:02
something and that was that was
02:00:04
basically something that on the surface
02:00:07
appeared to be a positive affirmation of
02:00:10
camaraderie but like I S said Iron Fist
02:00:13
beneath the velvet glove it's a threat
02:00:15
it's a threat we can set up shop formula
02:00:18
in in Excel spreadsheet that says they
02:00:20
are nothing without the team the
02:00:22
Enterprise Value equals zero company is
02:00:25
a zero without us and we can go step
02:00:27
shop somewhere else so it was perfect
02:00:30
velvet glove Iron Fist type stuff yeah
02:00:33
well done Sam we uh well Sam will be on
02:00:35
the pod in the coming weeks I think I've
02:00:37
been texting with him so I think if Sam
02:00:39
uh I think what Elon said yesterday was
02:00:41
also really interesting which is he
02:00:43
described Ilia as an extremely moral
02:00:46
person who thinks about these things
02:00:48
subtly
02:00:50
and so again and and I've known Adam for
02:00:53
a long time I think Adam is tremendous
02:00:56
he is from cor Adam D'Angelo yeah he was
02:00:58
the CTO at Facebook we worked together
02:01:00
in the trenches in war for years he is
02:01:03
just the best of the best totally he's
02:01:06
very smart you know very um very
02:01:09
knowledgeable this is not an irrational
02:01:11
emotional person my guess is
02:01:14
that that they had good reasons to
02:01:19
want to act based
02:01:22
on the Ila's philosophy around AI safety
02:01:26
you may not agree with that philosophy
02:01:28
but their mistake was if you're going to
02:01:30
do something like that you have to be
02:01:32
able to defend it you have to be able to
02:01:33
communicate it and I mean if your
02:01:36
concern here was around AI safety write
02:01:37
a Manifesto you know explain the values
02:01:41
that you're invoking and support that's
02:01:43
right I think that's a takeaway for all
02:01:45
of us for for all of us on boards that
02:01:48
at some Point have to make these
02:01:49
decisions because we're all faced with
02:01:51
them and we've made
02:01:53
them the lesson that I learned is we're
02:01:56
at a point where it is so important that
02:01:58
you give employees the transparency to
02:02:00
reer why they should stay so when you
02:02:03
make a decision like this in any company
02:02:05
going forward my reaction will be open
02:02:08
the kimono and lay out the case bare so
02:02:12
if you have to make a CEO transition
02:02:13
this is exactly why we did it this was
02:02:16
the precipitating events that caused it
02:02:18
here here's the evidence and here's what
02:02:20
we're going to do about it and I think
02:02:22
that that's probably a good takeaway for
02:02:24
all boards to learn which is that level
02:02:26
of transparency is going to be needed in
02:02:27
the future so that folks don't fill in
02:02:30
the blanks with their own conspiracy
02:02:31
theories also there were apparently two
02:02:34
companies or two organizations running
02:02:36
in parallel here to build on your points
02:02:37
J moth which is Ilia and the nonprofit
02:02:41
this might have been the right decision
02:02:42
for that organization but the right
02:02:44
decision for the employees who are
02:02:46
incented by the secondary that was about
02:02:48
to be
02:02:49
shipping the employees apparently
02:02:51
billions of dollars that for-profit
02:02:54
company this would be the wrong decision
02:02:56
the for-profit company should go fast
02:02:58
and it should be releasing Jason and
02:03:01
Jason like the I I from what was
02:03:04
reported there's like this obligation
02:03:07
and it's hard to understand what it
02:03:08
means of the board to determine when AGI
02:03:11
is reached and then as a result
02:03:13
essentially hit the kill switch on the
02:03:16
commercial business and if I were a
02:03:18
board member dealing with that I would
02:03:21
want a gazillion trillion dollars of
02:03:24
insurance to cover me and the reason is
02:03:27
that when that's litigated not if when
02:03:31
that's litigated it is that board that
02:03:33
will be at the center
02:03:36
of dealing with
02:03:38
that financial responsibility and
02:03:41
liability this is the other Master
02:03:43
stroke I think of what Sam did he's not
02:03:45
even on the board so that liability is
02:03:47
no longer his yeah
02:03:50
so he's got complete he's got complete
02:03:52
control of the business and and the
02:03:54
actual none of the responsibility and
02:03:57
and the actual fiscal responsibility he
02:03:59
doesn't have to bear good well can I
02:04:01
speak to the kill switch for a second so
02:04:03
I I think it's a really interesting
02:04:04
point so so by the way Jason there is a
02:04:06
for-profit entity here the for-profit
02:04:07
entity is this new LLC that was created
02:04:09
correct the nonprofit entity is above it
02:04:12
at the governance layer and it kind of
02:04:13
owns the LLC right so again investors
02:04:16
and employees get compensated out of the
02:04:18
LLC and then this nonprofit Foundation
02:04:21
was supposed to exercise it's a really
02:04:22
complicated orc chart there you go yeah
02:04:24
whenever orc chart has more than like
02:04:26
two arrows it's crazy you're [ __ ]
02:04:29
right how many arrows one two three four
02:04:31
five six seven eight arrows that's six
02:04:33
too many but my point is that this
02:04:36
complexity was justified by this idea of
02:04:40
the kill switch that if the AI gets out
02:04:42
of control the AI gets out of control
02:04:44
we're going to have this board of Super
02:04:46
Wise people who are not motivated by a
02:04:49
profit incentive right because that we
02:04:50
can't trust the profit in motive right
02:04:53
and so we're going to have this board of
02:04:55
of of wise Elders who are going to make
02:04:58
this you know super intelligent decision
02:05:02
and if this whole episode shows anything
02:05:04
it shows this structure completely
02:05:05
failed I mean the board ended up acting
02:05:07
in a completely incompetent way either
02:05:09
they had good cause to do what they did
02:05:12
and didn't explain it which was
02:05:13
incompetent or they had no cause at all
02:05:16
which was incompetent either way you
02:05:17
cannot say that this
02:05:19
acted with a high degree of competence
02:05:21
no matter how competent any of the
02:05:23
individuals are I'm just saying that as
02:05:25
a board Dynamic it completely failed so
02:05:28
they did not invent some higher form of
02:05:30
governance as they originally claimed
02:05:33
was Frank strcture it's a Franken
02:05:35
structure so it didn't work and I think
02:05:37
this all I mean it's a I think important
02:05:40
lesson in human motivations which is
02:05:43
just because you take out the profit
02:05:44
motive does not mean that human beings
02:05:47
all of a sudden become Noble they just
02:05:49
pursue other agendas basically political
02:05:52
agendas or whatever and um so this idea
02:05:56
that we're going to solve the AGI
02:05:58
problem or alignment issue by creating
02:06:02
nonprofit structures I think that this
02:06:05
episode proves that's not going to work
02:06:06
like look elsewhere and you and I talked
02:06:09
about this on a Twitter spaces and X
02:06:10
spaces which was you know people give
02:06:13
VCS and and you know investors a hard
02:06:16
time about you know I don't know their
02:06:18
existence and how they operate in the
02:06:19
world okay fair enough I'm sure there's
02:06:22
valid criticisms but the share price and
02:06:25
employees participating and the share
02:06:27
price going up and secondaries occurring
02:06:29
on a regular basis is the most perfect
02:06:32
structure that has been created by
02:06:34
humans to date for running an
02:06:36
organization I think we would all agree
02:06:37
and it's super imperfect and there's
02:06:39
weird things that happen but if you want
02:06:40
everybody to grow in the right direction
02:06:42
giving them some shares and then
02:06:43
everybody watching the share price go up
02:06:45
to the right is pretty phenomenal this
02:06:47
board did not have one VC on it it was
02:06:50
not right and all the VCS in the company
02:06:51
were they were the
02:06:53
biggest you know they were the most
02:06:55
aggressive tweeters saying you know WTF
02:06:58
like what are you doing because they
02:07:00
could see their investment Going Up in
02:07:01
Smoke yes they had a alignment with the
02:07:04
share price but nool so so as much as
02:07:07
you don't like the profit motive it does
02:07:09
create alignment and that makes people
02:07:11
predictable and that's a good thing and
02:07:13
like Adam Smith said in the
02:07:15
1700s the reason we can trust
02:07:19
that the Butcher and the baker will
02:07:22
serve us our dinner is because they're
02:07:24
going to make a profit they're aligned
02:07:25
with us and you know we don't look to
02:07:28
charity we look to their self-interest
02:07:30
and like you said for all the [ __ ] that
02:07:32
VC's take that if you properly align
02:07:35
people it can create I think it creates
02:07:38
a great Enterprise it creates a
02:07:39
potential for great Enterprise for great
02:07:42
outcomes great outcomes absolutely all
02:07:43
right this has been another
02:07:46
extraordinary all in episode probably
02:07:48
top five five thanks so much for Tucker
02:07:51
Clawson for coming on the program and uh
02:07:54
four the Sultan of science David
02:07:56
freedberg the Rainman yeah definitely
02:07:59
David Sachs and the dictator himself
02:08:04
jtia I'm the world's greatest moderator
02:08:06
and we will see you next
02:08:09
time let your winners
02:08:11
ride Rainman
02:08:16
David and in said we open sources to the
02:08:18
fans and they've just gone crazy with it
02:08:21
love queen
02:08:23
[Music]
02:08:28
of
02:08:30
[Music]
02:08:31
Besties my dog taking
02:08:35
driveway man oh man myit will meet me at
02:08:40
we should all just get a room and just
02:08:41
have one big hug orgy cuz they're all
02:08:43
this usess it's like this like sexual
02:08:45
tension that they just need to release
02:08:47
Som
02:08:51
[Music]
02:08:53
we need to get
02:08:58
[Music]
02:09:02
mer I'm goinging
02:09:04
[Music]
02:09:06
all

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 80
    Most shocking
  • 80
    Most surprising
  • 80
    Most polarizing
  • 80
    Most influential

Episode Highlights

  • Navigating Corporate Pressures
    Tucker reflects on the pressures of advertisers and corporate influence in news coverage.
    “I always said out loud, I work for your company. I don't own this network.”
    @ 04m 48s
    December 01, 2023
  • The Crisis of National Cohesion
    A discussion on the lack of agreement on what it means to be American.
    “Without a shared Civic religion, we risk societal collapse.”
    @ 19m 03s
    December 01, 2023
  • The Dangers of Relentless Change
    Exploring how rapid change can destabilize society.
    “People can't handle relentless change; it drives them insane.”
    @ 20m 27s
    December 01, 2023
  • The Power of Fasting
    Fasting for three days can enlighten your senses and change your perspective.
    “There's something about forgoing food that enlightens you.”
    @ 37m 44s
    December 01, 2023
  • Wealth and Destruction
    Wealthy individuals often fund destructive politics, raising questions about their motivations.
    “Destruction is the point.”
    @ 44m 21s
    December 01, 2023
  • Government and Immigration
    Critiquing the current immigration policies and their effects on native citizens.
    “It's insane for a government to do this to its own people.”
    @ 58m 57s
    December 01, 2023
  • The Primacy of Control
    Information control is crucial in a war, rivaling even ammunition.
    “The primacy of control of information in a war cannot be overstated.”
    @ 01h 13m 26s
    December 01, 2023
  • The Future of Democracy
    Concerns arise about the sustainability of democracy amidst chaos and misinformation.
    “You can't have a democracy if you don't have free information.”
    @ 01h 20m 41s
    December 01, 2023
  • The Reality of Goodness
    What truly matters is the reality of goodness, not just the perception of it.
    “What actually matters is what you do, not what you think.”
    @ 01h 30m 57s
    December 01, 2023
  • Understanding Populism
    Exploring the concept of populism as a reaction to elite disconnection from the populace.
    “Populism is the word that the elite gives to democracy they don't like.”
    @ 01h 39m 51s
    December 01, 2023
  • Employee Power
    The employees united and pressured the board to reinstate Sam, setting a new precedent.
    “Employees got together and said this is what we want.”
    @ 01h 54m 35s
    December 01, 2023
  • Failed Governance Structure
    The nonprofit governance structure intended to ensure AI safety proved ineffective.
    “This structure completely failed.”
    @ 02h 05m 05s
    December 01, 2023

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Economic Crisis18:38
  • Relentless Change20:27
  • Prosperity's Paradox35:21
  • Societal Destruction44:21
  • Government Critique58:57
  • Information Control1:13:26
  • Governance Failure2:05:05
  • Top Five Episode2:07:46

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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