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Inflated GDP?, Google earnings, How the media lost trust, Rogan/Trump search controversy, Election!

November 01, 2024 / 01:30:52

This episode covers topics such as the upcoming all-in Holiday Spectacular, US GDP growth, election predictions, and the impact of media bias on public perception. Guests include David Sacks, Chamath Palihapitiya, and Jason Calacanis.

The hosts discuss their recent dinner and the upcoming Holiday Spectacular event scheduled for December 7th at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco. They also mention a live stream for election night on November 5th, where they will analyze results and have special guests.

They analyze the recent GDP growth report, noting that while it shows positive numbers, government spending has significantly influenced these figures. The discussion touches on the implications for the economy and upcoming elections.

As the conversation shifts to election predictions, they examine early voting trends and the potential for a Republican advantage. They express concerns about the integrity of the voting process and the need for voter ID laws.

The episode concludes with a debate on media bias, particularly regarding how search engines display information about political candidates, and the implications for public trust in media.

TL;DR

The hosts discuss the Holiday Spectacular, GDP growth, election predictions, and media bias impacting public perception.

Video

00:00:00
we had dinner last week and sax and I
00:00:02
got bombed last week we had dinner and
00:00:04
we drank a
00:00:07
quadruple Kasa I've not seen jcal drink
00:00:11
like that before I stopped in for a few
00:00:13
minutes drinking I mean Kasa aul he tore
00:00:16
my house apart getting back in oh my God
00:00:20
like a bear like a bear I went Brooklyn
00:00:22
sth he was like a bear he was like a
00:00:23
drunk bear but I I spoke to the lady of
00:00:26
the manor and I will be staying at Sax's
00:00:28
house next time so I will be able to
00:00:31
refresh the ranch's soap and towels yeah
00:00:34
I'm staying in your place I need you
00:00:36
know what I forgot to get towels when I
00:00:37
was at shiman has got these amazing
00:00:39
embroidered towels so I'll just hit
00:00:41
those up when I hit your place um it's
00:00:43
really funny to go to jcal Ranch and
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there's going to be a big S on his
00:00:46
towels like wait why why is there an s
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on I got
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the on it I've got a robe on the back it
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says
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Maga I took all the Maga robes from what
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is What is the stand for is
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grifter oh it's so funny
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steals Ste he's got a bunch of towels
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that say c as well
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[Music]
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cheap let your winners
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ride Rainman
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David and inste we open sources it to
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the fans and they've just gone crazy
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with Love Queen of
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all right listen happy Halloween to
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everybody and we've got a great docket
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for you today but I just upfront wanted
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to let people know that we will be
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having the all-in Holiday
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Spectacular on December 7th at the
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Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco
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it's going to be amazing allin.com
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events and next Tuesday that's right
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November 5th if you go to our YouTube at
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7 p.m. Pacific Time 10 p.m. eastern time
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we're going to do an election Night Live
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stream for the fans we're almost at
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700,000 subscribers so subscribe to
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comment and join us on our live stream
00:02:10
on Tuesday night there'll be guests
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right there's going to be some fun
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guests I think helth is still banned by
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chamath for life but I may bring him on
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and let give him a second chance chth is
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that okay I bring him on for a second
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chance sure okay so we're gonna give
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helth a second chance we'll see be a
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tight leash if he makes it about himself
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in s seconds or less 7 Seconds to Phil
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hel youth he's going to get kicked right
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off the show okay holiday party did we
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announce that yeah so the holiday party
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go to allin.com events if you want to
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come it's going to be great you guys
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aren't going to be happy but we are
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setting uh we are GNA spend a million
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dollars on this party how do you spend a
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million dollars on a party dude did you
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see the s belt last time for that sounds
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like a lot of founder that's a lot of
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yeah about 300,000 we'll probably lose
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money on the party but it's going to be
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it's not meant to be call it a profit
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Center but it's just going to be super
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fun be a great part you cannot put a
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price on a good time and you know if
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you're going to get that premium founder
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mode did you always want to be a party
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promoter when you were like in high
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school and in college so when I was in
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college I had a DJ set up I had like
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synthesizer setup which I plugged in and
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I did live electronic music with my DJ
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set I'm going to drop the beat jth
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I'm GNA drop the beat here it comes a
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couple of uh my startups now are doing
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something interesting Athena bought like
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a pack of tickets and they're doing like
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a holiday party there with their top for
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our event for our event they basically
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bought a bundle of VIP tickets and
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they're giving them to the top customers
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and their top employees to come that's
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cool and make it like their holiday
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party in San Francisco with their
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customers so that's kind of neat smart
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move by them and so if you uh have a
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startup and you want to bring your
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startup you can buy a a pack of tickets
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as it were that's actually a really good
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idea a bunch of these small startups
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should just co-opt our holiday party as
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your holiday precisely yeah just buy 10
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tickets and come hey freeberg is gonna
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go below a million
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bucks co-opted I'm hopeful today we're
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gonna sign this DJ um which is everyone
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everyone knows the DJ and it is gonna be
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pretty sick if we can get degenerate
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Gambler we know him we play bker with
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him whatever we pay him he's going to
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lose twice as much at the poker game
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let's just let's call it what it is SX
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can you host Um poker at your house
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after the party
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yeah
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no what a team
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player he built an entire poker building
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and he's used it like seven
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times f David saaks is just the absolute
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best all right let's get to work you
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know what's winning as well is the US
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GDP here we go it grew uh slightly
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slower than expected but the top line
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numbers are healthy looks like soft
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Landing might be baked in we'll see on
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Wednesday the Department of Commerce
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reported that real GDP grew 2.88% in Q3
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uh that means it's adjusted for
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inflation and um you know you can't look
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at these things in a vacuum you have to
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look at the other Western countries and
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their GDP Japan 7 Australia 0.2 Germany
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.2 Canada 0.5 the world is not growing
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us is growing briskly and um in terms of
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how the think about it 2 to 3% is uh
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sort of The Sweet Spot for mature
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economies above 3% positive but can also
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signal overheating like we experienced
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during zurp and in 2021 under 2% yeah
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stagnation uh US GDP was 30 basis points
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below the Dow Jones consensus forecast
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of
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3.1% there's your chart if you missed it
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and um obviously inflation we talked
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about this last week is at 2.4% very
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close to to the 2% Target unemployment
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4.1% close to Historic lows 10year
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Treasury 4.3% and obviously stock market
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at its all-time high again there's your
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S&P Dow and NASDAQ as we've talked about
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over in over again shth the federal debt
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is the issue 35 trillion in debt we have
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a trillion in annual interest payments
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on that debt and freeberg your pet peeve
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23.5 million directly and millions more
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indirectly as we know Federal government
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employees now at 3 million it's about 1%
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of the country and uh state government
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employees 5.5 million local governments
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15 million put it all together and we
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got almost 25 million people working for
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our
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government what do you think the
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prescription here is freeberg as we uh
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come up on Election Day and we look
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towards next year do you believe we can
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cut this crazy spending and what do you
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think's going to happen to the economy
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will it overheat soft Landing you're
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running a company now so you have to
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think about this
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obviously oh well I'll separate running
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a company because I think that's got to
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be treated independently from macro you
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can't build your business run macro but
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10year treasuries are sitting at just
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around 4.3% I think what the market is
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telling us and remember that's off of a
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low right when the the rate Cuts were
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happening if you'll remember in
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mid-september we got down to just around
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3 and a half% the market is telling us
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that with the sort of econom growth
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we're seeing low
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unemployment and you know call it modest
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inflation this is not the time to be
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cutting rates and the market is saying
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we are expecting higher rates for longer
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so I do think that that's one big kind
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of turnaround that's happened in the
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last 90 days which is really I think a
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big surprise to a lot of folks is just
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how robust things are relative to where
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folks thought that they were about 90
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days ago urging pleading and supposedly
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needing a big rate cut to get the
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economy moving again but I think at the
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end of the day everyone's looking to the
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election as kind of the next big moment
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in the economy both Trump and comma have
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made fiscal
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proposals that would be deeply expensive
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if you assume the you know these these
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budgeting groups that go out and take
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their policy proposals and try and build
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a model against them that they're both
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going to add trillions of dollars to the
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debt they're going to increase deficit
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spending Etc but the reality is that
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neither of them are actually going to
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end up theoretically being able to ex
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all those policies and there will be
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some degree difference
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end lot of talk about Doge the
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department of government uh what is the
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last word efficiency efficiency
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efficiency that Elon might be
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collaborating on where do you think the
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chances are he said there could be two
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trillion in in savings that could occur
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what are the chances that any meaningful
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Cuts happen and we reverse the trend in
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if Trump say he wins and and he and he
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creates that position I think the first
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question that'll inform how dramatic the
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cuts are is whether
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we organize ourselves around an accurate
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sense of where the actual economy
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is if you look at the print today it
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would actually tell you that things are
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pretty okay and that we are not sort of
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near an unsustainable Turning Point
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however and Nick if you want to just
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throw up this chart if you back out the
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percentage of government consumption
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that is included in GDP you start to see
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a very different picture which is that
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over the last two and a half
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years all of the economic
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gains under the Biden
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Administration have largely been through
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government consumption what that means
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is that private
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industry has been standing on the
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sidelines somewhat and that actually
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maps to a lot of this
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intuition that I've had over the last
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few months when I've said I think we're
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in a low-key recession because what I
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could never figure out is why I would
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look at the earnings transcripts of a
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bunch of companies who would constantly
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talk about softening demand and by the
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way this is across the board it wasn't
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just cpg companies but Dropbox as an
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example same sort of thing they just
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laid off 20% of their staff and the and
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the memo was about weakening demand so
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this is a broad-based softening as far
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as companies experience the economy but
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the high level number is positive which
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would make you think that everything is
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fine but when you look at that chart and
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you back out the percentage of the
00:10:51
positive news that the government is
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responsible for what it means is the
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economy is flat and the economy isn't
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growing which means that roughly there
00:11:00
are a bunch of folks that are seeing
00:11:02
contraction
00:11:04
so I think that if you normalize on that
00:11:08
view of the
00:11:10
world I think the cuts that Elon will
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affect will be
00:11:15
meaningful and
00:11:17
necessary if you uh pull up this chart
00:11:20
Nick of the uh Federal net outlays as a
00:11:22
percentage of GDP I mean you're
00:11:25
basically at an you're you're at a flat
00:11:27
stalling economy
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well if you look at this you know we we
00:11:31
basically have had High Teens during our
00:11:34
lifetime Clinton era 70s and 80s and
00:11:36
then uh it's gone up into the 20s now so
00:11:40
that is definitely something the amount
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of spending we're doing sorry just to
00:11:45
again this is where you can get a little
00:11:47
confused by data Jason this is net
00:11:49
outlays Y and that's different from
00:11:52
total gross government spending which
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also includes QE so if you go back to
00:11:56
the other chart why is this one going
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down and the other one represents 85% of
00:12:01
GDP it's because that one is a more
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accurate sense of what the government is
00:12:05
doing across all of its tentacles in the
00:12:08
United States economy it includes the
00:12:10
money printer going bur which the net
00:12:12
outlays chart doesn't
00:12:14
include so just to be clear about what's
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happening 85% of this quarter's GDP was
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induced by the government if you sub if
00:12:22
you sub it out so take 2.8% and multiply
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it by
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0.15 that is the true growth X the
00:12:29
United States government that exists in
00:12:31
the United States economy today saxs
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your thoughts here on the GDP obviously
00:12:37
looks pretty good for Biden Harris to
00:12:40
have all these stats going in their
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favor but there is the caveat obviously
00:12:45
about the government spending in there
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yeah no I think that's right I mean I I
00:12:50
think that for Harris and the election
00:12:53
it's probably a little too late for this
00:12:55
GDP report to be helpful if you go back
00:13:00
all the way to 1992 where the whole
00:13:02
election hinged on the economy remember
00:13:04
that was Bill Clinton running against
00:13:06
George HW Bush and Clinton's message was
00:13:09
it's the economy stupid Y and um
00:13:11
Carville right came up with that
00:13:13
Carville came up with it and and Clinton
00:13:15
beat Bush because we had a recession in
00:13:18
I think
00:13:19
91 but by 92 it was over already and in
00:13:23
the final week of the
00:13:25
campaign Bush tried to tout a similarly
00:13:28
positive GDP report that showed 2.7%
00:13:32
growth that report would later be
00:13:34
revised up to
00:13:35
3.9% growth so the recession was
00:13:38
definitely over and the economy is
00:13:39
growing again and nonetheless Bush lost
00:13:42
because voters impressions of the
00:13:45
economy had already formed and
00:13:48
solidified by the final week of the
00:13:50
campaign so I think it's probably too
00:13:52
late here for the GDP numbers to have a
00:13:55
big impact on the election I think the
00:13:57
other thing is that voters impression of
00:14:01
this economy isn't based so much on the
00:14:04
GDP numbers it's really based on their
00:14:07
perception of inflation over the last
00:14:09
four years and there's no question that
00:14:11
cost of living has increased a lot over
00:14:13
the last four years and voters are
00:14:15
really feeling that and that I think is
00:14:17
is playing into their perceptions of the
00:14:19
economy and I don't think that Harris
00:14:23
has a great answer for that so so I
00:14:25
think the the bottom line here is I
00:14:28
don't think this report going have a big
00:14:29
impact on on the election in terms of
00:14:32
where the economy is going the the thing
00:14:35
that I would come back to is interest
00:14:37
rates and this is the thing that
00:14:38
freeberg was talking about which is even
00:14:41
though the FED has cut rates by 50 basis
00:14:44
points the long-term rates the 10-year
00:14:46
treasury has not gone down in fact it's
00:14:49
gone up slightly you know it's gone up
00:14:51
to call it
00:14:52
4.3% and so we have this real issue
00:14:55
where as the FED is cutting short rates
00:14:58
long r rates are not going down and I
00:15:00
think that is because of the government
00:15:02
deficit and the government debt and the
00:15:04
fact that there's so much debt that
00:15:07
needs to be serviced by the bondet
00:15:10
market for treasuries just the the
00:15:12
buyers are all leaving the market for
00:15:13
treasuries the Chinese we talked about
00:15:15
this last week have been selling down
00:15:16
their treasury position there just
00:15:18
aren't buyers anymore which is and I
00:15:21
think this could this could ultimately
00:15:22
have a very detrimental effect on the
00:15:24
economy you already saw that I think uh
00:15:26
this hasn't been widely reported but I
00:15:29
think it should be a major piece of news
00:15:31
which is the prime rate hit 8% today so
00:15:36
it now it had a seven handle on it
00:15:37
before and now has an eight handle on it
00:15:39
well this matters a lot if you want to
00:15:42
buy a house and get a
00:15:44
mortgage it's much more expensive then
00:15:47
you got to think about all the people
00:15:49
who already have debt doesn't this look
00:15:52
recessionary totally because a few years
00:15:54
ago you could get a a home loan at a 3
00:15:58
to 4% interest rate you know and
00:16:01
amortize that now your debt service
00:16:03
costs can to be twice as high so you
00:16:06
just can't buy as much house it's a very
00:16:08
bad place if the economy is in the
00:16:10
toilet but we can't even talk about it
00:16:12
because there is no structural way to
00:16:14
get an accurate read because the
00:16:17
government
00:16:18
just perverts the effect it has in the
00:16:22
economy like have yeah Distortion fine
00:16:26
you you cannot have a nonprofit entity
00:16:30
representing the plurality of the
00:16:32
economic activity of a country and
00:16:35
expect the capital markets to function
00:16:38
properly at some point the capital
00:16:39
markets will basically throw their hands
00:16:41
up in the air and puke it all out and
00:16:43
say no and I think that you're starting
00:16:46
to see a little bit of these fissures so
00:16:48
I think we're going to have to clean up
00:16:49
our balance sheet pretty aggressively
00:16:51
here yeah and if you look at the
00:16:53
importance of that rate that rate drives
00:16:56
the value of bonds as the current market
00:16:59
rate for treasuries or for the prime
00:17:01
rate climbs the value of a existing bond
00:17:06
that pays interest at a lower rate goes
00:17:08
down because you have to pay a lower
00:17:10
basis in order to get back to the new
00:17:12
high rate that the market is telling you
00:17:15
so there are several trillion dollars
00:17:17
and we can pull up the the graph here
00:17:19
Nick of loans and bonds that are sitting
00:17:21
on the balance sheets of many commercial
00:17:23
banks in the United States that are now
00:17:26
so significantly underwater
00:17:29
where the value is now below the book
00:17:31
that they paid for those loans or that
00:17:33
they issued them at that those Banks now
00:17:36
have unrealized losses and I think that
00:17:39
this number is one of the other kind of
00:17:40
facts you see a few articles come out
00:17:42
here and there about this but the number
00:17:44
as the rates go up the number of
00:17:46
unrealized losses but the dollar value
00:17:48
the unrealized losses at Banks balance
00:17:49
sheets in the United States has climbed
00:17:51
so considerably that it represents a
00:17:53
real crisis in fact the unrealized
00:17:55
losses on banks balance sheets today is
00:17:57
higher than it was 8 it's trillions it's
00:18:00
trillions Buffett warned
00:18:02
BFA public he's been selling off he sold
00:18:05
off right B well he warned BFA publicly
00:18:08
although a bit
00:18:10
obliquely last year
00:18:13
during his annual conference and it was
00:18:16
very clear it's like listen this is an
00:18:18
opportunity for folks to just Mark to
00:18:19
Market these Securities properly and or
00:18:22
sell them and get them off the books I
00:18:24
don't think B OFA acted quickly enough
00:18:26
and so what did Buffett do he just
00:18:27
basically started dumping and he's
00:18:30
almost completely out of B BFA if not
00:18:32
completely out altogether
00:18:34
so there's a lot of talk a crisis of
00:18:37
brewing there's a lot of talk in fin twt
00:18:40
if you go into sort of like the the Deep
00:18:42
far-reaching bowels of of the of the
00:18:45
Fint community on X that there is a huge
00:18:48
credit crisis looming amongst some of
00:18:49
these
00:18:51
large Charter holding Banks because of
00:18:53
this exact issue and the relation
00:18:55
between the fed and the prime is
00:18:58
typically 3% so the FED Cuts rates and
00:19:02
then the banks put 3% on top of it when
00:19:04
they give people creditworthy people
00:19:06
mortgages and credit cards so as the FED
00:19:09
Cuts this should come down but if it
00:19:12
went up what explains that I'm curious
00:19:14
if anybody knows well the FED sets short
00:19:17
rates it sets the the FED funds rate
00:19:19
which is the the rate of overnight
00:19:21
lending between Banks but it does not
00:19:23
set the 10year treasury for example the
00:19:26
long-term the market set Market
00:19:29
and the market now requires a higher
00:19:32
rate of interest in order to accept you
00:19:34
know the risk of investing in those
00:19:36
bonds or it's not really since it's a US
00:19:40
Treasury it's not really risk it's more
00:19:41
about the time value of money and their
00:19:45
expectations of inflation how much that
00:19:47
money is going to be worth in the future
00:19:49
so I think what we're seeing is that the
00:19:51
FED can cut short-term rates but it
00:19:53
hasn't had the impact on long-term rates
00:19:56
that everyone was expecting I think
00:19:57
everyone was expecting
00:19:59
that we had this sort of um burst in
00:20:01
inflation the famous 9% inflation rate I
00:20:04
think people were expecting that that
00:20:05
would work its way through the system
00:20:07
and that we'd get long-term rates back
00:20:09
to where they were but that's not
00:20:11
happening and it's not happening for the
00:20:13
reason we're saying which is there's
00:20:13
just too much debt out there so now
00:20:15
think about the impact on the real
00:20:18
economy let's say that you're a home
00:20:20
buyer and you got like a five-year
00:20:23
interest only arm type mortgage for your
00:20:27
house Tick Tock yeah so now you know you
00:20:30
probably got that in the 3 to 4% range
00:20:33
if you have to refinance it this year at
00:20:35
8% your monthly payment's going to
00:20:38
double that has a real impact on
00:20:40
people's wealth and on their spending
00:20:43
power maybe they can't even support a
00:20:46
payment like that now go over to the
00:20:48
commercial side and it's it's very
00:20:50
similar there's a lot of commercial real
00:20:52
estate out there you know buildings and
00:20:54
so on where they've got debt on it you
00:20:57
can't get 30-year mortgages and
00:20:59
Commercial the typical commercial loan
00:21:01
is 5 to seven years okay we're now
00:21:05
coming up I think in the next few years
00:21:07
on a lot of that that debt will need to
00:21:09
roll it'll need to be refinanced if it
00:21:11
gets refinanced at twice the interest
00:21:15
cost roughly a lot of those buildings
00:21:18
may be underwater I mean they may not be
00:21:20
you know in there may be no equity value
00:21:23
and a lot of people know this now but
00:21:25
they don't really have to mark those
00:21:26
positions to mark it if they did their
00:21:29
zero but they're kind of all on borrow
00:21:32
time right now hoping that rates will go
00:21:34
back down and what we're seeing is that
00:21:37
the long rates are not going back down
00:21:39
it's a pretty scary proposition and then
00:21:40
of course you know a lot of the the debt
00:21:42
on those buildings it's all owned by the
00:21:44
commercial banks that you're talking
00:21:45
about the regional Banks so they're
00:21:47
sitting on a lot of bad debt that they
00:21:50
haven't had to Mark to Market and
00:21:51
they're just kind of hoping that this
00:21:53
problem will get sorted out before you
00:21:56
know before there's a default
00:21:59
and by the way as these numbers climb
00:22:01
the cost to borrow for the federal
00:22:03
government climbs so the new bonds we
00:22:05
have to reissue a good percent I think
00:22:07
nearly $10 trillion doll I think of our
00:22:08
debt has to be reissued in the next year
00:22:11
that's going to get reissued now at this
00:22:13
higher rate and that higher rate means
00:22:15
that the annual expense just to pay the
00:22:17
interest on the existing debt is now
00:22:19
climbing at a faster rate and that means
00:22:22
you've got to issue more debt to pay for
00:22:24
your interest on your current debt it's
00:22:26
quite paradoxical that the FED sets that
00:22:28
rate right well this this becomes the
00:22:31
compounding problem when your G your
00:22:33
debt to GDP reaches a certain level and
00:22:36
you don't reduce federal spending fast
00:22:38
enough it becomes a compounding problem
00:22:40
you cannot get away from and this has
00:22:42
been the beginning of the cataclysmic
00:22:44
economic collapse of every great Empire
00:22:46
in the last 500 years I know I've said
00:22:48
this you guys can joke about it all day
00:22:49
long but this is how it starts is it
00:22:51
starts at a point where you're at
00:22:52
rithmetic not able to get out of your
00:22:54
debt spiral and uh the markets are
00:22:56
telling us that if the US doesn't
00:22:58
drastic action in reducing it spending
00:23:01
and reducing the deficit levels so that
00:23:03
we can actually address the payment
00:23:04
obligations on the outstanding debt that
00:23:06
we've already issued the US dollar is
00:23:08
going to have a real problem and the
00:23:10
creditworthiness of the United States is
00:23:12
challenged that's what the market says
00:23:13
but I know that there's other issues
00:23:15
with the fact that there's no other
00:23:16
better place to put money today and
00:23:17
there's not a lot of other you know
00:23:19
great economies out there and so on and
00:23:21
so forth but the stability of the United
00:23:23
States the hegemony of the United States
00:23:24
and the dollar is challenged in part by
00:23:27
the fact that you've got this bricks or
00:23:28
gation out there now that has greater
00:23:30
GDP and aggregate than the US and so
00:23:32
there may be an alternative that emerges
00:23:34
in the next couple years and maybe
00:23:35
everyone's kind of putting their assets
00:23:37
away in in gold and and other and
00:23:40
Bitcoin and other stuff while they're
00:23:41
waiting for the transition to find
00:23:42
another place to buy we'll see all right
00:23:45
well but what it what it implies if if
00:23:47
rates have roughly doubled let's say in
00:23:50
the last few years and they're going to
00:23:52
stay at that level they're not going
00:23:54
back down it implies there's going to be
00:23:56
a big deleveraging right because
00:23:59
you know you can't support those
00:24:01
interest payments I mean let's say that
00:24:02
you own a building right and now all
00:24:05
well tax that's it's actually
00:24:07
deleveraging or inflation because the
00:24:10
alternative is the fed monetizes the
00:24:12
debt they start buying all the bonds
00:24:13
which means you're pumping more US
00:24:14
Dollars into the market and that means
00:24:16
that the cost of everything goes through
00:24:18
the roof so you have this effect of
00:24:19
economic inflation which is the way that
00:24:21
you inflate away the debt problem
00:24:24
assuming people still want to use your
00:24:25
currency yeah well I mean that's at the
00:24:27
government level I mean I was talking
00:24:28
about the the private sector I mean just
00:24:30
think about it at the level of like an
00:24:32
individual building you've got a loan on
00:24:33
it now you need to refinance the loan
00:24:35
interest rates are twice as high that
00:24:38
let's say that that doesn't the building
00:24:40
no longer produces operating income at
00:24:41
that level of debt so you have to pay
00:24:44
down some of your debt it's called an
00:24:46
equity in refinancing where you're not
00:24:48
pulling money out you're putting money
00:24:49
in you have to deleverage in order to
00:24:51
make your sort of income statement work
00:24:53
right it's just too much debt at at that
00:24:55
new level of interest rates so if rates
00:24:58
stay high there's no choice but for many
00:25:01
people to delever whether it's on the
00:25:03
commercial side or the or or on the
00:25:06
consumer side you just can't afford as
00:25:09
much debt right at that higher interest
00:25:11
rate so think about the impact that has
00:25:13
on the economy when everyone has to
00:25:15
delever that's a very negative effect
00:25:18
and then of course you like you're
00:25:20
saying at the government level you have
00:25:22
to figure out what to do about that
00:25:24
because our interest payments on the
00:25:25
debt are already what 20 to 25% of
00:25:28
federal revenue yeah it's about trillion
00:25:30
five
00:25:32
trillion so you already see there where
00:25:34
there's less money to spend on current
00:25:36
programs because you're paying for
00:25:39
interest on the debt so what do you do
00:25:41
about that so I I think that the next
00:25:43
president's going to face a pretty
00:25:45
wicked set of problems in tradeoffs here
00:25:47
even though the GDP numbers are fine
00:25:49
they're good I still think there's like
00:25:51
a wicked set of problems related to
00:25:53
government debt and interest rates yeah
00:25:56
and there's no way to really skin this
00:25:58
without some some I think there yeah
00:26:00
there there I think the only path is you
00:26:03
have to cut spending which is
00:26:05
recessionary government spending which
00:26:07
is recessionary so you're going to
00:26:08
trigger an economic recession you're
00:26:10
going to have to have some amount of
00:26:11
inflation and you're going to have to
00:26:13
have a spike in unemployment and if you
00:26:14
don't do the first two things you're
00:26:15
gonna have a lot more inflation which is
00:26:18
really hard to get out of so well I I
00:26:20
agree agree we have doesn't seem to be a
00:26:21
win a win win scenario here there's
00:26:23
there's no yeah I agree we have to cut
00:26:26
government spending I don't I personally
00:26:27
don't think it's recessionary I think it
00:26:28
helps the private sector When government
00:26:29
gets cut right uh however because Sachs
00:26:33
that means seor gets to service that
00:26:37
function the government won't be
00:26:38
consuming all these resources that the
00:26:40
private sector could use better it also
00:26:42
won't have as many government
00:26:44
bureaucrats acting as break pedals on
00:26:46
the private sector so I tend to think
00:26:48
that the government the the real economy
00:26:50
will perform better with a smaller
00:26:52
government however I I think the reason
00:26:55
why it won't happen is because it's
00:26:57
politically difficult it's extremely
00:26:59
difficult to cut spending politically
00:27:01
right right well I mean as we saw this
00:27:03
cycle every single proposal seemed to be
00:27:07
a payoff to different constituencies it
00:27:09
was like right CAU in the budget somehow
00:27:13
right somebody somebody fought for every
00:27:15
single line item in the budget some
00:27:17
special interest and they're going to
00:27:19
fight like hell to keep their
00:27:20
appropriation it's not even special
00:27:22
interest it's the representatives in
00:27:25
Congress doing their job which is to
00:27:27
fight for their con getting their fair
00:27:29
share or their Fair shake at the money
00:27:31
that's being spent and that's just the
00:27:33
way that the legislative branch has
00:27:35
evolved over time if someone's getting
00:27:37
something in order for me to vote for it
00:27:39
I want to get something too and so the
00:27:40
whole thing over time becomes
00:27:42
functionally
00:27:43
inflationary right I think that whole
00:27:46
shell game might just be over now
00:27:47
because there's no more money left I
00:27:49
mean it's all been spent in fact you
00:27:52
know what I mean so like all the federal
00:27:54
government probably will end up doing in
00:27:57
the near future is entitlements and
00:28:00
defense that's it because those are the
00:28:02
core core functions of the federal
00:28:04
government I think everything else
00:28:05
that's that's sort of quote unquote
00:28:07
discretionary is probably GNA get cut
00:28:09
because there's no more money left
00:28:11
tragedy of the commons folks uh
00:28:13
everybody acting in their self-interest
00:28:15
and yeah not a lot of coordination or
00:28:18
ability to win office if you actually do
00:28:21
what's in everybody's Collective best
00:28:23
interest and take the medicine moving on
00:28:25
through the docket Tech earnings this
00:28:27
week Google had a great quarter let's go
00:28:30
over that a bit here you're all mamada
00:28:33
freeberg they beat Top Line and bottom
00:28:35
line stock popped 5% looks like cloud
00:28:38
and YouTube are the story here total
00:28:41
revenue let this sink in
00:28:43
88.3 billion up 15% year-over-year
00:28:46
search was uh 49 billion of that and uh
00:28:51
their operating income is now up 34%
00:28:54
year-over-year I think the CFO is
00:28:56
getting some work done there 28 .5
00:28:58
billion and net income was
00:29:01
26.3 billion interestingly people are
00:29:05
expecting even larger profits they got a
00:29:07
new CFO over there who said they could
00:29:10
push a little further on cost cutting
00:29:12
and she said the company will use AI to
00:29:14
cut costs by streamlining workflows and
00:29:17
managing headcount physical footprint I
00:29:20
think that means more layoffs are coming
00:29:22
to Big Tech YouTube had a tremendous
00:29:24
quarter add Revenue 8.9 billion jamath
00:29:27
that's up 12% % but Sundar said
00:29:30
something interesting he said YouTube
00:29:31
surpassed 50 billion in total revenue
00:29:33
over the past year and so if you do a
00:29:37
little uh B math that's the back of the
00:29:40
envelope math for those of you at
00:29:42
home who haven't heard that acronym
00:29:45
Google doesn't report YouTube's not add
00:29:47
Revenue but we know YouTube had 35
00:29:49
billion in add Revenue over the last
00:29:51
year that means they're doing about 15
00:29:53
billion in premium paid products YouTube
00:29:57
TV NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube premium
00:29:59
which is the greatest product ever takes
00:30:01
ads out of YouTube and makes it usable
00:30:04
so 7030 split Cloud had a blowout
00:30:07
quarter Google Cloud I see that all the
00:30:09
time now 11.4 billion in revenue on 35%
00:30:15
annual growth with 1.9 billion in
00:30:17
operating profit I mean it's printing
00:30:19
money there are seven quasi monopolies
00:30:22
in the
00:30:23
world they're all American and if we
00:30:27
allow them to flourish will be good if
00:30:30
we hamper them a little bit and allow
00:30:34
other companies to pick up the whites
00:30:36
space will be great over to you okay
00:30:39
there's your that's called analysis
00:30:43
Cham and if we break them
00:30:45
up I think that you'll have a lot more
00:30:48
the the sum is greater than the parts I
00:30:51
mean clearly YouTube would be one of the
00:30:53
great companies right now you take the
00:30:55
perspective of
00:30:58
if you own stock in any of these
00:31:01
companies the some of the parts analysis
00:31:03
would tell you that the breakup value is
00:31:05
greater than the way that these
00:31:07
companies get discounted you can look at
00:31:09
the multiples that they trade at and you
00:31:12
can see that so if you're a shareholder
00:31:14
of the company you actually silently
00:31:16
probably want them broken up because
00:31:18
you'll get individual shares that are
00:31:19
each will be worth more separately if
00:31:22
you are a shareholder of the United
00:31:24
States economy you also probably want
00:31:27
them broken up because then you'll just
00:31:29
have many more companies creating
00:31:30
economic value which then drives the tax
00:31:34
roles which benefit the United States
00:31:37
balance sheet it's hard to see unless
00:31:39
you're an employee of the company or you
00:31:42
derive a lot
00:31:44
of ego from the existence of a company
00:31:47
the way it is that you would need it to
00:31:49
stay where how it is well let me
00:31:51
challenge your point on two fronts in
00:31:53
Google's case both YouTube and gcp
00:31:56
required many many many many billions of
00:31:59
dollars of investment over many years
00:32:01
same with weo by the way at this point
00:32:04
that took a long time and a lot of
00:32:06
capital to get the payback on if those
00:32:08
were Standalone businesses and they
00:32:10
didn't have the profits being derived
00:32:12
from search and ads over many years they
00:32:15
would not have been able to build those
00:32:17
incredible businesses so if you do break
00:32:19
these businesses up what you do lose is
00:32:21
the ability for an American Juggernaut
00:32:24
to be able just like Amazon did with AWS
00:32:26
and apple did and we can go through the
00:32:28
list to build these new businesses that
00:32:31
require the cash flows from the old
00:32:33
businesses as separate companies it
00:32:35
becomes much harder to make that degree
00:32:37
of an investment that that angle that
00:32:39
angle of belly aching is not going to
00:32:41
pass muster because it's all about
00:32:43
litigating the past and you got to play
00:32:46
the ball where it lies where it lies is
00:32:48
this business is in a position where you
00:32:50
can probably demarcate four or five
00:32:53
logical business units again I'm not
00:32:55
saying it should Happ but it will happen
00:32:57
and and the the argument of but the past
00:33:00
is not going to work no no no I'm not
00:33:01
yeah I'm not disagreeing with your point
00:33:02
about like hey if these things broke up
00:33:04
people would make money I'm just I'm
00:33:06
just trying to understand this point
00:33:07
about American dynamism or whatever you
00:33:09
want to call it that these companies are
00:33:11
all in America they've all been
00:33:12
successful because they've been led by
00:33:14
amazing Founders they've reinvested so
00:33:16
much of the profit they've generated
00:33:18
back into building insane new businesses
00:33:21
that took a lot of capital and a lot of
00:33:22
time and eventually they paid off and
00:33:24
they became the next generation of
00:33:26
ginormous new businesses that would not
00:33:28
have possibly existed if not for the
00:33:30
will and the cash flows coming from
00:33:32
those old businesses you also have a
00:33:34
companion economy in the capital markets
00:33:36
where there's hundreds of billions of
00:33:37
dollars that go and fill in the gaps and
00:33:39
I think the reality is the people in the
00:33:42
capital markets are not stupid and if
00:33:44
these big companies hadn't spent
00:33:45
hundreds of billions of dollars the
00:33:47
capital markets would have so I don't
00:33:49
gole if Google let's just play a
00:33:51
scenario and I'm I'm not trying to
00:33:53
relitigate the past but if Google did
00:33:54
not own YouTube what do you think would
00:33:56
have happened you would have gotten
00:33:58
funded and it would have been fine it
00:34:00
would have raised the billions buil the
00:34:02
because you do you remember YouTube had
00:34:03
a real infastructure serious lawsuit I
00:34:06
think they would have shut down the
00:34:07
reason is
00:34:08
because people are smart enough to
00:34:12
understand when then there's the
00:34:13
potential to make money okay and the
00:34:16
free markets do a really good job of
00:34:18
highlighting where that's
00:34:20
possible again there is no point Rel
00:34:22
litigating this but I
00:34:25
think yeah gcp AWS get funded with
00:34:28
billion yeah I guess that's what open is
00:34:30
right why does why does cor weave get
00:34:32
funded today how is cor weave allowed to
00:34:34
even exist why doesn't it all go because
00:34:37
investors are smart they see that
00:34:39
there's an economic rationale for there
00:34:41
being multiple players and then there's
00:34:43
a smart founding team that creates a
00:34:46
justification that gets it going so the
00:34:49
era of the monopolies Monopoly on
00:34:52
building new monopolies is
00:34:54
over I don't think it's I don't think
00:34:56
it's ever existed but I think the point
00:34:58
is that big businesses are there to
00:35:01
eventually grow at GDP so that they can
00:35:03
be disrupted by small companies that's
00:35:06
what you want because if you had the
00:35:08
same seven or eight companies then you
00:35:09
could make the argument that we should
00:35:11
have stopped at the East West India
00:35:12
company and everything would have been
00:35:14
great I mean it is what we did with the
00:35:17
railroads it's what we did with the AT&T
00:35:20
it's what we did with standard oil like
00:35:22
when when these when these monopolies
00:35:24
were built in the US they were all
00:35:25
broken up and but hold on it's not
00:35:26
necessarily what we did it's the
00:35:28
conditions that enabled other people to
00:35:30
then go fill the gaps and I think that
00:35:32
that's economic boundary conditions you
00:35:34
know Saks had this great tweet this past
00:35:36
week and I almost quote tweeted it but I
00:35:40
thought I don't want to create a lot
00:35:41
more noise where there doesn't need to
00:35:43
be Zach is paying attention now but he
00:35:46
had this tweet about taking back the
00:35:48
licenses for the main broadcast channels
00:35:51
and I thought that was an excellent
00:35:53
thing and I quote tweeted something
00:35:55
where I was like yeah we should buy that
00:35:57
that for all in and I said it half
00:36:00
jokingly but I didn't because I think
00:36:03
that if those licenses were up for grabs
00:36:05
what would happen is a bunch of private
00:36:07
Equity people would get behind Rogan a
00:36:10
bunch of private Equity people would get
00:36:11
behind us and we would all bid and the
00:36:14
outcome would be better so the point is
00:36:17
that these small structural changes and
00:36:19
I know that it may seem large to break
00:36:23
up Google it's not it's a small thing in
00:36:25
the grand course of American businesses
00:36:27
it's not going to really matter that
00:36:30
much would be good generally through the
00:36:33
lens of the individual shareholder and
00:36:35
through the lens of the shareholder of
00:36:36
the United States that's it sax can you
00:36:38
tell us about the broadcast licensing
00:36:41
comment that you made I thought it was
00:36:43
actually pretty good too yeah there's a
00:36:44
history to this I mean originally in the
00:36:46
US we had three major broadcast networks
00:36:50
ABC CBS MBC and they were given licenses
00:36:54
of public Spectrum from the FCC and
00:36:57
those licenses were free but in exchange
00:36:59
for them the major broadcast networks
00:37:01
had these various requirements to serve
00:37:04
the public interest to be fair this was
00:37:06
pre pre- cable and this was broadcast
00:37:09
this goes back like a hundred years and
00:37:11
just to be it's I think it's important
00:37:13
to be clear because I I I don't think
00:37:14
everyone understands that back in the
00:37:16
day all the TV networks only broadcast
00:37:19
over the air so they needed radio
00:37:21
spectrum allocated to them to to do that
00:37:24
which was a you know 100-year old kind
00:37:25
of that's a 100-year Old Situation
00:37:27
doesn't exist anymore sorry go yeah it
00:37:29
was the only way to get information
00:37:31
broadcast on TV was through this this
00:37:35
public
00:37:36
spectrum and so it kind of made sense in
00:37:39
a world in which there were only three
00:37:41
networks because that was the only way
00:37:43
to get information to have these
00:37:46
fairness requirements and public
00:37:48
interest requirements and so it was
00:37:50
heavily regulated well now it's a
00:37:52
century later and there's so many ways
00:37:54
to get information you've got cable
00:37:58
obviously meant that we went from three
00:38:00
or four networks to hundreds and then of
00:38:04
course you've got the internet and
00:38:05
you've got streaming so there's now an
00:38:08
infinite number of ways to get
00:38:10
information in real
00:38:12
time including video and and that sort
00:38:15
of thing you've also got social networks
00:38:17
you've got X and all the rest so there's
00:38:20
no shelf
00:38:21
space limit anymore there's no scarcity
00:38:24
and so therefore tying up this very
00:38:27
valuable Spectrum by giving it for free
00:38:30
to the to the broadcast networks just
00:38:32
doesn't really make sense in the same
00:38:34
way and what we should do is just
00:38:37
auction off the Spectrum use the money
00:38:40
to pay down the national debt and and in
00:38:44
that way it'll go to its most highly
00:38:46
valued use the market will figure out
00:38:48
what that use is if the broadcast
00:38:51
networks are the most highly valued way
00:38:53
to use this spectrum then they'll win
00:38:55
the auction but I suspect they won't
00:38:57
exactly they did this auction in 2016
00:39:00
right for 15 years they've been
00:39:01
gradually auctioning off more Spectrum
00:39:04
but we're talking about here this is
00:39:06
like the most Choice valuable part of of
00:39:09
public Spectrum so for
00:39:11
example one of the reasons
00:39:14
why the spectrum is valuable is because
00:39:17
it can easily go through walls right
00:39:18
like you can watch your TV inside your
00:39:21
house and yeah this broadcast spectrum
00:39:23
is good at getting through those walls
00:39:25
imagine the types of GPS apps you could
00:39:29
enable with that kind of precision right
00:39:31
so there's many other ways in theory
00:39:34
that this spectrum could be used and you
00:39:36
would be able to unleash I think a lot
00:39:38
of innovation in Next Generation
00:39:41
Wireless apps if the Spectrum were
00:39:43
available I don't think the public would
00:39:45
lose anything because ABC CBS NBC first
00:39:49
of all I mean these networks are
00:39:50
basically a commodity now there's so
00:39:52
many other ways to getting used and
00:39:53
they'll still be available through the
00:39:55
internet and through cable so you're
00:39:57
saying
00:39:59
to speed up these auctions because they
00:40:01
do occur every 15 years or something to
00:40:03
that I think what happens is that the um
00:40:06
the licenses are actually granted to
00:40:08
local stations like your you know your
00:40:11
local ABC
00:40:15
whatever yeah and then collectively they
00:40:17
have a Lobby called the NAB or National
00:40:20
Association of broadcasters and this is
00:40:22
why they have so much power is you've
00:40:24
got all these local networks let's call
00:40:26
three or four of them in every geography
00:40:28
and they all come together as part of
00:40:29
this Lobby and so this is why nothing
00:40:32
ever changes but does this model still
00:40:34
make sense no I mean it's completely
00:40:36
obsolete but those local networks will
00:40:39
all go crazy if they lose their free
00:40:42
Spectrum well they pay for it they don't
00:40:45
they don't pay for it now they get a a
00:40:46
free license from the FCC in exchange
00:40:48
for the fairness requirement and these
00:40:51
other requirements I think that they pay
00:40:54
billions of dollars for these and like
00:40:56
hundreds
00:40:58
no every six years or so they come back
00:41:00
up and they get renewed by the FCC H I
00:41:03
was just talking about the Spectrum
00:41:05
auctions I'm looking at it right now
00:41:06
that's different yeah
00:41:08
okay all right interesting no look the
00:41:11
the FCC has auction Spectrum before but
00:41:13
not the spectrum that the broadcast
00:41:16
networks are sitting on which is some of
00:41:17
the most valuable Spectrum got it and
00:41:20
the only reason why it's being used this
00:41:22
way is because of Legacy because this is
00:41:25
how it worked 100 years ago well and
00:41:28
then this parallels into I think some of
00:41:29
the research that's going on right now
00:41:32
around Legacy Media and Trust in Media
00:41:35
bunch of reports have been coming out
00:41:38
about this it's not shocking to anybody
00:41:39
who listens to this podcast but
00:41:41
confidence in institutions is tracked by
00:41:44
a number of different organizations
00:41:46
Gallup being one of them and if we look
00:41:50
at how Americans feel and Trust has
00:41:52
generally been going down in
00:41:55
everything the military
00:41:57
it's also being it's also being tracked
00:41:59
in the wapo upad section yeah exactly
00:42:03
are you g pull that up jcal do you have
00:42:05
that or no uh we'll talk about that yeah
00:42:08
but here if you take a look at from 2021
00:42:11
2022 and into
00:42:13
2023 television news went from 16 down
00:42:17
to 11 and back up to 14 but is amongst
00:42:20
the
00:42:22
lowest in terms of trust
00:42:25
in and 40% of Americans have no Trust in
00:42:30
Media at all according to this Galla
00:42:31
poll here's uh how it breaks down by
00:42:36
party Republican independent and
00:42:38
Democrats confidence by the Democrats
00:42:41
58% Independence
00:42:44
29% Republicans
00:42:47
11% in mass media your thoughts fredberg
00:42:50
as we look at just trust in general in
00:42:54
institutions this transitionary period
00:42:57
we in and specifically the
00:42:58
media I do think we've talked about this
00:43:01
a number of times in the past so without
00:43:03
rehashing too much I think that many of
00:43:06
the
00:43:07
institutions that have offered media
00:43:09
have had to move away from providing
00:43:12
data and information because data and
00:43:13
information has commoditized it's
00:43:15
available broadly through the internet
00:43:16
and other places so the actual Gathering
00:43:19
of information is now democratized you
00:43:22
know agencies put their data on their
00:43:24
website stock stock markets are
00:43:25
published on the internet so the
00:43:26
internet has democratized access to
00:43:28
information so the media companies that
00:43:30
have historically been Arbiters of
00:43:32
information have had to become
00:43:35
effectively content businesses they've
00:43:37
had to provide more than just
00:43:39
information and what has happened is a
00:43:42
iterative feedback system whereby the
00:43:45
more kind of angry they can make someone
00:43:49
the more upset they can make someone the
00:43:51
the more emotive they can make a reader
00:43:53
or a viewer or a listener the more
00:43:56
clicks they the more the kind of lyic
00:43:59
system triggers that consumer to come
00:44:01
back and consume some more of their
00:44:02
media and so the iterative development
00:44:04
cycle is that things look like they're
00:44:06
one side versus another side in nearly
00:44:08
every context in every piece of media
00:44:10
everyone is opinionated and making a
00:44:13
position point from a side from a
00:44:15
perceived side that they are
00:44:17
representing because it is a motive to
00:44:19
the readers and the readers come back
00:44:20
and they align with that side and they
00:44:21
want to have more of that because it
00:44:23
incites their limic system that's what
00:44:25
happened and as as a result when people
00:44:28
look at it and assume that it's what it
00:44:29
used to be which is objective truth fact
00:44:31
finding information gathering and it is
00:44:33
not that they're like well this isn't
00:44:35
even news anymore and the truth is it's
00:44:37
not because information is democratized
00:44:40
it's available to you anywhere and
00:44:41
everywhere you want it you can get it
00:44:43
through citizen journalism via blogs via
00:44:46
podcasts via Twitter via many other
00:44:48
places and so the the Legacy Media
00:44:51
companies have effectively become
00:44:52
emotive content companies in order to
00:44:55
drive clicks Drive views sell ads that's
00:44:57
really all this whole story is and I
00:44:59
don't think that that's going to shift I
00:45:00
don't think that Jeff bezos's attempt to
00:45:02
try and return wapo back to being a
00:45:05
fact-f finding organization is going to
00:45:06
be successful I think all the consumers
00:45:08
that read wo today they love the
00:45:10
one-sided nature they love the bias that
00:45:13
they read it makes them feel good I
00:45:15
think that the people that work there
00:45:16
love the bias they love writing those
00:45:18
opinion pieces it makes them feel good I
00:45:20
don't think anyone actually wants boring
00:45:22
news anymore because you know what they
00:45:23
can go to a website from the government
00:45:26
itself or from a company itself and just
00:45:27
read the information and frankly if they
00:45:30
want to get unbiased honest factual
00:45:32
information there's a hundred other
00:45:33
sources well and then here the
00:45:35
commentary the comment yeah the
00:45:36
commentary about off the cuff Etc you
00:45:39
know what that is that's called
00:45:40
authentic conversation that is how
00:45:43
people speak when we all get together we
00:45:45
are not journalists we are not
00:45:47
necessarily well-versed let's be honest
00:45:49
we mess things up a lot we say off the
00:45:51
cuff comments that are wrong very often
00:45:53
but that's just how people speak and it
00:45:55
feels authentic and when we do have
00:45:57
signal I think that listeners and
00:45:59
viewers are smart enough to separate
00:46:00
that signal from noise and they are
00:46:02
going to make their own decisions about
00:46:04
what they find to be truth and factual
00:46:07
and what they're going to use to make
00:46:08
decisions in their life and that's I
00:46:09
think how people want to consume
00:46:11
information now it's not being told what
00:46:13
the truth is by some fake Authority and
00:46:16
here is a clip from the podcast last
00:46:19
year podcast could play a huge role just
00:46:21
like in 2016 social media broke through
00:46:23
and played a huge role I think in 2024 I
00:46:27
think that podcast could break
00:46:29
through the way that unorthodox
00:46:31
candidates get their message out could
00:46:33
be the way all candidates get their
00:46:34
message out we're moving from
00:46:37
traditional media defining these
00:46:39
candidates to direct to Consumer direct
00:46:42
through Twitter SLX direct through
00:46:44
podcasts this podcast included what
00:46:47
we're witnessing right now is the
00:46:48
transition from traditional media and
00:46:50
the establishment defining who the great
00:46:53
candidates are to the public and the
00:46:56
people on podcast in social media who
00:46:57
are the tip of the spear and the
00:46:59
Vanguard they're going to pick the
00:47:01
winners I love you both you guys totally
00:47:03
nailed it look at that sax your thoughts
00:47:06
on this sort of transition
00:47:08
interestingly as we know Rogan had Trump
00:47:11
on over 40 million views now I think
00:47:13
they're up to 100 million views now for
00:47:15
that Rogan Trump interview oh including
00:47:18
the fact that you literally could not
00:47:19
find it if you search for it in Google
00:47:21
or YouTube it's quite amaz well we'll
00:47:22
get to that in a second yeah that's an
00:47:24
interesting one I got to take on that
00:47:25
but what do you take from
00:47:28
Rogan getting let's say many more views
00:47:32
than the last two presidential debates
00:47:35
Trump Harris 67 million viewers Trump
00:47:37
Biden 51 million viewers I think maybe
00:47:40
Rogan combined with his two episodes
00:47:44
will get more than the first two debates
00:47:48
yeah look I think this is the first
00:47:49
podcast election where you can make the
00:47:52
argument that podcasts will decide the
00:47:54
election and there's a couple of reasons
00:47:56
for that one is podcasts have gotten big
00:47:58
enough that there's enough audience that
00:48:00
they just have the reach now to play a
00:48:02
big role second the format is is highly
00:48:07
informative to viewers you get to see a
00:48:09
candidate expound in long form being
00:48:13
asked questions and having to go for
00:48:15
potentially hours at a time I mean Trump
00:48:17
went for three hours with Rogan impress
00:48:20
and it's very hard to hide who you are
00:48:22
when you're going for that period of
00:48:24
time in an unscripted environment I
00:48:26
would argue even the hour that Trump
00:48:28
spent with us demonstrated that he knew
00:48:32
a lot more about policy issues than
00:48:34
people were giving him credit for and
00:48:35
it's and it also showed his personality
00:48:38
was a lot different than the media had
00:48:39
portrayed him so I think that podcasts
00:48:42
have been a great Advantage for Trump
00:48:45
he's been willing to do them and I think
00:48:47
he does them quite well I think it's
00:48:50
particularly helpful to him in a context
00:48:52
where the Legacy Media has been trying
00:48:55
to portray him as a very extreme figure
00:48:58
as as literally a Nazi or literally The
00:49:01
Reincarnation of Adolf Hitler when the
00:49:03
media is is telling the audience that
00:49:05
you're that and then you can go on Rogan
00:49:07
for three hours and show that you're a
00:49:09
normal funny guy who actually knows a
00:49:11
lot about policy it's just such a
00:49:13
different impression than what the media
00:49:15
is trying to portray that it's been
00:49:18
incredibly I think useful and
00:49:20
advantageous for Trump by the same token
00:49:23
KLA Harris has not been willing to do
00:49:25
Rogen at least not on Rogan's terms
00:49:27
apparently she was willing to sit down
00:49:30
for one hour with him but but not in
00:49:32
Austin according but not in Austin but
00:49:34
Rogan said is no we have to sit down in
00:49:37
our studio for three hours so far she
00:49:39
hasn't been willing to do that I think
00:49:41
that speaks volumes in and of itself is
00:49:43
that she hasn't been willing to subject
00:49:45
herself to the same sort of you could
00:49:48
call it interrogation or really just
00:49:50
longform conversation that Trump has
00:49:52
been willing to but in any event just I
00:49:55
think my bottom line on this is that I
00:49:57
think Trump's biggest challenge in this
00:49:59
election is just to get people
00:50:02
comfortable with the idea of a second
00:50:05
Trump term to get people comfortable
00:50:07
with him and I think that him going on
00:50:10
all these podcasts including ours
00:50:13
including I thought that Andrew Schulz
00:50:14
Swan was really good too has helped him
00:50:16
I think just get people comfortable with
00:50:17
the idea of of trump which I think was
00:50:20
just his biggest obstacle in this
00:50:21
election because people definitely want
00:50:22
to change and they're not happy with
00:50:24
Biden Harris you know the one thing I
00:50:26
say is before you go on Rogan there's a
00:50:31
sense of anxiety that I had which was do
00:50:36
I have enough interesting things to say
00:50:38
for three hours that was really at the
00:50:40
top of my mind I think Jason I talked to
00:50:42
you right before yeah I went on and and
00:50:45
that was a big thing for
00:50:47
me and then you go and you get in the
00:50:50
seat and he's incredible in the way that
00:50:53
he kind of like moves the conversation
00:50:55
along and then you end up you're like oh
00:50:57
it's already been 3 hours that's his
00:51:01
superpow the reason that she should find
00:51:04
a way to go to Austin and do it is
00:51:07
because he has the ability to allow you
00:51:11
to be your true self over a long period
00:51:13
of time and I think again just going
00:51:16
back to the
00:51:17
basics she deserves for herself for the
00:51:21
American people to vote up or down who
00:51:24
she really is and all the campaign
00:51:26
strategists aside and all of the other
00:51:28
nonsense aside I would want if I was
00:51:31
running for president one shot at people
00:51:35
being able to see me for who I really am
00:51:39
and that's why she should go on R I
00:51:41
think she's afraid of that I mean she
00:51:43
has mostly ducked media interviews and
00:51:47
ducked any podcast that would be
00:51:49
perceived as ever she's definitely gone
00:51:51
with the friend but she sto she stopped
00:51:53
ducking them I think In fairness to her
00:51:55
like maybe after she was like in the
00:51:57
third or fourth week she started yeah
00:51:59
she's done call me daddy she's done
00:52:00
Howard
00:52:01
Stern knew would be super friendly yeah
00:52:03
of course yeah doing adversarial is
00:52:06
don't you think that Trump did our show
00:52:08
because he thought it would be friendly
00:52:10
yeah he started with friendlies yeah
00:52:12
yeah why would he do opposition when
00:52:13
Trump did I mean we were one of the
00:52:15
first podcasts he went on went on that
00:52:17
fox she went on that Fox News thing she
00:52:19
did Fox News for 26 minutes freeberg and
00:52:21
her staff was waving they were on the
00:52:24
sidelines waving frantically to get her
00:52:26
off of there um but any event was was
00:52:29
were we the first podcast to interview
00:52:31
Trump second nek boys were first I guess
00:52:34
we were
00:52:36
second I think that it was really
00:52:39
unclear what would happen when you you
00:52:42
know put a major candidate for president
00:52:44
on a podcast for an hour at the time he
00:52:45
did it I think he took a little bit of a
00:52:47
risk um and I think it worked out for
00:52:49
him and then he's done a lot more since
00:52:51
then I mean other than Rogan Rogan and
00:52:54
us have consistent tried to get
00:52:57
everybody on all sides to be on the
00:52:58
podcast I think we did a really good job
00:53:00
looking back on we've gotten everybody
00:53:02
except one person K yeah I mean I wish I
00:53:06
had time to have asked January that get
00:53:11
to on my question we had all The
00:53:12
Independents and we had all the credible
00:53:15
Republicans and to his credit we were
00:53:17
the first for RFK right we were the
00:53:19
first
00:53:21
with first for Dean Phillips Dean
00:53:24
Phillips and V
00:53:27
were the first for V and so yeah I give
00:53:28
us some some credit there on the um
00:53:30
search issue I looked into that there VI
00:53:34
sorry I always get that wrong the search
00:53:36
issue there was some complaints that
00:53:38
YouTube might have been like I don't
00:53:40
know hiding the video which didn't make
00:53:42
much sense to people so I did an
00:53:44
investigation of that sax you're
00:53:47
laughing go
00:53:48
ahead well finish what you're saying no
00:53:51
no no I have a different point of view
00:53:52
than you on this but I didn't get my
00:53:53
point I know I've seen it on Twitter but
00:53:56
keep going oh well no I did um a search
00:53:59
on you're going to defend Google I know
00:54:01
no no I'm not defending Google I'm just
00:54:02
explaining to people how search works
00:54:04
independent of it I went to Bing dock
00:54:07
Dogo search. brave.com Google YouTube
00:54:11
Google video and what people don't
00:54:14
understand about how the search
00:54:15
algorithms work is they are designed to
00:54:18
increase advertising dollars and
00:54:21
freeberg will back me up this he worked
00:54:22
at Google and session link that's the
00:54:26
goal am I correct freeberg with
00:54:28
algorithms whether it's Tik Tok YouTubes
00:54:31
Etc yeah
00:54:34
I I know more about search results I
00:54:36
don't know as much about the video stuff
00:54:37
so so when you look at that it's it's a
00:54:40
very nuanced thing but Joe Rogan doesn't
00:54:42
monetize his search he does
00:54:45
not make any money for them and then
00:54:48
Clips do make money for YouTube and the
00:54:51
clips have flooded the zone so if you do
00:54:53
a search on any search engine whether
00:54:55
it's being or Brave or duck ducko Google
00:54:59
or YouTube any of them what you'll find
00:55:01
is the clips beat out the main episodes
00:55:05
all the time this happens to our podcast
00:55:07
when people clip our podcasts they will
00:55:09
do keyword stuffing and they'll beat us
00:55:12
and it will beat the algorithm because
00:55:14
the algorithm wants to get ads and we
00:55:16
don't have ads turned on either so
00:55:18
people have this frequent frustration
00:55:19
with this weekend startups my other
00:55:21
podcast all in here and Joe Rogan that
00:55:24
anything that's not monetized on YouTube
00:55:26
doesn't rank high and if you look all of
00:55:29
the
00:55:30
clips and this makes sense if you just
00:55:32
think logically the clips will will
00:55:36
generate more engagement because you get
00:55:38
to watch the highlights so it's kind of
00:55:40
like sports highlights sax would you
00:55:42
like to conspiracy theory this and tell
00:55:44
us that Sergey is sandbagging for the
00:55:47
Democrats or something by hiding YouTu
00:55:49
conspiracy theory you can just I mean if
00:55:51
you go to Google every single day and
00:55:53
just type in a trump related search term
00:55:56
versus a Comm related search term you'll
00:55:58
see the difference in coverage but back
00:56:00
to the the Rogan thing look Google is a
00:56:03
search engine this is what they're
00:56:04
supposed to be good at you have an
00:56:06
interview between the biggest podcaster
00:56:08
in the world and a former president
00:56:10
who's probably the most famous person in
00:56:11
the world it's massively trending it's
00:56:14
got something like 100 million views at
00:56:16
the time that people noticed that you
00:56:18
couldn't find it on YouTube it already
00:56:19
had something like 34 million views what
00:56:22
I'm saying is you have to work pretty
00:56:24
hard as a search engine for your
00:56:26
algorithm to be so bad that you can't
00:56:29
find that interview okay when I went to
00:56:31
YouTube and tried to find it at first I
00:56:32
typed in Trump Rogan interview couldn't
00:56:35
find it then I typed Trump Rogan
00:56:38
interview podcast couldn't find it it
00:56:40
was just Clips then it was Trump Rogan
00:56:43
full interview full po podcast still
00:56:45
couldn't find it there's no question
00:56:47
that just is a factual matter this
00:56:49
episode was suppressed in YouTube search
00:56:53
if you went to the main Google search
00:56:54
engine and did a similar search what you
00:56:56
would have found as the number one
00:56:58
search result was an article from the
00:57:02
Arizona Republic which is a publication
00:57:04
I've never even heard of that would have
00:57:06
told you that the Rogan interview with
00:57:08
Trump was a brain rotted waste of three
00:57:10
hours that's the number one result
00:57:12
somehow Google decides that his number
00:57:14
one result for the Rogan interview was
00:57:17
this Arizona Republic story okay I I
00:57:20
mean that is not a search engine doing
00:57:22
its job so it's pretty obvious to me
00:57:25
that they're using other
00:57:28
factors in deciding what to surface here
00:57:32
and somehow the results end up being
00:57:35
almost universally negative towards
00:57:37
Trump and almost universally positive
00:57:39
towards kamla I think you've got to at
00:57:41
this point have your head buried really
00:57:43
deep in the sand not to think that
00:57:46
Google is incredibly biased in this
00:57:49
election against Trump let me pull up
00:57:51
some facts to show how wrong you are if
00:57:55
you pull up you
00:57:57
here's an image of the YouTube search
00:57:59
results that I just did for the Trump
00:58:01
Rogan and what you'll see is as I
00:58:03
explained previously Clips perform
00:58:06
better and make money they make money so
00:58:08
the algorithm favors those and what
00:58:10
you'll see here is Fox News Etc and all
00:58:12
these clips and then eventually you get
00:58:14
to The Joe Rogan interview and if you
00:58:15
look at Bing search results for Rogan
00:58:17
Trump interview what you'll see is all
00:58:19
the search engines put news up first
00:58:22
then they go to organic so it's just a
00:58:24
fundamental misunderstanding of of how
00:58:26
search is designed for users they start
00:58:29
with news on every search engine today
00:58:32
and then here's Google's same thing and
00:58:34
then what you'll see here is on the
00:58:36
Google and on the bang images you have a
00:58:39
collection you know typically five or
00:58:40
six news stories then they go to the
00:58:42
first organic so people just don't
00:58:44
understand how search works it's always
00:58:46
news first when you type in a
00:58:48
politician's name and then when you look
00:58:50
at the news or you it has New York Post
00:58:52
right leaning you have people who are
00:58:54
dead center like AP in there and you
00:58:56
have Fox News there in the Google one so
00:58:58
of the first five two of them are right
00:59:01
leaning and AP is obviously in the
00:59:03
middle Forbes I don't know maybe Forbes
00:59:06
is Right leaning too freeberg over to
00:59:08
you well I was going to say I read
00:59:11
somewhere so I have no direct knowledge
00:59:13
about this I actually hanged several
00:59:15
people at Google to ask them what was
00:59:16
going on and I did not get a clear
00:59:18
response I I so like I have no insight
00:59:20
as to what actually happened but what I
00:59:23
read online somewhere was that someone
00:59:25
reported that someone at Google said
00:59:28
that there were there was kind of a a
00:59:31
whole bunch of people that clicked
00:59:32
inappropriate content flagging on the
00:59:34
video so like anti-trump people went to
00:59:38
the video clicked that it was
00:59:39
inappropriate and when when YouTube gets
00:59:42
that many people clicking that this is
00:59:44
inappropriate it automatically fling yes
00:59:48
it is a technique people will use
00:59:49
they've used it on our program here
00:59:51
where they right so if you get like a
00:59:52
million people that say at once like hey
00:59:55
there's inappropriate content here the
00:59:57
default is hide the video to hide the
01:00:00
video from search results while it's
01:00:02
investigated but clearly there's
01:00:03
something messed up here because they
01:00:05
should have been on top of that and
01:00:06
responded immediately with the video
01:00:08
that has such a large number of views
01:00:10
and such a large audience to allow that
01:00:13
to happen and and drag on for so long
01:00:16
but someone said that that may have been
01:00:17
what happened and then they fixed it I
01:00:18
so I don't know but I just want to point
01:00:20
that out that it may not necessarily
01:00:22
have been kind of overt action by Google
01:00:25
but just the way that the system is set
01:00:26
up that anyone can flag and if enough
01:00:28
people flag you get this s and I can
01:00:29
tell you I know firsthand that Google is
01:00:32
aware of the claims of bias and you I
01:00:36
think you're starting to see it just
01:00:37
like CNN is aware of the claims of bias
01:00:39
added CNN is aware of the claims super I
01:00:42
mean like all these companies are super
01:00:43
sensitive to so Facebook Mark
01:00:46
Zuckerberg's very sensitive to it I know
01:00:48
Sundar himself is very sensitive to it I
01:00:50
I don't want to kind of hide the fact
01:00:51
that these people think that they're
01:00:52
going out and being biased that they
01:00:55
have these kind of information Empires
01:00:57
because they know that they're going to
01:00:57
lose trust and they're going to lose
01:00:59
customers and revenue and Etc CNN has
01:01:02
done I think an exceptional job I don't
01:01:03
know if you watch it at all saxs but
01:01:06
they have been having Trump supporters
01:01:08
and right-wing commentators in CNN on
01:01:11
the desk every yes it's really changed
01:01:14
the nature of it from being like MSNBC
01:01:16
or Fox did you know being something in
01:01:18
the midle I've never I never watched I
01:01:21
never watch these shows but like before
01:01:22
we go off on this topic people
01:01:24
throughout this election have been post
01:01:26
in Google search results when you just
01:01:28
type in Trump versus Harris and I've
01:01:31
done it every single time it's massively
01:01:34
biased I mean let's just go through them
01:01:36
this was a search result I got months
01:01:37
ago where I just typed in Donald Trump
01:01:40
and you the first Carousel was about
01:01:42
kamla Harris I remember joking on the
01:01:45
Pod that if you want to find the latest
01:01:46
news about KLA Harris just search for
01:01:49
Donald Trump and then you go down and
01:01:51
the first Carousel that's about Trump is
01:01:54
negative stories this one was about
01:01:56
project 2025 which has nothing to do
01:01:57
with Trump nonetheless this was a major
01:01:59
Democratic talking point at the time is
01:02:02
that somehow that project 2025 is what
01:02:05
Trump would do in a second term I just
01:02:07
did this and it's different now
01:02:08
obviously this is you said this is a few
01:02:09
months old I've been doing this on a
01:02:12
recurring basis over the last few months
01:02:14
and the point is that whenever you
01:02:17
search for the candidates the news is
01:02:19
very positive towards Harris and it's
01:02:22
very negative towards Trump and even
01:02:24
when you search for Trump they'll give
01:02:26
positive news about Aris now go to the
01:02:28
go to the podcast se you don't you don't
01:02:30
think this is a function of the fact
01:02:32
that so many media Outlets are being so
01:02:33
negative about Trump and positive about
01:02:35
Harris and so therefore the ratio is
01:02:36
just off how does the Arizona Republic
01:02:39
end up being the first choice when you
01:02:40
search for Rogan Trump they're not you
01:02:43
know like page rank can't explain that
01:02:45
they're just not a major publication
01:02:47
they're not being linked to by a lot of
01:02:48
people doesn't make any sense here's
01:02:50
another example okay stay on this one
01:02:52
for a second this was after Trump went
01:02:54
on the Andrew Schulz
01:02:56
podcast that podcast was a very positive
01:03:00
experience for him as we just talked
01:03:01
about helped his campaign a lot what's
01:03:04
the number one result when you look at
01:03:05
for that new Republic podcast host
01:03:08
laughing Trump face as he struggles to
01:03:10
defend rambling that's when he had that
01:03:11
hilarious story about The Weave if you
01:03:14
actually watch the clip the podcast
01:03:16
hosts were they were definitely laughing
01:03:18
with him they were not laughing at him
01:03:19
that was a ridiculous
01:03:21
mischaracterization the new Republic is
01:03:23
not the objective uh source for anything
01:03:26
I don't know how you could say that
01:03:28
objectively page rank should get you to
01:03:31
the new Republic as the number one
01:03:32
source for the Andrew Schultz interview
01:03:35
of trump that is bias I mean it's just
01:03:38
biased you there's been so many examples
01:03:41
of Google giving these ridiculous
01:03:44
results and they find obscure
01:03:47
Publications and obscure articles that
01:03:50
have no basis in the truth to to elevate
01:03:52
to the top it's almost like they're
01:03:54
trying to find the most negative article
01:03:56
they can find on Trump and make that the
01:03:58
number one result yeah it's not the
01:04:00
search engine it's just the Corpus of
01:04:02
media that's being indexed um if you
01:04:05
look here at Google why is New York
01:04:07
Times then that's the number one thing
01:04:09
well I mean just you know here if you
01:04:11
look at Donald Trump you know if we were
01:04:13
to look at these new sources there's NBC
01:04:16
NPR Politico and New York Times are left
01:04:18
leaning if you were to do this on um I
01:04:22
think I have bang as the next one you
01:04:23
can open and you can look at the next
01:04:25
one Nick which is duck Dugo in all of
01:04:27
these cases the problem is only 3 or 4%
01:04:30
of journalists at Publications today are
01:04:33
right leaning and most of the right
01:04:35
leaning Publications are opinion
01:04:37
Publications like Fox Etc and so you
01:04:40
just you don't have a lot of
01:04:41
representation in the index of
01:04:43
Republicans and that's like a big
01:04:45
opportunity I think for Republicans is
01:04:47
to make more Publications or take more
01:04:48
Publications over like we're seeing with
01:04:50
the LA Times and Washington Post think
01:04:53
going to Publications if Google would
01:04:55
choose to surface them but it decides
01:04:57
that it doesn't want to it's it's on a
01:05:00
percentage basis it's very small as the
01:05:02
problem here you go this is Arizona
01:05:04
Republic rocketing to the top of search
01:05:06
results for Joe Rogan Trump interview
01:05:08
that's a publication that is local to
01:05:10
Arizona that no one's ever heard of it
01:05:12
has no basis being the number one result
01:05:14
in Google New York Times is second okay
01:05:16
I can see the logic of that because New
01:05:18
York Times is a big publication then you
01:05:21
go down one row to the Carousel oh
01:05:24
there's new Republic again why because
01:05:26
it's calling Trump appearing on Joe
01:05:28
Rogan shady and then you've got another
01:05:30
one another one there from the
01:05:32
Independent calling Trump a predator I
01:05:34
mean come on this is ridiculous okay so
01:05:36
you've shared these examples um what I
01:05:39
what I would recommend is I think we get
01:05:40
someone from Google on the show we could
01:05:41
arrange that and they can kind of talk
01:05:43
about how the algorithm works because I
01:05:45
don't think any of us are going to be
01:05:46
able to provide a reasonable
01:05:47
Counterpoint or understanding of what's
01:05:49
going on and if there is bias um and
01:05:52
there's some kind of manual intervention
01:05:54
in this in this process maybe it can be
01:05:56
kind of discussed and talked about why
01:05:58
and how and you know what the automation
01:06:00
is that causes this to happen and let's
01:06:02
just try let's try let's try and
01:06:04
cover I'll I'll take that as a to-do and
01:06:06
I'll try and find someone that we can
01:06:07
talk with listen to have a conversation
01:06:09
they do I I look I mean I've talked with
01:06:11
a lot of people over there and I have
01:06:13
heard from a lot of folks that this is a
01:06:16
real issue that folks are trying to
01:06:17
address internally so that there's this
01:06:18
perception of bias that they're trying
01:06:20
to get rid of and they really want to
01:06:22
address it this is what I've heard from
01:06:23
people at Google so I want to give them
01:06:24
a chance to come talk pull up the look
01:06:27
rather than having us all debate it or I
01:06:29
don't even have a strong point of view
01:06:30
on this I'd rather just bring someone in
01:06:31
and talk about it so just as a counter
01:06:33
point here Nick pull up the B I just did
01:06:34
for Donald Trump and we'll just if you
01:06:35
do it as an exercise that's always the
01:06:37
way to find the objective truth here is
01:06:39
to try the independent search engines or
01:06:40
other search engines duck ducko
01:06:42
bravex perplexity do that as well we'll
01:06:46
see but anyway if you look here this
01:06:48
bing one if you take out MSN well
01:06:51
no woke woke search.com J MSN USA Today
01:06:57
Charlotte Observer Seattle Times
01:06:59
Washington Post I think these are all
01:07:00
left leaning so that is more to my point
01:07:03
that like the entire Corpus of news
01:07:06
reportage is 95% left leaning that's
01:07:10
what's happening here and so they need
01:07:12
to they're going to need to manually
01:07:14
Sach say these 5% should get represented
01:07:19
5050 in the search results to please the
01:07:21
other side even though that's not what
01:07:24
the Corpus is and the number of stories
01:07:26
written by left leaning just is probably
01:07:28
50 to one to right leaning moving on I
01:07:33
have an alterate explanation can we just
01:07:35
pull up this this it's got some data I'd
01:07:37
like to just pull up this data if I
01:07:38
could if you look at employee donations
01:07:40
to party we've tech companies it's all
01:07:43
90s something percent goes to Democrats
01:07:46
except for that's a pretty simple
01:07:47
explanation for why the Google search
01:07:50
results are horribly biased in One
01:07:53
Direction Uber's 18%
01:07:57
all right let's go to our final segment
01:08:00
here we'll talk a little bit about the
01:08:01
election why don't you te us up here
01:08:03
Freer all right guys I'll quickly uh
01:08:06
introduce our final political
01:08:10
election update before our live stream
01:08:13
on Tuesday obviously a lot of
01:08:17
daily freakout daily efforts at having
01:08:21
an October surprise that will take down
01:08:22
the other side all sorts of drama all
01:08:25
sorts of insult not a lot of love in
01:08:27
America right now super depressing and
01:08:29
sad all sorts of stuff happened this
01:08:31
week jcal why don't you kick us off what
01:08:33
do you think's going to happen on
01:08:34
Tuesday what are the things that you
01:08:35
think are going to move people between
01:08:37
now and then it's a tossup I mean that's
01:08:39
what everybody's saying it looks like
01:08:40
Trump's got a slight lead and so I think
01:08:42
it's going to be a tossup saxs agreed
01:08:45
are we 6535 as poly Market predicts or
01:08:48
are we 100% Trump are we 90% K La Harris
01:08:53
what are we uh looking well you
01:08:54
definitely can't say it's going to be
01:08:55
100%
01:08:56
anyone I mean but if again if you look
01:08:58
at all the data the data is definitely
01:09:00
pointing towards Trump having an
01:09:02
advantage it's U obviously the
01:09:03
prediction markets are almost two to one
01:09:05
in favor of trump the polling shows that
01:09:07
Trump is ahead narrowly in this in all
01:09:10
the swing States I think every single
01:09:11
one of them even the uh sort of blue
01:09:14
wall states of Pennsylvania Michigan
01:09:15
Wisconsin that Harris must win I think
01:09:18
in order to have a path to
01:09:21
Victory whereas Michigan and Wisconsin
01:09:24
are very very close like 1% or less in
01:09:27
the swing state polls
01:09:29
Pennsylvania polling shows that Trump is
01:09:31
ahead by I think two or three that's
01:09:33
what I've seen today so it's it is
01:09:36
looking good for Trump and if you look
01:09:37
at the numbers that elon's group The
01:09:41
that America pack put out it looks like
01:09:43
the early voting in Pennsylvania is
01:09:47
trending 500,000 votes better for
01:09:52
republicans in the early voting than
01:09:54
four years ago but is that just pulling
01:09:56
votes forward some folks have said it
01:09:59
could be instead of showing up at The
01:10:00
Ballot Box on Tuesday a lot of folks are
01:10:02
doing mailin and making sure they get
01:10:04
their vote in in mail instead of going
01:10:06
in first there's so then you got to look
01:10:07
at polling of people who say they're
01:10:10
going to vote but haven't voted yet in
01:10:13
Pennsylvania who say they're going to
01:10:14
vote on Election Day and I think those
01:10:16
numbers are running about 18 points
01:10:18
ahead for Trump which is about double
01:10:22
what he needs to win so he just to be
01:10:24
clear the early voting favors Harris but
01:10:27
not by the same percentages that it did
01:10:28
four years ago so right now it looks
01:10:32
like Trump is tracking to win that state
01:10:36
but look I can't guarantee it I'm not
01:10:38
representing that you know that's
01:10:40
exactly what's going to happen but right
01:10:42
now the numbers are looking good
01:10:44
remember Biden only won Pennsylvania by
01:10:46
880,000 votes and again the swing so far
01:10:50
is uh Republicans are doing 500,000
01:10:52
votes better than they were doing four
01:10:54
years ago so there's a lot of stories
01:10:56
coming out on Twitter on Independent
01:10:58
Media and on mainstream Media or Legacy
01:11:00
Media as we might call it now talking
01:11:02
about hey I live at a house I got 15
01:11:05
ballots mailed to me all with different
01:11:06
random names and these sort of anecdotal
01:11:09
stories are being pushed and then
01:11:11
Amplified by folks that are involved in
01:11:14
the election chamat is this kind of
01:11:17
dangerous do we think that there really
01:11:19
is a lot of this kind of election
01:11:22
meddling happening and if not or if
01:11:24
there is
01:11:25
is this kind of a dangerous thing to
01:11:27
happen where a lot of people are talking
01:11:29
about this where no matter what happens
01:11:30
on Tuesday people start to question the
01:11:32
results of the election how much should
01:11:34
we be kind of worried about this
01:11:35
rhetoric I think there are two things
01:11:37
there's the substance and then there's
01:11:39
the strategy the substance is
01:11:42
that does it really make sense that the
01:11:44
most advanced and important country in
01:11:46
the
01:11:47
world doesn't have a uniform system
01:11:51
where one ballot is given to every
01:11:54
single
01:11:55
American citizen who is eligible to
01:11:59
vote that probably makes sense so we
01:12:03
should probably just figure out how to
01:12:04
do that separately the strategy of it is
01:12:08
for both sides to lay the groundwork to
01:12:10
say that this
01:12:11
thing somehow wasn't totally right down
01:12:14
the middle I am hoping for a very clear
01:12:18
decisive
01:12:20
Victory and frankly whichever candidate
01:12:24
wins I hope that it's very clear and
01:12:25
decisive so that everybody is forced to
01:12:28
deescalate and move
01:12:30
on now that said I think what the early
01:12:35
voting
01:12:36
data shows is something that you haven't
01:12:40
seen in the past which is that there are
01:12:45
a lot of Republican people that are
01:12:47
voting
01:12:49
early I don't know what that means for
01:12:51
election day but typically it's the
01:12:53
Democrats that dominate these
01:12:55
early voting processes and they build
01:12:59
What's called the firewall and in these
01:13:01
swing States these firewalls become very
01:13:03
important going into election day and as
01:13:06
saak said a bunch of these states
01:13:08
are different than they've historically
01:13:11
been in the favor of the
01:13:14
Republicans I saw an article today that
01:13:16
just said that they've basically
01:13:18
considered Nevada now in the Republican
01:13:22
Camp because like there's been so much
01:13:24
early voting that it's about 60% of the
01:13:26
total votes they think have already been
01:13:27
cast since they they have a very clear
01:13:30
Republican lead going into election day
01:13:32
so there's all kinds of stuff here
01:13:33
that's
01:13:34
new I just hope that it's just an
01:13:36
absolutely crushing victory in One
01:13:38
Direction or the other so that we
01:13:40
deescalate and get get on to the
01:13:43
business of running the country so I'm
01:13:45
going to break with my most my
01:13:47
Republican Brethren on this and say I
01:13:48
think early voting is actually a good
01:13:50
thing it's it's very convenient right
01:13:52
like why force people to only vote on
01:13:55
just one day because what if you get
01:13:58
sick or a kid gets sick and you have to
01:14:00
pick him up from school there's a lot of
01:14:01
things that can go wrong it is more
01:14:03
convenient to have say two or three
01:14:05
weeks to be able to cast your vote I
01:14:06
actually think that's not a bad thing
01:14:08
and in terms of who it helps I'm not
01:14:10
sure but I think that as the Republicans
01:14:12
become more of a populist party and the
01:14:14
Democrats become more of an elitist
01:14:16
party I think higher turnout might
01:14:18
actually might benefit Republicans
01:14:21
regardless I think it's a huge
01:14:22
convenience for voters and I think early
01:14:24
voting is something that we should keep
01:14:27
the thing we got to change is in the
01:14:29
states where you don't have to present
01:14:31
any voter ID to show who you are that's
01:14:34
just crazy I mean you just you go up to
01:14:35
the polling place and you give your name
01:14:38
and I guess your address they look you
01:14:39
up in a computer and they hand you a
01:14:40
ballot and there's no verification that
01:14:43
you're you are who you say you are that
01:14:45
to me is crazy the other thing that's
01:14:47
crazy is that you can even get
01:14:48
registered and added to the voter roles
01:14:51
in a lot of states without any proof of
01:14:53
citizenship so there are states where
01:14:57
you can go get a driver's license
01:14:58
without proof of citizenship and there's
01:15:00
just a checkbox to be added to the voter
01:15:02
rules and no one ever checks your
01:15:04
Citizen and now you're on the voter Rule
01:15:07
and you can go pick up your ballot
01:15:09
without any voter ID that's just crazy
01:15:11
to me so I think that after this
01:15:13
election there should be some sort of
01:15:16
Bill that gets passed and signed by the
01:15:18
president that sets a minimum standard
01:15:22
for for voter integrity and federal
01:15:25
election for federal election for
01:15:26
federal election states can do what they
01:15:28
want right like each state can states
01:15:30
can do what they want but I don't think
01:15:31
States should be able to do whatever
01:15:31
they want in federal election I just
01:15:33
want I want to point out that each state
01:15:36
is effectively voting for the folks that
01:15:39
they want to have go to the Electoral
01:15:41
College and that's really where the vote
01:15:42
for president is cast so but that
01:15:45
affects all of us if there's hold on if
01:15:46
there's cheating in several States and
01:15:49
in a close election by the way I'm not
01:15:52
I'm not accusing that of happening okay
01:15:54
I'm just saying that if we have several
01:15:56
states that don't have basic voter
01:16:00
Integrity that affects the outcome of a
01:16:03
election that has a huge impact on all
01:16:04
of us let's just talk about this really
01:16:06
important point which I think a lot of
01:16:07
folks ignore it's not a direct democracy
01:16:10
it's not like everyone in the united
01:16:11
states votes for the president what
01:16:13
happens is the states send a bunch of
01:16:15
electors to go vote for the president
01:16:17
the each state casts a vote for the
01:16:20
president how each state ultimately
01:16:22
decides who they're going to vote for
01:16:24
for president is through this kind of
01:16:26
process that we've kind of standardized
01:16:27
across the states but each state is
01:16:29
making a vote so shouldn't the states be
01:16:31
able to kind of decide how they want to
01:16:33
make their kind of voting process run
01:16:36
internally to determine who the V are
01:16:38
that are going to go to the Electoral
01:16:39
College yeah I mean I think the
01:16:40
Constitution specifies that the states
01:16:42
will run their own elections and and I'm
01:16:44
fine with that but what I'm saying is
01:16:45
there needs to be a minimum standard to
01:16:47
me the minimum standard is voter ID and
01:16:49
proof of citizenship to get registered
01:16:52
I'm in strong agreement with saxs on on
01:16:54
this front and I've actually done a ton
01:16:56
of research into it that I would like to
01:16:58
share because I think this is an
01:16:59
important service we can do here on the
01:17:02
all-in podcast I
01:17:04
think I had uh Hans so as a dieh hard
01:17:07
moderate you agree with sex I I I mean
01:17:10
as an American I don't you know putting
01:17:12
political parties aside I had Hans Von
01:17:15
spakovsky of the Heritage Foundation on
01:17:18
this week and startups last Tuesday you
01:17:19
can watch it and they have spent a ton
01:17:22
of money and time on elction
01:17:25
fraud and obviously they're a partisan
01:17:28
organization they found 1600 cases in 40
01:17:31
years it's about 40 a year they found 23
01:17:35
cases in 2020 none of them were in
01:17:38
Georgia you can go search those cases
01:17:40
you'll find cases like this one here
01:17:42
that Nick will pull up Randy Allen
01:17:44
jumper who voted twice and the database
01:17:46
is amazing anybody they're they're like
01:17:48
crowdsourcing this and so putting all
01:17:50
partisan aside the Heritage Foundation
01:17:53
is doing great work here because
01:17:55
sunlight is the best disinfectant and
01:17:57
what's really important for Americans to
01:17:59
understand is it is
01:18:02
impossible right now absolutely
01:18:05
statistically impossible to swing the
01:18:08
presidential election with fraud the
01:18:11
Brennan Center they're on the other side
01:18:14
they did a report about voter fraud um
01:18:16
and they put it at
01:18:18
0.003% and
01:18:20
0.0025% and basically you've got a much
01:18:24
greater chance of being struck by
01:18:26
lightning and let's just do a little bit
01:18:27
of math here 158 million people voted in
01:18:30
2020 we'll have about 160 million this
01:18:33
year if the estimates are correct and if
01:18:35
you look at swing States right that's
01:18:39
where I think a lot of people are
01:18:40
concerned oh what if they could swing it
01:18:42
in Georgia right and we all know from
01:18:44
the famous phone call to Brad
01:18:47
raffensberger who's a republican
01:18:49
Secretary of State uh and Trump said hey
01:18:51
you know we got to find these 11,780
01:18:53
votes that was the winning margin so if
01:18:55
we were to talk about that right and we
01:18:57
compare it to what the Heritage
01:18:59
Foundation found 1,600 cases documented
01:19:02
in 40 years about 40 a year now there
01:19:06
could be a multiple of that freeberg 10
01:19:08
times a hundred times but to find 11,000
01:19:13
ballots this would require in
01:19:16
Georgia for which has voter ID and by
01:19:19
the way voter ID is in 35 of 50 states
01:19:22
already after this election it's going
01:19:23
to hit 40 because it's just obvious that
01:19:26
we all want that Georgia requires you to
01:19:29
have ID to vote in person and you have
01:19:31
to water and they' Watermark the ballots
01:19:34
so in order shth for somebody to do this
01:19:37
they would have to fake 12,000 Watermark
01:19:42
ballots and have fake IDs and have those
01:19:45
12,000 people not show up to vote and
01:19:48
have two votes there then well looks
01:19:50
like Georgia's got a great system but
01:19:52
we're talking about the states that
01:19:53
don't like in California they just
01:19:55
passed a law saying that you're not
01:19:56
allowed to look at voter ID right and so
01:19:59
that obviously should change but the
01:20:01
point is even in California which
01:20:04
California California did that why do
01:20:06
you guys think such a law is passed
01:20:08
what's the justification for that they
01:20:11
want to not have somebody who had a
01:20:14
chance to vote vote and it obviously
01:20:16
benefits Democrats if you believe that
01:20:20
uh minorities don't have ID in some
01:20:22
greater population which people have
01:20:24
rightly called out is racist uh and
01:20:26
there is this concept that black people
01:20:29
or Hispanic people might not have IDs to
01:20:32
the same extent and they would lean
01:20:34
Democrat that is the cynical approach
01:20:37
that uh people have taken but if we if
01:20:39
we look at this it is impossible
01:20:42
impossible to S the federal election
01:20:45
sorry Jason you're saying it's a Dei
01:20:47
thing that's that's what people claim
01:20:49
I'm not saying I claim that's I think
01:20:51
that's condescending and nonsense to act
01:20:53
like minorities don't driver's license
01:20:55
that's ridiculous ridiculous or some
01:20:56
other form of ID I I think it's ABS your
01:20:59
question Toth I don't think there is a a
01:21:02
good justification there's none for
01:21:05
rejecting voter ID and the law is even
01:21:06
worse than that because it literally
01:21:08
makes it illegal for someone to ask so
01:21:10
if you go to a polling place in
01:21:11
California they can't look at your ID
01:21:15
even if you say well I lost my Ballot or
01:21:17
something they just have to take your
01:21:18
word for it you when they give you a new
01:21:19
ballot there's a legal requirement for
01:21:21
every employer when you hire somebody to
01:21:24
make sure that that person is eligible
01:21:26
to work in the United States if you're
01:21:28
going to pay them legally right you get
01:21:29
an I9 and they need to you know uh
01:21:33
justify that they have a Social Security
01:21:35
number that typically tells you whether
01:21:37
you need a a supplemental work
01:21:39
authorization or not so if you do that
01:21:42
for normal functional
01:21:45
employment why wouldn't you do it for
01:21:48
voting as well of course you need an
01:21:50
idea to get on a plane you need an idea
01:21:52
to buy a beer right you need an ID to do
01:21:56
all sorts of things in our society right
01:21:58
so it's it's ludicrous I mean and and
01:22:01
voting is something where you should
01:22:02
need an ID because you have to say you
01:22:04
have to match up that the person who's
01:22:06
standing in front of you at The Ballot
01:22:08
Box is the person on the voter roles
01:22:10
well why is it more important to make
01:22:12
sure that the person sitting in 23b on
01:22:15
the United flight is who he says it is
01:22:19
but it's less important for someone to
01:22:21
just walk in off the street and vote for
01:22:22
the president of the United States why
01:22:24
is that
01:22:25
because people believe that certain
01:22:28
communities may not have ID and then
01:22:31
they would be not right to vote why
01:22:34
don't why don't you allow people to just
01:22:35
get on an airplane and just fly wherever
01:22:37
they want like why don't yeah or or
01:22:39
drive without a driver 100% yeah yeah I
01:22:42
mean it's I'm not saying I agree with
01:22:44
any this I'm telling you what people
01:22:45
have said is the reason I think it's
01:22:48
it's cover I think that's total nonsense
01:22:50
I think it's actually if you think about
01:22:51
it it's insulting to minority groups to
01:22:53
imply that they're inable getting a vo
01:22:56
when you say when you say people you're
01:22:57
saying people in
01:22:59
charge the people in charge of
01:23:01
California this is what they think yes
01:23:04
and it turns out the only didn't have
01:23:07
cheating we haven't had voter
01:23:10
ID they wanted not every state has
01:23:14
government IDE that isn't a driver's
01:23:17
license right so this is Gavin
01:23:20
new it's obvious to see what the effect
01:23:23
this is going to be is it it it makes it
01:23:26
easier to engage in cheating do you guys
01:23:28
think if Gavin Newsome was on an
01:23:30
airplane and we said half these people
01:23:34
here have just bought a
01:23:36
ticket but we didn't check their IDs
01:23:38
would he get off the plane or stay on
01:23:40
the plane do you think right and TSA
01:23:42
requires ID so that they can do a check
01:23:44
on everyone make sure they're not on a
01:23:46
do not fly list and all that sort of
01:23:47
stuff there's consensus that everybody
01:23:49
wants voter ID I think you can kind of
01:23:51
think about a there's a do not fly list
01:23:53
and there should be do not vote list
01:23:55
like if you're not a citizen you should
01:23:56
be on the do not vote list meaning you
01:23:58
have to be on the I can vote list in
01:24:00
order to vote seems pretty reasonable
01:24:02
and you know the fact that we've got a
01:24:04
lot of federal agencies checking IDs to
01:24:06
deter important Point here is there is
01:24:09
no way to swing the election even if
01:24:11
there is a moderate amount that's that
01:24:14
is the most important for people to take
01:24:15
out you're not worried draw that
01:24:18
conclusion if people can cheat then you
01:24:19
can swing an election you can draw it
01:24:21
statistically based upon what I've just
01:24:23
said which is the smallest race is
01:24:28
11,779 remember when Trump asked them to
01:24:31
find those votes do you remember
01:24:34
that you're talking about the state of
01:24:36
Georgia which I think actually has
01:24:38
Integrity we're talking about the state
01:24:40
of California here that's the closest
01:24:42
race just law so just in your mind in
01:24:45
your mind logically think about what it
01:24:46
would take to get
01:24:48
11,000 779 people to fraudulently do
01:24:52
that and that they would go to jail and
01:24:54
it would be a felony so this is that
01:24:57
doesn't sound that hard to me I'm just
01:24:58
saying like finding 11,000 votes or
01:25:01
whatever doesn't seem that hard if
01:25:02
there's no voter Ian if Trump couldn't
01:25:03
do it how is it going to get done it's
01:25:06
not possible where would you get 11,000
01:25:08
ballots maybe not in Georgia because
01:25:10
they actually have voter in CIA where
01:25:12
would you get a$ 11,000 CIA is hold on a
01:25:14
second California is a huge State they
01:25:16
allow ballot harvesting and they've
01:25:17
eliminated voter ID yeah so telling
01:25:20
impossible for someone to cheat
01:25:22
nothing's impossible in cheat we all
01:25:25
agree cheating exists like credit cud
01:25:27
fraud exists what I'm saying is it's so
01:25:29
manageable that it is farcical for
01:25:31
anybody to think that we could swing the
01:25:35
presidential election because Trump
01:25:38
tried to swing the presidential election
01:25:40
by asking to find 11,000 and he filed 58
01:25:44
lawsuits and lost all of them it's not
01:25:46
possible folks do do you think so then
01:25:48
what is the value then of having voter
01:25:50
ID Jason if the cheating is so
01:25:52
hard because it would add more trust to
01:25:55
the system and it's always virtuous to
01:25:57
add more trust I think they should also
01:25:58
give you a receipt uh when you vote to
01:26:01
make sure there's no Shenanigans and we
01:26:03
want to build as much trust in the
01:26:04
system as possible but the point receipt
01:26:07
reduce fraud it would reduce people
01:26:12
believing that their vote was changed
01:26:13
after they left the box so if we all had
01:26:16
a receipt and then there was some debate
01:26:18
in a small area because of you know
01:26:21
hanging Chads like in Florida everybody
01:26:23
would have their and if you remember the
01:26:25
hanging Chad's case there were people
01:26:26
who said I voted for Gore I voted for
01:26:28
Bush and my vote got counted wrong
01:26:32
people don't remember this but you had
01:26:33
to push through a card and it popped a
01:26:35
Chad out of a little circle and there
01:26:37
are people who did it wrong because the
01:26:39
instructions were you know it's a
01:26:42
physical thing you have to punch a hole
01:26:43
into it I don't know who came up with
01:26:45
that system as opposed to drawing a
01:26:46
circle but that that was for years ago
01:26:48
I'm sure that's CH by now there was a
01:26:50
guy named Chad yeah but no now they are
01:26:53
giving receipts to people so so the gold
01:26:54
standard is giving a receipt showing ID
01:26:57
and having multiple weeks to do it and
01:27:00
so if anybody's taking anything away
01:27:01
from this there can be cheating but it
01:27:04
cannot swing the president okay so
01:27:05
Jason's going in can I make a um a point
01:27:08
so you mentioned uh I think fraud rates
01:27:11
credit card fraud rates didn't you I
01:27:13
think that's one of the things you
01:27:13
mentioned well the same way we don't
01:27:17
worry about credit C fraud because
01:27:19
there's a certain tiny amount of it in
01:27:20
the system now in this case it would be
01:27:23
a magnitude more than voter fraud voter
01:27:26
fraud is extremely rare because there's
01:27:28
no there's no incentive to cheat that
01:27:33
would be worth going to jail for and
01:27:35
that's why people generally don't cheat
01:27:37
in these elections because the cost is
01:27:39
so great I was the COO of a payments
01:27:41
company so let me actually sorry that
01:27:43
was sax sorry go ahead s let me explain
01:27:46
how this actually works since I was
01:27:48
founding Co of
01:27:50
payp massive amounts of credit card
01:27:52
fraud can I just explain this to the
01:27:53
audience sure you can create all the
01:27:56
models you want and you can create an
01:27:58
expectation of future fraud based on the
01:28:01
prior fraud rates however if you change
01:28:04
your verification standards that data is
01:28:07
no longer relevant if you create a
01:28:09
loophole big enough for a fraudster to
01:28:11
drive a truck through then if a
01:28:14
fraudster figures that out you could
01:28:16
have infinite amounts of fraud the in
01:28:18
other words the historical fraud rate
01:28:20
may not be predictive of future fraud if
01:28:22
you change the verification a standards
01:28:25
and I would say that the state of
01:28:27
California signing a bill that prohibits
01:28:29
voter ID might be such a loophole so I
01:28:32
don't see how you can say with this kind
01:28:35
of certainty and confidence you're
01:28:36
saying that no fraud could ever swing an
01:28:39
election of course fraud could swing an
01:28:40
election could swing the presidential
01:28:42
election it could swing a tiny election
01:28:44
in a state or in a local place of course
01:28:46
it could because there's a very in
01:28:48
finding out what I believe is that I'm
01:28:51
talking logic would you do 11,000 th000
01:28:54
is the question it would be incredibly
01:28:56
difficult to do 11,000 Trump tried to
01:28:59
swing 11 if you create a big enough
01:29:00
loophole it doesn't sound that hard to
01:29:01
me it just doesn't matter of common
01:29:03
sense I don't think you can say that
01:29:04
something is impossible what we should
01:29:06
do is simply tighten up these
01:29:08
requirements we're agreement about that
01:29:10
I'm just talking about this election
01:29:12
voter ID in this election you don't have
01:29:14
to worry 35 out of 50 starting in
01:29:17
January we pass a national voter ID law
01:29:20
minimum standard we all agree on that
01:29:21
100% we all agree on that yes I'm just
01:29:23
saying this election practically 35 out
01:29:25
of 5050 states have voter ID and the
01:29:27
ones that don't the closest margin is
01:29:30
11,700 this time happek we'll see you
01:29:34
we'll see on Tuesday night with Phil
01:29:36
helmuth on a short leash for the
01:29:40
dictator chath ptia your sulan of
01:29:43
Science and the
01:29:44
architect I am the world's greatest
01:29:48
moderate moderator we'll see you next
01:29:51
time
01:29:51
[Applause]
01:29:53
byebye let your winners
01:29:55
ride Rainman
01:30:00
David and in said we open source it to
01:30:02
the fans and they've just gone crazy
01:30:04
with it queen
01:30:07
[Music]
01:30:13
of Besties
01:30:15
are that's my dog taking I your
01:30:19
driveway man oh man my habiter will meet
01:30:23
me at we should all just get a room and
01:30:25
just have one big huge orgy cuz they're
01:30:27
all this useless it's like this like
01:30:28
sexual tension that they just need to
01:30:30
release
01:30:31
[Music]
01:30:36
somehow we need to get
01:30:42
[Music]
01:30:46
mer I'm doing
01:30:49
[Music]

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    Discussion on how mass flagging can affect video visibility on YouTube.
    “There's something messed up here because they should have been on top of that.”
    @ 01h 00m 05s
    November 01, 2024
  • Hope for a Clear Election Result
    A desire for a decisive election outcome to avoid disputes.
    “I hope that it's very clear and decisive so that everybody is forced to deescalate.”
    @ 01h 12m 24s
    November 01, 2024
  • Election Integrity Concerns
    Concerns raised about voter ID laws and election integrity in the U.S.
    “I want to point out that each state is effectively voting for the folks that they want to have go to the Electoral College.”
    @ 01h 15m 36s
    November 01, 2024
  • Voter ID Laws
    Voter ID is required in 35 states, with Georgia having strict regulations to prevent fraud. "It's ludicrous to think voting doesn't require ID."
    @ 01h 19m 22s
    November 01, 2024
  • The Challenge of Finding Votes
    Finding 11,000 fraudulent votes in Georgia would be nearly impossible given the state's voting regulations. "It's not possible where would you get 11,000 ballots?"
    @ 01h 25m 01s
    November 01, 2024

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Drunk Bear00:20
  • Debt Crisis22:46
  • Authentic Conversations45:40
  • Google Bias Discussion1:00:05
  • Hope for Clarity1:12:24
  • Election Integrity Debate1:15:36
  • Voter ID Debate1:21:50
  • Cheating Discussion1:25:25

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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