Kind: captions Language: en we have never found any evidence of any human civilization that didn't have money money predates written language money is as old as belief in God as like people staring into the stars and wondering what's out there I think of course there are Chinese spies in the US government there are Russian spies even our allies in 1951 Alan Turing wenton on a lecture tour of the UK where he was arguing that super intelligent AGI was months away uh he was wrong Graham Moore welcome to the show thank you so much for having me Tom I'm really excited to have you you've written a fascinating book about a period in time that I'm obsessed with which is World War II uh the book The Wealth of Shadows is about how economics were used to break the back of the Nazi war machine I think there are fascinating parallels to what's going on today especially in Ukraine and Russia and I'm curious how did the US end up beating the Nazis before they ever fired a shot I think that the US ended up beating the Nazis long before firing a shot thanks to a largely unheralded group of economists working under the offices of the US Treasury Department and that's what the book is really about I think in starting in 1939 even after Germany had invaded Poland there was there was this period where the United States was not just neutral in what we considered sort of this European dispute but the United States was assiduously neutral I mean sort of passionately neutral I talk about this in the book but in 1939 even after the invasion of Poland there was polling done and 12% of Americans wanted to get involved in what they called the European dispute the percentage of Americans who wanted to get involved militarily was 2% it was politically toxic for the Roosevelt administration to not just wage any kind of war against the Nazis but to even do anything that vaguely looked like what they were doing was Waging War against the Nazis what year was that poll taken 39 so they already know about concentration camps at this point they know the horrific conditions and yet it was still that unpopular that's absolutely right um and I when I found those numbers I was shocked by how small they were um it was really the common feeling was this is a European thing okay Germany invaded Poland it's complicated yes Czechoslovakia it's complicated they're not okay the UK is going to war okay France is going to war but this is their problem this is not our problem this is not our problem this is not our problem and yet there was this group of economists and even sort of largely amateur economists working for the treasury Department who this book is about and these people said no were the US had passed a Neutrality Act so doing anything to uh help the British against the Nazis or to help the French against the Nazis was illegal I mean it was counter to government policy and these people at treasury said no we're not doing that this is really bad the Nazi threat is not going to stop it's not going to stop at Poland it's not going to stop at Britain it's not going to stop at France this is going to keep happening why were they so confident about that because a number of things so one of the things that I think they had done and that we've certainly been able to prove since is that they' done analysis of the German war operation and what they found was that the entire German economy had been restructured around the making of war that is the German government um had the Nazi the Nazi government had completely structured its natural economy to produce one output and that output was war everything you know is a very kind of centrally planned economy um they were you know no secret that Nazi stands for sort of I can't I can't speak German if I try to do the German it'll be a disaster but sort of National Socialist Party of Germany um the politics of it were complicated this kind of like extreme sort of right-wing socialism mix that was quite statist and what they what the Americans had done is we sort of looked at this and said this this isn't going to stop this is a real threat and the Germans couldn't stop even if they wanted to um the German economy is built around a couple things it's built around one having a slave class of Jews to perform unpaid labor um and it's built around Conquest it's built around taking new lands where they can acquire new raw materials new money and frankly more slaves and if the Nazi war machine were to stop conquering were to stop taking new territory the entire the entire Nazi economy would collapse and so they there any idea that they're going to stop at Czechoslovakia is ridiculous any idea that they're going to stop at Poland is ridiculous any idea that they're going to stop at France is ridiculous this is a machine built to take land and built to take built to steal raw materials and capture slaves and it's going to keep doing that until one of two things happen either they consume the entire world or someone stops them and so what this book is about what the wealth of Shadows is about is about this group of folks at treasury who said okay we're going to be the ones to stop them it's a really interesting Moment In the book that you tell of an economist who's basically looking at a spreadsheet and says okay wait a second how did the Germans go from utterly devastated by the Treaty of Versa just demolished demolished by that demolished by the Great Depression and now all of a sudden in the span of a very short number of years like two uh they Roar back to life with all the sanctions that say they can't build this they can't build that uh because they didn't want them to rearm themselves and you get this economist who looks at the spreadsheet and goes they've created it's quite brilliant and this is where it starts to get very unnerving for me as somebody who studies the economy uh the Germans found a way basically to create a circular economy that was completely contained within Germany so you would sell war bonds to your Farmers or whatever promise them a return but to avoid inflation tell them ah first of all it won't pay off for a few years and second of all even when it does I'm going to restrict the amount that you can take out but everybody's super excited because they see their net worth going up even though in reality they're not being allowed to spend it and the only way that they can keep the inflation from going crazy since they don't have economic output that they're selling because it's all internal is to your point we have to go to the next conquest and on and on and on and that toogy is what I worry about today and so when you look at how they used economics they um tried to cut Germany off from the international money supply uh they went to Brazil and tried to buy up all the iron and cotton to make sure they couldn't make bullets and uniforms so they're doing all of these economic things but what does that tell us about what's likely going on today when we look at how we're positioning ourselves against Russia with Ukraine technically we're not in the fight but we're doing these economic things what's your read on that so it's a great question and my read is that that the set of techniques that the United States and the European Union have been using against Russia these past few years are essentially the modern versions of a set of techniques developed by this group of people at treasury in 1939 this was a set of techniques that we now call economic Warfare that really was developed in the late 30s and early 40s I don't think it had I would argue it hadn't really that economic Warfare hadn't really been tried before this um people sanctions existed but sanctions are a very small part um of I think the economic Warfare package that's presently being used and it was certainly being used in the 30s and 40s um because as just as you're saying I think a big part of of the anti-nazi economic Warfare of 39 40 and 41 and of what the US and the EU are doing against the Russian government today is trying to sever trying to sever those economies from the rest of the world um the problem is uh both the German economists in the 30s and the Russian economists in the last decade prepared for this um and I think we can see I mean one of the other Eerie corar between the late 30s and now is so you were just talking about this period in the mid-30s where the German brilliant German economists sort of rebuilt the German economy from nothing after you know Germany had it's no secret that they were kind of doomed to Decades of poverty thanks to these crushing sanctions uh these crushing debts after the war um you know Germany in the early 30s was this economic Backwater by 3839 they' built the largest military in the world in just as you said only a few years how did they do it it was pretty brilliant um and I suppose it doesn't need clarifying that brilliant evil um because as I said you know the the slave class was an important part of that operation it doesn't it doesn't work without essentially these work camps of of of forced labor they but as you're saying they develop this complicated Bond system to effectively make it look kind of funnel more and more of what was effectively German GDP into the military than it looked like they were doing the term GDP didn't quite exist yet and actually we get into that in the book it was sort of being invented around the same time but um basically a significant percentage of of everyone's labor and everyone's money was getting in Germany was getting put into the war machine than it then appeared to be going to it um but at the same time you know everyone was putting their money in the banks the banks were sort of to simplified the banks were secretly funneling that money to the German military but it looked like everyone would check their bank deposit books and they had all this money in the bank and they were making all these returns and Banks were offering 4% 5% returns in these checking accounts which looked for Germany at the time was was wildly High it looked great everyone was sort of looking everyone thought they were getting rich only just as you pointed out there was one trick they couldn't withdraw the money um the German government had passed a set of laws such that you know it was it was it was against the law to withdraw too much money from your checking account but then again why would you because leaving the money there made it grow and you kept getting these statements that made it look like it was growing um in a sense that it was some bizarre combination of like Ponzi scheme and kind of wild military expansion um but at the same time the Germans knew that with a coming War they were going to they needed to create this autarchic system they needed to sever the German economy from the west of the world because they were going to soon enough they were going to go to war with the rest of Europe and the rest of the world they were going to then not be able to trade with those countries um they needed to they knew that they weren't going to be able to trade in dollars very soon they weren't going to be able to trade in Sterling very soon they weren't going to be able to trade in franks very soon when they started going to war with the countries producing those currencies so they began this process of trying to sort of sever themselves from the global economy now if you look at the last 10 years um you can certainly see a set of Russian economists doing the exact same thing um you can see them understanding that they don't need to keep well they've done a couple of other things they kept pretty significant the Russians I guess in contrast to the Germans I should clarify have kept quite extensive dollar reserves um and at the same time they have something even more valuable which is they have oil reserves um which allows them to acquire dollars or other currencies on the global market and kind of keep trading with enough of the world that even if the US shuts them off and says we're not going to trade with you anymore even if the sh them off and says we're not going to trade with you anymore um other places will um and so you see a kind of preparation what you find is that in both the 30s and in the last decade is that the economists were planning for the war many years before the military was what I find most interesting about your book is there's this sense of um we have uh moral agenda and we're going to weaponize money as a way to get this done and before reading your book I would have agreed with the sentiment of when you look at a government you should say look it's hard to get things done because there's this managerial class it's bureaucrats pushing paper and they bog things down but reading your book I would say this is a contentious statement but the idea of a deep state is wiser way to look at it because there are people in the government working at intentional cross-purposes to the State admission of the president of the national Declaration of neutrality um you have in your book again the book is based on a true story that's right one of the true stories is that the guy running the treasury um Department that's in charge of of this war effort is also a Russian spy and so I was like whoa it it gave this sense of the government is not a bunch of bumbling bureaucrats the government is actually made up of people with competing ideologies that are going to war with each other inside the government itself to pull historical events in a given Direction and then that sets the stage for we are maybe not at maximum division cuz we're not not in a civil war and we know we've had one so there there is worse places to be than where we are now well but we are at a time of very heightened division which tells me within the government there will be massive Division and then we have our former presidents stating hey there's a very bad thing happening inside the government which is that they were pulling in directions that I did not want them pulling in and so I look at divided sentiment over Russia Ukraine I look at your book and say I mean I look at your book and I say there is a very complicated thing happening in terms of what I'll round to the Deep State and so what do you think becomes the outcome of this reality of how governments operate in today's context I I feel like in some ways you're you're burying the lead here because I feel like you're saying that the book has sold you Tom on bureaucrats and I'm proud to say that I'm finally I could be the one to to prove the value of bureaucrats the world over I think yes I think it I don't yes the word deep state is a loaded term but I think it is absolutely true that what this book gets into is that in 3940 41 42 throughout the war there were different groups of competing teams of people within the US government with very different aims from what the government's kind of stated goal was and what the president was saying they were doing so on one side you have while the government while the Rosevelt Administration is saying we're neutral we're neutral we're neutral to anyone who will listen we're going to go speech after speech every night about how neutral we are there's this at the same time there's this group at treasury who saying yeah yeah secretly what we're going to do is we're going to wage war against the Nazis and we're going to do it because the Nazis are evil and this is the right thing to do and the war is going to come to our doorstep one day one day whether we like it or not this is going to be our problem and we're not just going to sit here and watch it happen um we're going to take the fight to them and we're not soldiers we're not we're not spies we're economists and so we're going to kind of invent this concept of economic Warfare and try and kind of Kick the legs out from underneath the German economy um at the same time this team at treasury is doing that there was uh another team at the state department on the other side which is to say that there is a team of at best fascist sympathizers in the state department at worst I would say out andout Nazis I mean there were the state department was kind of Rife with people who were openly supporting the Germans and the Italians against not just the British and French but against the Americans um and so you had another like another deep State operation at State sort of saying no no we're not neutral because we should be joining the Nazis we should be on their side and we're going to start we're not just going to kind of try and we're going to do whatever we can to kick the legs out from any kind of pro- British or pro- French operation that that the Roosevelt administration is doing because eventually the Roosevelt administration is going to wake up one day and realize that like we should be on the side of the access those are the right that's the right side to be on here um so in a way you find mind um kind of it's like multiple deep States right you have sort of multiple competing forces within the government with mutually exclusive and incompatible goals um you have a a government very much at war with itself and I might argue um that's not a flaw it's a feature I think that we the government's big the American government's really big even in 1939 the American government is really big and one there's a reason we have human beings in those jobs and it's because they're making moral decisions they're making ethical decisions and there this is certainly a period where you had a bunch of people working for the government who are saying we don't care what our sort of official policy is we're just going to do what we believe is the right thing and I guess the emot the I guess the ethically complicated thing is you look back on this and say okay you know in the book our guys at treasury who were doing this are the heroes because they were doing it on the right side the guys at the state department are the villains of the book because they were doing it on what I think we can inarguably say was the wrong side but they were both making the same calculation which is the government's policy is wrong so we're just going to pursue what we think is the right thing to do one way or another and you know to help with the consequences um would they be the first or the last government Bure rats to ever do such a thing obviously not um and it's funny it's like in some ways do we only have the ability to evaluate the morality of that postao like where who does it turn out was on the right side of that dispute in this case it was the treasury Department and I mean the state Department's Behavior was a lot has been written about this but it's like worse than horrible if you're being burdened by a bunch of high interest debt you going to want to do something to mitigate that with an impending presidential election and financial uncertainty causing stress for just about 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Tech it cools Heats and even elevates automatically it's clinically proven to give you up to one more hour of quality sleep every night and getting as much sleep as humanly possible is the way to cognitively optimize now my wife Lisa and I are temperature opposites so we're excited about the Pod 4 ultra's personalized Heating and Cooling features head to 8sleep.com impact and use code impact to get $350 off your pod 4 ultra they currently ship to the US Canada the UK Europe and Australia okay so let's start teasing some of these ideas out as um guiding principles so I think a lot of times people will argue a concept at what I call the level of the tea uh my will be very familiar with the story so the biggest fight my wife and I ever got in was over a cup of tea uh two hours into a screaming match I finally go there's no way this is about a cup of tea what is this really about uh so we vowed never to argue about the Tea again and so what we found is that you're really arguing about beliefs or values or you might have what I call as a collision of based assumptions where you just both have a belief about the way the world works that is completely different um and unless you lay those out you're going to just argue past each other so taking this argument to the level of um values I think will be very interesting so for instance do you think it is um morally just to lie to the American people to get a desired global economic outcome uh this is a question for um so in many ways it's it's a great question this is why this is why I like historical fiction I mean we sort of talk about this why am I writing why am I writing novels about this and not non-fiction and it's because I want to be able to tease out exactly the moral question you're asking from the perspective of the from the inner lives the inner thoughts of the actual human being beings in actual history who are facing these very questions because they're not simple ones um I think the answer is yes of course it's the right thing to do um it helps that in the specific cases of government officials lying to pursue the outcomes they wanted economic or military in this book it sure helps that they were on the right side um it sure helps that when Roosevelt himself much less the rest of his administration was saying we're neutral we're neutral we're neutral um did Roosevelt know what the people in his Treasury Department were doing not exactly but I think we have good evidence that and the book s of gets into this that you know they were they were the the people at treasury were basically sent Henry morgantha who was the treasury secretary who was the president's dear friend to his office to sort of say to Roosevelt hey look I know we're neutral but I've got some guys back at the office they're going to do some stuff May you don't want to hear about that stuff and you know Roosevelt basically put his hands over his ears and said n n n n n I'm not listening you didn't say that don't as long as it never shows up in the newspaper I never need to hear about it again and you guys do what you need to do to get the job done was he lying to the American people when he then claimed that the United States was perfectly neutral in this matter of European dispute yeah absolutely he was lying to the American people people when he said that was it the right thing to do it sure helps that the Nazis were the worst right that I think we can all agree it helps that you and I can both sit here today and without making a ton of assumptions I think I can say that we were both in perfect agreement that he was on the right side of that dispute right that these these lies were being told for just outcomes defeating the Nazis was a just outcome that we can all look back and certainly support and if it takes a couple lies to do that okay um if you know look then the moral question becomes all right so then where do you draw that bright line because anyone who's ever lied to anyone ever can say no no no but I was doing it for the greater good you don't understand I had to lie because it was in your best interest to be lied to after the fact you know you can lie to your family you can lie to your co-workers you can lie to anyone and say no no no no I was just protecting you from the worst or I was just I was doing it because if you believed this then you would do something that made this all work out for the better of us so I think that's in some ways this is a moral question this is a Shakespearean question right more than an economic question this is a kind of what do we believe as people in the world about what are the ethics that guide our Behavior towards each other what sort of Little White Lies are acceptable where is that line crossed can we only um you know are we do we want to be perfect effective altruists or perfect utilitarians and believe that only outcomes matter it doesn't matter how you get there the only thing that matters is the effect of your actions or do we want to believe frankly in a more Christian morality where we're saying no no no intentions matter it matters what I was trying to do and if I know that I'm lying to you that's bad one way or another um so I think in these cases in the cases that the wealth of Shadows gets into these characters were right to lie uh but that's really easy for me to say because it worked and if it hadn't worked or if we were looking back and saying oh no it turned out they were on the wrong side um is that more it doesn't work out quite so well does it and you know in this we get into the the case of a character who is a real person who you were just saying was effectively applying that same logic um to justify being a Soviet spy which which he was at the same time that he was sort of lying to the American people on behalf of the Treasury Department to defeat the Nazis he was also lying to the treasury Department on behalf of the Soviets because he believed that he believed correctly that the Soviets were valuable allies against the Nazis for United States and the Roosevelt administration was holding them too much at arms length you know these were operation one from his perspective was defeat the Nazis let's work ever more closely with the Soviets to do that and you know we can deal with that we can deal with an American American Soviet problems later um but so you know you can kind of see within the book that the logic of no no no it's okay I'm just going to lie to the people around me this one time because it's in the best interest for everyone if you're making that sort of utilitarian argument that what matters is ends and not means you better be really sure about what those ends are going to be yes uh and my the thing that worries me is that no one is ever going to be sure that they're on the right side of history and the the wonderful thing about setting your book at World War II is not only is it a fascina time period but there's moral Clarity I would say and you don't have to do a lot of calculus to be like hey the people killing people by the millions in uh concentration camps they're the bad guys um but this begs so many questions about how you should approach something like this um so what I want to drill into is okay if we know that we're putting a moral question on the table about whether you should be lying to people if this is a judeo-christian ethic like intentions matter and so lying in and of itself is a problem whether this is purely utilitarian no as long as we get to the end of um stopping Nazis and saving lives uh we're good and we can do anything we want including uh drop nuclear bombs on uh Hiroshima Nagasaki like that's fine because you know we ended up saving so many lives by doing that okay the question becomes who gets to make who gets to run that moral calculus ought it be done by vote by decree what's the right answer there and then who gets to decide what lies to tell I mean certainly when you're talking about a government as discussed the government's really big right and I think people make the argument right we don't we don't there's a reason we don't live in a perfectly representative democracy right we we elect we elect leaders they appoint lots of people most of the government is appointed Not Elected they are in theory appointed by the people who are elected and they're going to make many thousands of decisions tens of thousands of decisions hundreds of thousands of decisions every day that affect your life and that affects my life and they're not going to explain themselves to us as they make all those decisions every single day um some of those decisions will be relatively minor some of those decisions are going to be dropping nuclear weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and we understand that for the government to work work they it's functionally impossible for them to what reach out to polling and say hey should we drop a nuclear weapon on the city at the tail end of a war they can't ask that question right so on some level what I it's on on some level what I would argue that elections are is um you is making decisions about the people whose thought processes and judgment and character and do is this someone when you're voting for someone you're saying is this someone I trust to make it a bunch of decisions that I'm never going to know about because it's certainly the case that I think that anyone in government will say this that half of the important decisions are the decisions that we as Citizens don't know about and and you and I see this in our own lives right even taking this out of the context of government like we you make things I make things half of three qus of the really important decisions that go into how to make the things that we make aren't necessarily things that the audience is going to know about or hear about they're not there for that decision- making right they're they're on the outside of it and they just see the outcome and they weren't there for all the meetings that kind of went into that process right and that's certainly the case with government so I think it's um um I mean the United States famously saw this with with George W bush right who ran on a platform of non-intervention was sort of his a big campaign plank for him was non-intervention in foreign affairs and we're not going to be sort of policemen of the world I think he said in in a speech at one point and then sure enough what was the sort of defining defining decision of the George W Bush Administration was the invasion of Iraq uh the exact opposite of the very thing he had campaigned on Now One could make the argument that well what happened is the world changed and September 11th happened and he was he was responding to new information and new events as it was coming in and I'm not sitting here trying to defend the invasion of Iraq because I won't but the what we find there is that the most so that's a presidential Administration in which what I think anyone would argue is the mo in which the most significant the most significant decision that was made was quite public and was totally contrary to what the election had been about it was it was something had happened and the George W Bush Administration made a de collectively and collectively made a set of decisions about what to do and that set of decisions involved invading Iraq right you um and so I think when you're talking about what we want the government to to do what do we what do we want the how honest with us do we want the government to be how how much do we want the government to sort of stick to their campaign promises or elected officials to stick to their campaign promises or if you're asking kind of what elections are really about in some ways there's this kind of Base lizard brain level on which elections are about electing people who we think have a good sense of judgment to respond in productive ways to unpredictable events as they occur it's interesting so I don't know that um that you can run a government without lying I don't know but the reality is if you believe that the government ought to be elected officials by an informed Republic then you have to inform the public like they have to actually understand the things that are going on and if you're creating a smoke screen which is what we're doing now there is the world that we all think we interact with and literally until I was in my 40s I thought the world as I saw it was the world and then the more that I began to learn about money the more I realize wait a second the world that I thought actually isn't real and that there is a curtain money is a fiction it's being manipulated it's being manipulated to my disadvantage that we being told one thing weapons of mass destruction just to stick on Bush for a second uh Saddam Hussein has weapons of mass destruction we have to invade Iraq and I remember at the time being like wait what does Iraq have to do with um 911 like I I was like well I guess I just don't understand and they just kept saying weapons of mass destruction over and over and over and so I was like oh okay and so you begin to realize oh what this is is they are counting on the fact that the public is uninformed they are counting on the fact that the public is manipulatable they are counting on the fact that they have Superior your morals to what the public would have if they could vote in real time because if you in in the very near future uh between just the the way that everybody has access to a computer the way that the blockchain works you could with every decision in real time say hey everybody grab your your cell phone at home uh you're going to be prompted to vote on seven new things just send in your vote and we'll do it by decree now I would say that that is a disaster and the reason that that isn't going to function is because you've got a media that is just manipulating the living [ __ ] out of everybody and we're being lied to left right and center and so even though yes you could vote in real time you would have to clean up all the BS first and so if there was just com you would have to commit to complete and utter transparency and let the chips fall where they may if you really wanted to do a nonrepresentative democracy which I recognize for the people screaming in the comments right now I understand that's not what we have now but I'm just saying for people who will put that forth um as you did and said we could never do this technically it will be very feasible I believe in very short order to have everybody just vote immediately now for all the ways that can be hacked and manipulated it's probably Beyond a terrible idea uh but the question becomes what would have to be true in order for us to want a nonrepresentative democracy where everybody just cast their vote and I don't know that humans are capable of digesting the issue putting it out in a way uh that is accurately representative of what's going on um and not only do I not even know if that's possible right now it's just a bunch of lies and so the question becomes how do you create a functioning government when the mechanisms that have been proven over and over all throughout human history are that you lie to the public you control The Narrative this is why whenever a dictator takes over the first thing they do is take over the media uh you lie to the public control the narrative get them to believe what you want them to believe many many many of them will and then the denters you just punish relentlessly this will be fun let me defend the status quo to you uh because it's always I always feel like such a Bor as long as you define it first I'm happy too um it always feels like only boring people defend the status quo so it's a fun it's a fun exercise in some ways let's let's try and take this into the realm of of something something really specific uh a specific question on which the government of here in this case I'll give an example of unelected officials making decisions that profoundly infect our lives without without pulling everyone first um interest rates you know a lot about monetary Theory um so no secret that the board of the Federal Reserve all these Governors make a set of decisions about about what about what interest rates should be right um the these issue where to set interest rates is extremely technical I know some things about economics um I am not a governor on the Federal Reserve board nor should I be I don't have a degree in economics um I I Graham want people who know a lot more about this than I do to be sitting on the Federal Reserve board making these decisions if you'd asked me a year ago whether interest rates should have been lowered more I would have said yes that seemed like the right thing to do now in uh the middle of 2024 that turns out would have been the wrong decision and that I would actually argue Drome Powell and Company have done a terrifically good job of managing um the inflationary crisis of the past few years and I'm not going to argue that the inflationary situation is perfect um I'm going to argue that it's better in the United States than it is in Europe because I think Jerome Powell and Company have done a better job than anyone in the EU has done um and and I actually think that's pretty remarkable the so that situation and we can have another conversation about whether we want governments to be managing currencies at all but we certainly have a situation in which they are so you you're not going to you can't pull a population about a question as complicated as where to set interest rates people have lives people are um it's a really technical finicky question right and at the same time someone needs to make a decision there needs to be sort of at the end of the day one person in the government who is making that decision and stands up in front of a microphone at a Podium and announces that decision and then the world responds to it so uh we don't know all of the considerations that go into that decision right we we're not in the meetings where the Federal Reserve Governors kind of discussed this but we hear about the outcome and I would I would argue that that there's a specific example where yes the government is by nature keeping information from the public it's keeping that decision-making process from the public it's not Consulting the public about that decision uh but nor should it and nor should it because the people are not going to be able to make that kind of well-informed decision yeah I again I'm not the most informed person about monetary theory in the United States of America but I'm not the least and had I made that decision a year ago I would have been wrong yeah so this now gets into um are there some decisions that simply shouldn't be left to anybody to make the decision so taking monetary policy um monetary policy I would put forth there is a moral obligation that governments have to not manipulate currencies the reason I believe that is because of my definition of money my definition of money is that it is any one person's ability to capture the efficacy of how they spent their time so if I spend my time um as a school teacher then I'm able to capture the economics of that and the society values it to a certain degree and I'm able to get that now if the government can say oh well we're going to print more money now the economic activity that I was able to capture in the dollars that I generated by being a school teacher they're now worth less and so that will derange how I think about my money because it's actually wiser to spend my money hopefully on something that holds value but no matter what it is better to spend your money on the thing that it can buy today because it will buy less tomorrow and the fact that behind the scenes we have unelected bureaucrats that are manipulating money that cause this Downstream total derangement of people's relationship to their own time and energy and so just to say it another way by letting the government print money you are letting them steal retroactively your own efforts it's it's literally crazy to me I cannot believe people are not more upset about this uh they're not upset about it because they don't understand it and so to your point you have a thing where people even if they have the time like the amount of time I've spent to understand it and to feel like I'm sort of just clinging to the Bottom Rung of something uh like you talk about in your book John Maynard kanes who as somebody who's in the Bitcoin Community I will say they [ __ ] hate that guy with a FY passion and it's fascinating because reading your book he gets into he basically describes what I want to do as a Global Currency literally I'm waiting for you to say Bitcoin because it sounds exactly like Bitcoin but he wants it to still be manipulatable he wants people to have control but ironically by creating this this high level currency that no one government had access to he thought it would be less manipula but he still thought the manipulation in my reading of this was a feature and not a bug which is why they hate him I think that's correct I think that correct for I think that's a correct description of his theories he had this it's funny when you read biographies of canes and i' I've read a bunch they tend to skip over his what he called bankor bankor which is his his name for his kind of Global Currency he was going to create at the end of the second world war um we tend to skip over this in histories of can's because as you may have noticed he failed in his attempt to create vanor it doesn't exist it didn't exist a Global Currency was not created at the end of the second world war the BR and wood system as we know today was instead the World Bank the IMF and so forth um he but yes as you're saying I think one of the interesting things to me about the conversations that KES and his colleagues and his enemies frankly were having around surrounding currency manipulation and currency Creation in the second world war is that to me they felt I was reading canes and I was reading his opponents uh writing in the 30s and 40s and going oh my gosh this could have been written yesterday this is exactly the same set of conversations we're having about uh cryptocurrencies that we're having today this is exactly the same set of conversations that we're having about you know do we want do we want governments to create currencies do we want someone else to create currencies who is the someone else you just talked about currencies being manipulatable um I would argue that unless you want a fixed quantity of money forever which I guess is the sort of Bitcoin argument that um that as soon as you move past that all currencies are they're by definition manipulatable they they were created to be manipulated um and so the question is just who we want to be manipulating it um unless you're going to make an argument that we sort of want you know a fixed pool the kind of Bitcoin maximalist argument that we really want a sort of a fixed pool of currency that can't move up and down ever you can make that argument but if that was the case in 1939 the United States would not have been able to defeat the Germans we would not have been able to with the economics but the Germans also wouldn't have been able to manipulate their own currency to create that Loop that allowed them to rearm that's true the yes they would not have been able to sort of do their own currency Shenanigans and an arm in that way though they like I mean these counterfactuals are always a little bit tricky right um like describing sort of what would 1939 have been like with Bitcoin is a really tricky problem to solve um because on the one hand you're like well but they didn't have computers how would it work um there's a bunch of practical questions to solve but if something like that did exist I mean literally you can look at it today because what my hypothesis in reading your book is your book is like talking about the Korean War during the Vietnam war you do it to create a little bit of distance uh so we can really talk about the issues but really we're talking about Russia and Ukraine like your book as far as I can tell man whether you intended it or not maps effectively one to one what's going on right now we are manipulating the US dollar by printing a metric [ __ ] ton of it so that we can send Aid to Ukraine without having to ask the American people if they're here for it or not because you just print and it in my words steals from all of us us because I don't have any say you dilute my buying power which is the same as taking some of my money literally effectively is not different if you inflate the currency if inflation because there is a difference between the amount that you inflate the money and the actual inflation felt in the marketplace for reasons that are fascinating but we'll set aside uh if you inflate if inflation hits 20% that's the same as taking 20% of my money right just so people understand like hey don't fall for the trip so they the I'm not even saying it's the wrong answer to pay for the war in Ukraine I am saying that it's the wrong answer to do it without going to the American people and saying we would like to get into an economic war with uh Russia via Ukraine you in or you out and if they're like we're out then we're out and that just is and you have to accept uh I'll finish that sentence and I want to plant an idea you have to accept that there is a um there is a wide spectrum of intellectual abilities and so some of the voting public will not have the ability to cognitively understand the second and third order consequences of what's going on they will be easily manipulated by messaging which will be whether people intended to or not be tilted in a given direction that just is what it is but hey Welcome to The Human Condition I don't see a way around that so if given the populace speaking up this is a very Western perspective uh I believe in the power of the individual way over the power of the collective and if those Collective individuals come together and say this is what we want then then that is what it is and I don't believe morally speaking that anybody from the top should be able to say no I'm gonna lie to you I'm just not going to ask I'm going to money print so I don't have to talk to you and so that was the vibe that I got reading the book man and I kept wondering like are you intending me to read it this way because you convinced me that the Deep state is real you convince me that the my own government is is is at war with itself that there are people in my own government that are like I don't give a [ __ ] what the public thinks I am going to go to fight on the side of the Ukraine or God I'm sure there are people like I'm going to go fight on the side of Russia I'm sure there are yeah a thousand per. and so now I'm like whoa okay here's the seed that I wanted to plant there are solutions that come at a hyper oblique angle there's a guy Nam name b g shason you know him uh not personally but I know him brother I think yeah I think you'd find him utterly fascinating so his whole thing about the network State and he's like ah these governments super p a not going to work to a highly educated public uh once you divorce money from governments you're going to find that people no longer Group by region they Group by values and while I'm not sure that plays out at that level I certainly think that people do group by values whether they group at nation state esque levels I don't know oh a lot to respond to there um on the BAGI topic I think his argument is fascinating and super smart I almost entirely disagree with it but I think there's really interesting things give me a quick rundown of what you see his stance as oh great question um you just did such a great summary of it um I think the argument so so he's arguing I take his argument he arges a lot of different very complicated things but one of his arguments is against government created currencies entirely that this is a p a as you just said a p these are p a institutions they don't work they're too manipulatable and that we sort of want um he's arguing against that communities are human communities are best formed effectively electronically kind of not based on physical location but we'll we'll be getting sort of networks of people groups of people building effectively their own kind of delocalized def physicalized nation states people can build their own currencies people can build their own kind of communities their own jobs their own corporations what have you it's a sort of the the nation state is going away to be replaced by these other communities do you think is that a reasonable description of he's doing you're probably better up on B's work than I am yeah I think that that's very close the the concept of stri governments of the ability to Overlord on people people by taking their money away essentially their ability to manipulate the currency and then um don't lock them in with your borders and then see what happens so I'm pretty so that's see that's a great way of describe it um because I'm actually largely in agreement with him on the open borders question um I'm like my politics tend to be quite open borders um as are his from my understanding of it um the bit where I disagree with that is that um the age-old argument that the the government is the entity with the um a monopoly on the legitimate use of force a very classic kind of argument for that's what a government is they're the people they're the people allowed to hurt other people and we say it's okay that's that's the definition of a government that's either gosh my um your listeners who are uh more versed in enlightenment philosophers recently than I am will remind me if that's rouso or lock or Hume I'm forgetting I'm so embarrassed in this moment drop in the comments yeah drop it in the comments who that was but that's a uh the idea is that that's that's the definition of the government right we say what is a government the government is whatever we say is allowed to put people in prison the government is whatever we say they're allowed to have weapons that you and I aren't allowed to have they're allowed to use force that you and I are not allowed to use that's what defines a government and I think that's correct and I think that's a good thing um I think that we want the the government to have access to nuclear weapons but not for me and you sitting here to have access to nuclear weapons um I was going to show you mine after the interview [ __ ] much as I much as I think that my personal use of nuclear weapons would be entirely benevolent and right and I would only use it uh don't we all yeah for the right reasons and against the wrong people I think that is a good thing I think it is a good thing that only not only do only governments around the world have nuclear weapons but only some governments have nuclear weapons I think it's a good thing that the government of Iran does not have nuclear weapons yet I think it's a good thing that uh we're trying to you know the I think the situation in Russia and Ukraine would look a lot different if Russia did not have nuclear weapons today right I think that's inarguable what do you think about um the Second Amendment right to bear arms oh great question um so this is one of those things where I'm a little bit agnostic like it seems I feel like I keep reading about this this is totally tendential obviously to wealth Shadows or anything um I gosh it's complicated so I feel like I keep uh I'm from Chicago grew up there spent the first 18 years of my life there um and so Chicago right is famously a place with some of the strictest gun laws in America and also sort of one of the highest rates of gun crime in America um the and when you do my loose understanding of the data on this is that when you do um cross State comparisons states with stronger gun laws do not have lower rates of gun crime than states with looser gun laws um you can tell me if you've seen data that contradicts that but that's my loose understanding of the situation I I have no sense of the data I am I'm a junior constitutionalist in that if I knew the Constitution better I might make that statement really aggressively but I know well enough to be like if that's where we're founded on then that's where we should be and given the second amendment's pretty clear now on the nuclear Armament side yes I'm with you and so if that ends up being a uh a violation of the Constitution I'm I'm here for limiting nuclear weapons yes so yeah I guess in some level right we're just arguing some level it's funny I get really perhaps because I write write Pros for a living I find constitutional arguments impossibly tedious uh at a technical level or at a philosophical moral level both and here's why because every time we have conversations about well um this depending on how you read this clause on this piece of paper from a couple hundred years ago like one set of people reads that one set of people reads those couple words this way another set of people reads this couple words in another way I write Pros fiction for a living so trust me I write books where hopefully different readers do take away different things from the text this is a book where as we were just discussing you can I just wrote a novel which is not a constitution but at the same point you know you'll have um you were talking about the book's comparisons to the way the book is sort of clearly making references to Modern debates about Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies and I've had people write to me since the book is coming out saying oh gosh I like the book but God you were so Pro Bitcoin like this was I I couldn't handle how Pro Bitcoin the book was and I've had other people write to me and say gosh I really love the book but oh this book was so anti- Bitcoin like you really took such a strong anti- Bitcoin position I just disagree with you and I don't understand and that's um I would argue that's a feature not a bug of what novels and art are supposed to do they're supposed to raise these questions and not give anyone exactly what they're looking for if you go into the book with one set of opinions you should have those opinions challenged if you go into the book with a completely contradictory set of opinions you should have those opinions challenged um with with constitutional arguments it ends up being this thing it's like it vaguely feels to me like I'm listening to my English professor friends debate some monologue in the middle of Hamlet going oh I think Hamlet felt this way and someone else is saying I think Hamlet felt that way and on some level perhaps this is what I find tedious is that I find myself going well do we have data on which version of this kills the fewest number of people because I feel like I'm in favor of the one that kills the fewest number of people and this is perhaps where I'm uh a sort of maybe this is where I'm more of a utilitarian and then I realize where it's just the outcome matters more to me than some of the Constitutional procedural arguments and I think um yeah like in some ways I almost feel like argument about the Second Amendment per se is a slight tangent to the actual issue I mean I just I didn't maybe it's because I didn't grow up with guns I never had guns around well what I'm trying to Peg it to so in in all these questions I'm trying to map the way that you view the world so that I can understand and um so that I the reason to understand things is so that you can make predictions and so I think of every human that I encounter as an incredibly uh expensive flesh- based AI that they may draw better conclusions than I do and if I can map their thinking and predict their answers then I now have access to that AI even when they're not around me so I'm always trying to understand somebody's thoughts and then go okay well their way of thinking is going to lead to you know this second third fourth order consequence at least as far as I can think uh really fascinating when I'm talking to somebody who looks backwards to form their um certainly is looking backwards to understand now I won't put words in your mouth in terms of why you do that but when I read your material I Look Backwards to understand the future so I read the wealth of Shadow so I can understand Russia Ukraine and if I can then Look Backwards understand the historical context of somebody like you whose AI is really programmed on historical events that are knowable it gets very interesting because I'm like oh he believes that for this reason we see that play out historically did that play out well or not so for instance as we've been talking though I haven't wanted to interrupt uh basically every war that I can think of and I'm I'm not a historian I want to be very careful about that so I have a headline reader sense of what I'm about to say but every war that I think about post World War II has not turned out to be what I will call a just war and so all the things that we did to manipulate and win against the Nazis we did to um in in the uh Vietnam for instance and uh don't love that one that did not go well Afghanistan Iraq all of it like it just starts to get this becomes a game that I start saying we just shouldn't be playing it that that the game to itself is so manipulative and puts the power in the hands of unelected bureaucrats although I really do think deep state is the right it conjures the Right image certainly in my mind um of these competing factions within a government that are pulling in different directions that may in fact believe another country is more moral more just more whatever and so they're trying to pull in that direction and I will even grant that they have the best of intentions that that they want the same things that I want but they're going about trying to achieve them in a way that I'm mortified by uh again reading your book brought that home to me in in such an incredibly visceral way that in some ways man I'm really going to be able to draw a line in my thinking and say before the wealth of nation the wealth of Shadows and after absolutely fasc that's so kind I really appreciate you're saying so well the question becomes are you going to end up hating what I do with that thinking that's what I'm trying to figure out in this in this episode is how do you think so anyway you're you're telling me things um that you for instance the thing that made me ask about the second amendment was uh the government should have a monopoly on violence and if Drew was really on his game he would not have waited for people in the comments to tell us he would have pulled that up uh but whoever said it um that's very interesting but now that for me brings up questions of well the founders of our constitution said the thing you have to worry about is a tyrannical government that we know there's something about The Human Condition that over time a government entity is likely to bend towards tyranny and while we think we've built one that'll keep itself in check it probably still bends towards tyranny and so the first thing we're going to do is say nobody can tell you what you can and can't say Okay first amendment baby freedom of speech but that value is falling out of favor which brings us back to my whole thing about it's values are all that really matter uh the second one is and just in case they try to tell you what you can't say you've got guns to protect them if they were shutting you up so that they could come do something else crazy now I love the modern world man and I like that water just shows up at my house and I don't want anybody to get confused life despite the complexities of the moment that we're living in is still awesome and within the just proximity of people that can hear my voice in this room let alone on this microphone are people that I love are great and if you lose sight of that woo we what I think people are struggling with and this is certainly true for me I can feel the value system is changing so anyway what I want to map in this is your values how they play out and then as I get a better understanding of where you're coming from we can talk about second and third order consequences right that was all explanations as to why I asked about the Second Amendment it's not tangential for me it's all part of me trying to map how you view this yeah wow there was a lot to respond to there I think that's fascinating and yes important to remember I feel like we we see charts in this all the time that every time someone sort of starts tearing their hair out about this being I don't know the worst time to live in human history or something you kind of go well actually the fewest number of people globally are living at the poverty line since recorded time like like fewer people are living under starvation or a few a smaller percentage of the world population is living under starvation condition conditions now than has lived at any other point in human history that feels pretty good um you know even beyond the fact that you and I can sit here in your beautiful home surrounded by expert crafts people building these things surrounded by all this wonderful technology you know the world starvation is going down war is actually the rate of uh deaths to war is due to war is going down over the last 100 years 200 years certainly 500 years C certainly a thousand years right the trend lines you if you zoom out long enough um and you don't even have to zoom out that far the trend lines are all going in the right direction so that's great um the when you say that values are changing can you tell me more about what you mean by that every generation is going to get the world that they want and this is the fascinating Greek curse like an ancient be careful what you wish for yes yeah very much so this is why also history Rhymes is that there's only so many human personalities which means uh everybody ex so all right there's only so many personalities what do I mean by that think of humans as flesh- based AI like we were talking about previously uh it it's a very constrained system with a ton of epigenetic context so you're born into an area where you have 50% of use hard wire there's nothing you can do to change it and then there are a bunch of epigenetic tags on you so that um if your family went through a famine you're going to respond to calories in a wildly different way if your family was hyper stressed out uh it's mother more way more importantly but it actually tracks on both sides but if your mother was hyper stressed out especially during pregnancy there are going to be all kinds of epigenetic tags on your DNA that have to do with just what she went through uh so you're up against all that in terms of how you're going to respond to your inputs now humans are the ultimate adaptation machine so we are going to adapt to whatever environment we're born into so that could be Geographic what's the weather like what's the food like how much exposure to Sun do you have etc etc um and then it could also be social so hey you come out in a time of War how do you respond to that you'll adapt so that's the 50% of you that is malleable and so in the 50% that's malleable in goes value system and so if you were about to grow up in China and have one set of values but instead the moment you're born I bring you over to Afghanistan you're going to grow up with a very different set of values or I bring you to America you're going to grow up with a very different set of values doesn't matter everyone's going to absorb the values in which they are born now you'll get iconic classs obviously um but you're going to absorb the values that you're born into now those values along with beliefs and biological context but now you have the whole shebang so your values your beliefs your biological context they make up this thing I'll call frame of reference frame of reference is the distorted lens through which you view everything in the world you mistake your frame of reference for objective truth all right since values is one of the three things that make up your entire sense of how you view the world uh they play an unreasonably outsized role and since they effectively govern your sense of what is moral now it just in terms of what people want to see reflected in the world that's a question of values and you will see the left and the right long story about how they get set up from a biological standpoint it's pretty interesting but for now just accept that they do there's biological reason why some lean left and some lean right um but all of that ultimately comes down to a value system and so when you see them colliding they are colliding over values they often can't explain them because so much of this stuff is just subconscious but if the values of the day are um hey everybody should be treated equally and we want to see all people rise and be happy uh then you're going to get that world whether people try to fight against it or not take the 60s people were just like no we [ __ ] had enough of this we're not going to live in a place where some people have some rights and other people based on the color of their skin do not [ __ ] that that's ridiculous cool Society got what it wanted as it always will just throughout history people have been crushed down suppressed because the values of the day were like but they are lesser people obviously and so because that was the value system of the day slavery is fine yeah no problem then that's what people did and so you can get Nazi Germany where it's like hey this is the values uh Germany is not going to be kicked around anymore by these you know other imperialistic dogs from Europe we are going to rise up and we're going to take back what's ours and nobody's going to tell us what to do anymore cool Hitler's able to the values of the country and then the ideas follow and then once they bind your values you're going to drive them into war But first you have to change the narrative which is ultimately changing the values which is changing their frame of reference which is how you get people to act so whoever controls the values controls the world this is why people say that politics is Downstream of culture what they mean is politics is Downstream of the mechanism by which we manipulate people's beliefs and values and that very much is culture so once you understand that you your morality is controlled by an invisible set of values you understand the game of manipulating yourself or being manipulated by others but that's what I mean so culture just gets values it comes across in the music the movies the TV shows the way their parents raise them uh and on and on that's really fascinating and I love your description of values as being our own kind of blurry lens that we internally are through which we internally are viewing the world and and we know it's blurry and I think one of the interesting things again is someone who writes books and makes films like the point of that is to hopefully sort of contribute to culture right like you want people I make things so that people will engage with them and so that people will hopefully feel that their I don't know their moral framework is being challenged or their understanding of the second world war is being challenged right you want some kind of um you want you want people to be we're a better culture of people are constantly challenging their own values is this really what I believe right is this I think that's something it's something I do a lot right where you're saying is this am I right you know I've been saying uh whatever about the Federal Reserve for a couple years but is that right do I still believe that is that still right like I giving ourselves the opportunity to be wrong constantly challenging our own Frameworks constantly surrounding us ourselves with people who will challenge our Frameworks I feel like that's and as you're saying our especially our Frameworks of values is really important I mean I've never had as you're saying we hold our values pretty dearly but there's nothing it feels a valuable exercise to try and have them poked at by by someone else especially someone else who's thought very hard about about their own value system right um especially if they I don't know believe in a God that you don't or they believe in a kind of ethical framework for the world that you don't I think that's um I guess I would make an argument that that's kind of the work of culture is to sort of create a constantly destabilizing you know kind of like workout for all of our Frameworks of values when you look at everything that the government has historically done with money printing manipulation Etc um do you see that as a path forward that we want to continue on or do you want to see something like a Bitcoin coming to existence or a bankor coming to existence that's outside of any one nation state I think that government created and controlled currencies are an imperfect solution to the problem of how to organized Human Society but a better solution than I've seen from frankly any other comers uh including Bitcoin maximalists it's funny you're using the word manipulate to describe what governments do with currencies and I think that's correct I don't disagree with you um I guess I would just say that manipulates a funny word because it sounds somehow nefarious um I though in the sentence I just said I just use the word controlled which now that I think about it also sounds vaguely nefarious doesn't it uh create or alter might be other words we could use to describe what's going on and and creates an important one because I would argue that uh the book sort of gets into this I mean there are these part of what kanes was looking into and part of what um a lot of the character can you tell people who John mayard KES was uh sure John mayard KES was I would argue the C certainly the most influential Economist of the 20th century if not the most famous and influential and influential intellectual of the 20th century he was a British Economist though not by training uh he had no real economic training because I think until John maner kanes came around frankly that he almost invented the field of economic training as we understand it today he was um as I said he was English born into a very kind of uppercrust Posh old money English family um and you know sort of had all the Hallmarks of that kind of upbringing um time in the Foreign Service um and he became uh uh he got a teaching position at Oxford quite young I want to say he was 24 25 um and in that time he basically pioneered a lot of like what is now the field of Economics like remember before that before can's economics wasn't really a field um you know you go back to something like Adam Smith um who did not describe himself as an economist uh he was a philosopher it was just philosophy and the word economy was in there but that was just philosophy economics was not its own study yet it took a little while until the sort of early 20th century for economics to be its own field of study and kanes is one of the people who made that the case um you know his biography is fascinating he was a sort of as as you were saying a kind of like midlevel mid uper level like government he'd spent some time in the government he was a bureaucrat certainly um and I'm so glad feel like so so much of this book is a defense of a defense of bureaucrats uh SL the Deep state or at least showing how they can be useful and Kane certainly spent his time as a bureaucrat but first world war first world war breaks out and he is basically asked by the government to manage the British economy through the first world war which he did um and this is one of his unquestionable Geniuses he somehow man manag the British economy during the first world war and sitting here today I don't think I or maybe anyone else alive could really explain how he did this he somehow managed it so well that Britain left the first world war in better shape economically than she entered it which given the destruction on all sides in that war is unfathomable to me um he was at the end of the war greeted as a national hero and it says something I think a lot about British culture certainly at the time that an economist became a war hero at the end of the the first World War I mean everyone was stunned by how well the country was doing then he goes to the Treaty of Versa he's there as part of the British delegation signing the Treaty of Versa where he quite famously and quite publicly quits in a huff because he felt that the treaty that the British and the French and the Americans were the peace treaty they were signing with the Germans was so punitive against the Germans for having quote unquote started the first world war that it was going to can's felt that it was going to Doom Germany to all of these debts to generations of poverty that would end up producing the cultural and social conditions under which some sort of dictatorship might later emerge um can's at the end uh at Versailles he quits Paris and leaves and basically with shocking and terrifying accuracy predicts to the letter the next 20 years of German history and says if you guys do this he doesn't you know he's not calling out Hitler by name but he basically predicts what's going to happen in the next 20 years of German politics ending with you know the rise of something that looks a lot like the Nazi party and he says if you guys Force the Germans to sign this deal this is what's going to happen and if that's what you're doing then scree wall I'm out and quits in a big huff and he writes it up into a pamphlet do you remember his reasoning what why did he think such a punitive thing would lead to a hitleresque character because he felt that it would Force so first of all it was going to force the Germans into Decades of crushing poverty and he was certainly of the belief that if you force a population into Decades of crushing poverty they're going to choose political solutions to that poverty that are horrible um I think canes felt that um you don't countries that are doing really well economically don't Veer towards dictatorship that comes from that comes from crushing social catastrophe and he felt that you know when you that punishing the Germans was it might feel really good to say oh you guys started the war or of quote unquote started the war and we're going to punish you and you're the bad guys and we're the good guys and it feels so good to kind of punish The Losers of the war but it's going to you've now created all these social conditions in Germany where not only do you have widespread poverty but the government has to spend so much of its resources towards just paying the British back paying the French back paying the Americans back paying back all these War debts they're also going to get all this resentment German are going to grow really resentful for devoting I forget what the percentages are but however whatever significant percentage of its GDP is just going to get sort of sent out the door to their former enemies in the British the French and the Americans and you want to get a bunch of people really really angry you tell them oh you don't get to have food this week because actually the government's spending all of its money sending it to London um that's going to get a lot of people really pissed at London it's going to get a lot of people really pissed at the English um and it's also going to get as it would turn out a lot of people really really pissed at the Jews who they believed were s of controlling the global economy and some sort of insane conspiracy theory um and sure enough a lot of people really did come to grow tremendously resentful in Germany about the rest of Europe about the Americans certainly about you know Jews across the world and so K predicted all of this uh writes this paper the papers writes it in a sort of he publishes this book the book somehow becomes a bestseller all around the world I mean this was a time when John mayard canes could be like the bestselling author of the year with this economic Trea about why the um why the Versa was such a bad idea uh but then he goes He Lives his fam fabulously Glamorous Life where he invests really early in the artistic careers of Pablo Picasso and Virginia wolf he buys these Picasso paintings really really early before they were valuable Virginia wolf he knows and gives her a house to write her first novels um he has this great artistic taste it's this very kind of classy old money sort of world that he's from um he makes Untold fortunes actually on the currency markets which now we would consider tremendously unethical because he was a former government uh you know he was managing currency for the British government and then made a ton of money on the currency markets in the 20s we did not you know they did not have the same ethical rules that we would today Jerome Powell could not go and sort of play the currency markets the way John maner kanes did in the 20s that would be illegal tell tell that to Congress um but uh seem to work out fine he sort of had these Untold fortunes he made um so canes was uh personally he was gay for his entire life and quite open openly gay with the folks around him um he we find in his Diaries He Kept these amazing he kept these amazing Diaries of all of his sort of sexual encounters he kept these um they're really funny to look at people can Google them they look like Excel spreadsheets where you kind of check off the various characteristics of all of the men who he was kind of meeting and sleeping with and many hundreds of them every year it was quite a oh yes he canes was a dashing wealthy man in an exciting period in British history um and again this was the worst kept secret in London was that canes was sort of an out out homosexual uh uh meeting men in parks and going home with them it was I mean he was really famous too so it wasn't like this was a secret you could keep particularly well um but so he was personally he was gay his whole life until he then met a woman named Lydia lakova who was at the time the uh Prima ballerina in the Moscow ballet then engaged to a messy divorce from eigor Stravinsky somehow KES meets her falls in love begins his first heterosexual relationship they get together he steals her from Stravinsky they get married um attempt the sort of what turns out to be this wonderful life together together for decades afterwards um in what by all account seemingly was was quite a happy heterosexual marriage um and you know you can imagine kees is the most famous intellectual alive at the time Lydia Lova was the Prima ballerina of the Moscow ballet who just divorced one of the most famous composers in the world they were a sort of it's like a Kanye Kim Kardashian kind of marriage it's sort of two of the most famous people in the world get engaged in this messy thing um and it was this level of sort of the glamour around canes is hard to convey today because we talk about him as being an economist and it all sounds kind of a bit dreary but he was anything but dreary um and so kees was canes was basically running the when the second world war breaks out kanes is basically running the kind of British economic operation um he wasn't officially at the ex cheer when the war broke out but he was such a he was so powerful and important in in Britain that they kind of nobody did anything without kind of going to him and checking with him and um he didn't he they ended up giving him an official government position at some point during the war but I think at the beginning of the war he didn't even have an official position he was just kind of like well look we're going into war so clearly the person we need to ask is the most famous economist in a 100 years if not ever John maner kanes and so he ran the British war operation and so he was in some ways um he's in this book He's sort of the antagon he's a and antagonist of our Americans uh our American Heroes because they one of the big questions on the American side during the war was how do we fund the United States had to fund not just the American war operation but the British and French War operations as well and kanes was in charge of the British side and he very much felt that um the he the Americans wanted Britain to pay for all the weapons we were sending them and Canes felt that well wouldn't it be quite nice if you just gave us all these weapons and we didn't pay for them wouldn't that be a better solution for all involved and that was his position through much of the war there was a lot of kind of economic wrangling around around this fact that you know in again in 39 and 40 the Germans had built up this massive war operation the British military was a some tiny fraction of the size of the German military the French military was a tiny fraction of the size of the German military the American Military wasn't even tinier fraction of the size of the German military the the collective Allied Forces were outmanned and outgunned in 39 and 40 in every conceivable way and so what our folks at treasury had to figure out how to do was do what the Germans had done over the last few years how do we build up our own massive war operation and build it very very quickly um and moreover the British don't have a war operation the French don't have a war operation um you know we need to like like physically Britain doesn't have enough bullets to go to war they didn't have bullets how many we need to start making millions of bullets and we need to start making quickly they were making three million bullets a month com you know there was World War II took a lot of bullets and someone had to make them and someone had to pay for the making of them and neither the UK or France were in a position to be able to make them so the US basically became the armorers of the entire Allied war effort and that took quite a bit of government expense um to one of our earlier topics of conversation the way they financed the building of to way the way they financed the creation of all those bullets was by printing quite a lot of money because someone had to pay a bunch of guys in Detroit to build a bunch of factories that would then make all these bullets and that that took money printing which means the guys in Detroit paid for their own making of the bullets along with everybody else well yes I maybe this is where this becomes an interesting question of you were talking earlier about your sort of understanding of and I think the book gets into this too that like if we accept that money is essentially a fiction like it's not real right there's nothing real about it it's just this thing we use so that Society can help function we can Define it however we want to and I I would argue actually that that's one of you just asking about kanes I would actually argue that's one of his greatest insights so we talk about K's K's is talked about as being sort of an economist of the left and I think that's true um but he's an economist of the left who is very much not in the shadow of Marx he is no Marxist he is no socialist he is certainly no communist um and kan's big contributions to economic thought are largely around exactly what we're talking about which is money printing in times of economic distress that is in times of economic slowdown the govern should print more money to hire more people to do more jobs uh to work more jobs so when we talk about you know the US response to the Great Depression and the idea of okay the government's just going to hire a bunch of people to build roads and dig ditches and do whatever that's a very Keynesian approach to uh to the problem um the frankly what the Germans did in the 30s to build up their War operation and to build the autobond was a very Keynesian approach that was all government funded inflation is eating the value of the dollar alive and that's why it is more important than ever to look for ways to cut costs while also boosting performance in your business and one solution that's helped over 37,000 companies do just that is netsuite by Oracle netsuite is the number one Cloud Financial system bringing accounting financial management inventory and HR into one platform and one source of Truth it reduces it costs and cuts the cost of maintaining multiple systems you improve efficiency by bringing all your major business processes into one platform slashing manual tasks and errors and giving you an edge over your competitors backed by popular demand Nets Suite has extended its one-of-a-kind flexible financing program for a few more weeks so head over to netsuite.com Theory right now again that's netsuite.com Theory netsuite.com SL Theory how often are you checking your credit score afraid of identity theft or account breaches we all use the internet every single day for important things like Personal Banking and remote work so why not protect yourself with our sponsor Aura Aura is an all-in-one cyber security service that keeps you safe online Aura identifies data Brokers exposing your info and submits opt out requests on your behalf Ora also monitors your credit tracks your passwords for data breaches and secures your online activity with VPN and anti malware protection you can try Aura for free for 2 weeks by clicking the link in the description or scanning the QR code really fast I want to yeah I want to challenge an idea there and I want to get your feedback so um I would say this is why people in the bit Community Bitcoin Community absolutely despise canes is that it is the very same thing that led Germany to have to do Conquest after Conquest because when you're printing money you're now even though money is quote unquote a fiction which I hear you but there is this real concept of value right that I will give you a thing if I get a thing that I want that is of equal or greater value and so just the easy way to do it is to create what we call currency now when you print more of that you are taking money from everybody that holds that currency and part of the reason like you you need only think of it as uh it's counterfeiting that's approved for the government so the government is allowed to counterfeit their own currency but the question you have to ask then is if they can print money why don't they just print everybody a billion dollars and people will either get stuck on that and go yeah why don't they just print a billion dollars or they will go oh my God even printing me a dollar is that same problem just smaller and so now we're asking a question of not does this destroy the um stability of the economic system but it's just a question of how fast so I'm willing to destroy it because I hope that when it falls apart it falls apart after me or that we can sort of Limp this thing along long enough or maybe they have a vision of well the currency in Great Britain the Sterling uh they used to be the reserve currency and you know look they're fine now and so what's it matter that they used to be the most powerful economy in the world and now they're you know God knows where so um people I think lose sight of that at their Peril so the fact that KES wants he doesn't want to go to say gold which is way too restrictive you can't manipulate it I know you don't love that but I stand by that choice of word um because of that you now get into the people hate that hate that because it is taking from everybody else in an invisible way with no vote Yes I don't disagree with anything you just said um May I give you the Keynesian counter argument to that so two things one um and this isn't just Keynesian but uh why does gold suck as a global Reserve currency and a currency overall because it's the amount of gold in the world is not fixed we keep finding new stores of gold all over the place there is a lot more gold now in the world than there was 100 years ago um and gold is the worst of all possible options because not only at least with Bitcoin you have the argument that okay there's a fixed store of these things there's this is the number of Bitcoins that are ever going to exist with gold somebody finds a new mine somewhere someone finds some new store of gold you know 100 miles below the Earth or a mile below the Earth or something somewhere in the middle of nowhere oops now the price of gold on the all over the world just fluctuated and it fluctuated totally rank randomly um that's even worse than Central planning because you have fluctuations now depending on like what some mine happens to do someday so um I would argue that uh gold as a currency manages to combine both the worst features of Bitcoin and the worst features of the US dollar the Keynesian argument to the why don't we just print everybody a billion dollars is I think this is a really interesting point about Keynesian Theory and um what he would say is and I think this is his famous quote I think I'm going to get this right I'm always mangling these quotes but I'm pretty sure this one's short enough that I can do it right anything we can actually do we can afford um I I would argue that that that single sentence is utterly Central to Keynesian thought um and it's and it's a thought that I agree with I don't agree with everything about keynesianism but that's a bit that I will totally agree with the which is to say that the reason we can't print everyone a billion dollars is because everyone is not sort of doing a billion dollars worth of work um that money is fiction money is all made up it's just stuff we need to move around in order to sort of get real things to happen in the world we can Define it however we want we can make it do whatever we want we can make it work however we want the thing that matters is what happens in the real world um if you want to if you want if you want to make a bullet the the con rint if we have the technology to make a bullet we can make some bullets and we can make as many dollars to go make bullets as we want to because we have the technology to do that we know how to do it if we want to build a cold fusion machine you could give as you the government can print as many billions of dollars as it wants to build a cold fusion machine it doesn't matter we don't know how to do it we're physically incapable of doing that the thing that matters is is the real world meaning if you put uh newly printed dollars inflationary dollars into cold fusion and it doesn't work you just inflated the money supply exactly but if you do it to create a bullet which has an economic unit of value you did not that is the argument and um and so you can create money and have it not be inflationary to the degree that the real world corresponds to to the money you're making so a word that actual work actual productive use and part of this has to do with kind of how we defined like what are actual Goods in the actual world right um establishing that money is a fiction you can't eat money you can't you know money doesn't keep you warm at night right the the heat that goes into your house keeps you warm at night the the blanket that's over you is what keeps you warm at night money is sort of a tool that we use and the way we kind of think of money now is we use is is a tool that we use to kind of move Society in such a way that a lot of people can get blankets over them at night or that more people can have blankets over them at night than had blankets before because we know how to make blankets we have the technology to make blankets if the government aian thought would be that if the government wanted to spend money making I don't know how many how many Americans are there now 300 million 400 million 30 is the last official count but we we'll get back to your open border statement from earlier so great so let's call it 330 if the government wanted to make 330 million blankets so that everyone in America could sleep with the blanket over the night we absolutely have both the technology and the money creation ability to do that we have factories that can make blankets we have Logistics systems to make blankets I mean Logistics is a part of this too right um what we can do that and the argument is that would not be inflationary because that's creating real value for people um it's creating like real things that people can actually use in the world if we can actually do it we can afford it and we can make the limits on how much money we can print are physical limits another great historian who sort of whose work went into this book a lot is is David Graber who we should certainly talk about um Contra canes David Graber was uh he just died a couple years ago very sadly um he was a socialist he was like an out andout um very proud socialist but he wrote a wonderful book that I can't recommend more highly to your listeners called debt the first 5,000 years and it's a wonderful history of the concept of debt and this shows up in my book and I really just stole it from greyber because I think it's so brilliant um he talks about the idea that um effectively digital currencies predate physical currencies that um one of these questions that kanes is looking into and frankly other economic historians are looking into is where money where does money come from where where was money created who invented money where did we come up with this thing Adam Smith tells this theory that we've all heard we Adam Smith sort of popularized a theory that became kind of how economists tend to talk about it now which is always some kind of parable about like there's two farmers and one of them has horse or one of them has cows and the other one uh has hay or something and the guy who makes the hay wants to sell it to the cow guy and the guy who has the cows wants to sell it to the hay guy but they don't know how how much hay or how many cows is a barrel of hay worth how many barrels of pay as a cow worth if only we had some sort of system for figuring out what things are worth and then I can exchange them like actually giving you a cow is physically really difficult so gosh if we only we had some little slips of paper we could use to sort of smooth over this transaction and so money was created okay that's a very standard Adam smithian account of how money was created um uh an account that uh that Graber I think sort of brought my attention to it's it's usually called the Tartus the of money creation um because it comes from another school of economic thought is that this did not that that entire story is ridiculous that didn't happen that has never happened um and in fact we've we've never found evidence of any human civilization no matter how old looking back however many thousands of years we have never found any evidence of any human civilization that didn't have money money predates written language money predates um moneyy is as old as belief in God as like people in into the stars and wondering what's out there money is as old as the human brain because and they didn't use little pieces of paper um but they effectively had sort of rituals and processes and tablets um around which people could make check marks to record debts because money is debt um and we know that's kind of literally true right like on a a dollar what makes a dollar a dollar it's the part on it that says if you bring it to the treasury we'll give you this much in gold they don't actually do that anymore but that's what it like says that on dollar bills right like that's what the value of dollar a dollar is a debt all dollars are debts from the US Treasury money is sort of literally this history of debt and so the garine argument that I find quite compelling is that the history of money is is really a history of human society and so so we had money long before we were kind of moving pieces of paper around and so we can't think about the questions of like what money is and what do we want it to do are as you were just saying earlier they're questions of values if we know what we want to do as a society we can determine how to make the money system sort of do that for us if what we want to make is 3 million bullets we can make a money system that makes us a lot of bullets if what we want to make is blankets we can make a money system that makes us a lot of blankets if what we want to do is capture territory and kill a bunch of strangers and enslave a bunch of people we can also make a money system that does that and I would argue that the sort of Keynesian argument is is also this one of similar to what you're making it's this argument about values it's saying it's a better thing to do to design an economic system that makes lots of blankets than an economic system that makes a lot of bullets uh if I understood that well I'll be able to sum it up in a single sentence which is to map it to to a law of physics uh value can be created but it is only destroyed when you don't get a good of comparable value for the money that you created so it's probably better to say it in money money can can money can be created but it can only be destroyed if you fail to create a good of equal value meaning if I've understood all that correct uh and this is why I was saying earlier that inflation is a tricky beast and that it doesn't map one to one because if you create money and out of thin air but you do it in such a way that it creates a good that people want so you paid somebody with new fake counterfeited money printed however you want to think about it if you pay them to make a bullet with that newly created money as long as you get the bullet at the end it was as if there was already a balance between the money and the thing but if in the case of covid you just give people a bunch of money and there's no economic output then you do destroy that value and now you are back to what I was saying which is that form of theft where you printed money nothing of economic value came out the other end and so now you have literally taken from everybody and spread that uh you you have as they say socialized the losses because we could get very complicated as to how the money gets into the system which favors people that own assets which then tends to favor the rich and this is how you accelerate the rich poor divide which is another reason that uh people that are against canes absolutely hate money printing um but I can see the logic even though I think it is a system that becomes so dangerous because you will some very distressing amount of the amount of time put money into the system without creating something of economic value and therefore it takes I think that's uh wonderfully put and I I honestly I agree with all of that the yes you're going to make mistakes sometimes you're going to print too much money sometimes like you're going to sometimes you're going to overshoot sometimes you're going to undershoot right um you're always trying to gauge money printing to the amount of real world goods and I actually liked a lot when you use the word value in your kind of neonian physics example I think value is a very good way of thinking about it that um uh and another way of framing this might be to say that um here's why I think value is a good a good word to use here Adam Smith would argue that um there is no such thing as value Adam Smith would argue that uh this cup is worth the cup that I'm holding in my hand right now is worth exactly what I can convince you to pay for it if I can convince you to give me a dollar for it it's worth a dollar if I can convince you you to give me $100 for it it's worth $100 there is no inherent Worth or inherent value to this cup um KES would say that's [ __ ] um it does have inherent value the inherent value is that it brings in this case the last bits of cold coffee to my lips like it does a thing it physically does something and that thing has value and that thing has value to society the money part that we use to sort of describe it who cares that's just the that's just the money bit um the value it has is real um so yes when we talk about which sounds a bit kind of Airy and philosophical but I think it has direct application to what you're describing about the kind of Co era money printing that first the Trump Administration and then the B Biden Administration did with the uh I forget what they were called the two there was two stimulus packages right the Trump era one and then the Biden era one um so I would while neither were perfect I would defend both and say that at the time in they were 2020 and 2021 if I'm remembering this right correct me if I'm getting the ear wrong I would I would make the argument that given what was the kind of societal cataclysm that was those couple covid years printing too much money you'd rather air on the side of too much than too little and they aired on the side of too much and I would argue boy did they ever air on the side of printing too much they printed a lot too much um I don't think anyone would make the argument in hindsight that they printed just the right amount they obviously printed too much um hence the rise in the rate of inflation that we're seeing today and we're seeing it all across the board right because I mean I think comparing it to Europe is a great example where um you know inflation is bad in the US but compare it to Russian inflation I mean we're what isn't it like 15% % 20% it's terrible in Russia compar it to someone in your comments can look up the numbers it's much much worse um or Drew or Drew can look it up compare it to the UK was worse France was worse Germany was worse um the US has done I would argue comparatively quite well in response to sort of comparable economies across the world okay I haven't looked at this but I will say that because the US dollar is a world Reserve currency we're actually Outsourcing a lot of our inflation which is partly why we don't feel it as much at home agree I don't disagree with that um I will agree yeah 100% agree with what you just said but I would make the argument that if you're going back to 2020 and 2021 you'd want to while ideally you would get the amount of money You' print the exact right number of dollars to precisely correspond to the amount of economic activity going in the world you're you're looking at a period where there's widespread unemployment right where people are stuck at home people are not producing Goods they're not producing value into the real world no one is making cups no one is making I mean I write books for a living and I remember this period in 2020 where I had my book before this came out of the beginning of 2020 and we physically ran out of books because the printing presses stopped like the the factory where they print I don't even know where the factory where they print these hard covers is I think it's in the Northeast somewhere the factory was shut down right so they were just there weren't any more books um like that's a supply chain problem that had not been faced in the United States since I don't know when if ever um so you know I could I can write as many books as I want but we physically lacked the ability to print them and send them to people so there's all this value that's being lost um so we're kind of printing money to fill the Gap and as you were just saying obviously that money wasn't people were paying rent people were I mean a lot of people used it to pay down debt which is not super helpful um but people were not using that money to I don't know build High ways or print books or build cups um and so we got a lot of inflation the argument in the so the pro argument for that that I would make is you want to better to air on the side of too much than too little because airing on the side of too little couldn't means too little could mean widespread unemployment the likes of which we've never seen in the United States since the Great Depression and the Great Depression and and while the inflation the United States is currently not ideal and bad it's a lot better than Great Depression era unemployment yeah it is uh okay this is where it starts getting complicated so um no one wants to see people without jobs I was I changed the entire focus of impact theory of the show uh as my very small contribution to what I thought was going to happen because I did not know what money printing was uh and so I thought okay people need to buckle down they need to know how to weather this storm the problem is that while money printing worked and it did a very good job of making sure that all of us in 2020 did not suffer it does create suffering for the Next Generation for sure and so we said hey we don't want to suffer so we're going to leave you guys to suffer and so what I want to know is what do you think history tells us about the money printing that we're doing now and the national debt that we racked up because when I put it in context of the wealth of Shadows and what happened to Germany and how crazy their debt was and the madness that ensued because they were just so burdened with debt and what we can learn from Great Britain and what happened to them because they were so burdened by debt um what does history tell us about this moment money Printing and our national debt um it's a great question so obviously during the second world war the United States printed a ton of money and racked up a ton of debt um and we did it to win a war war that we felt I would argue correctly and I think we would all argue correctly was existential and sure enough it worked we won the war as we all have noticed um and the and the the and we ended up building a bunch of factories to build bullets and build airplane you know the airplane factories are still there right like the Boeing factories are still there they're still making airplanes um we ended building up during the war we used all the money Printing and all the debt all the government bonds to build a bunch of things that are kind of Blue Chip valuable American Industries um so I would not I I would again say that it's the issue isn't money printing itself the issue is what are you using the money for the devil's in the details here um if you're using the money to build build factories that can now produce airplanes that we can sell all around the world and people can use to fly places there's there's value created there um if you're using the money to just sort of like go into the black hole that is the Wall Street Financial system I would argue that not that much value is being created there um so what does history teach us about money printing per se and debt per se it's it's they're not per se problems but itend depends on what you're doing with them you know I think now I mean I'll here let me give you an argument against what I'm just saying which is yeah so the argument against what I just said is okay Graham that's well and good but we're not we are not engaged in World War II right now like yes we're funding a Ukrainian War operation yes we're making weapons for Ukraine but the I mean you can remind me of what the however many billions of dollars 80 billion was that the last Aid package to Ukraine the most recent perhaps yeah but that's certainly not the sum total it's a couple hundred billion something like that total got to be I don't know the exact number but it's yeah hundreds of billions hundreds of billions um so though that gets a little bit complicated because the most of those values are the value of weapons we've already built that are just sitting there that we're giving away rather than selling them or we're basically we're actually doing the same thing we did with the British in the second world war where we're saying uh we're going to quote unquote sell it to you but you don't have to give us any money now we're going to give you a loan to pay us for it so and it's a little bit unclear exactly when these loans are going to be due like we did this in the second world war with Britain right we funded their entire War operation by um there two programs the first was called Cash and Carry the second was called L lease and in a nutshell the basic idea of of these programs was saying to the British we're just going to give you a bunch of weapons that you're quote unquote buying from us um but we're also going to loan you the money to buy them from us so we're just paying ourselves the money to make these weapons um you're going to pay a small interest rate on those loans and the loans aren't due for 50 years um and so sure enough there was some funny moment I want to say it was in '94 1996 when Britain finally paid back its World War II loans to United States like at the point where frankly due inflation the value of those loans was neg um so they're kind of fake it's a way of looking like we're kind of charging for the weapons without actually really charging anyone for the weapons um and in the second World of War I I would make the argument and certainly kanes make made the argument that this was the right thing to do because it was really really important for US security that Britain had a bunch of weapons to fight the Nazis because certainly in 39 and 40 they were actually at War and the United States was not so we could make a bunch of weapons the US can't use them we're not a war but Britain was um moreover it was vitally important for US National Security interests that Nazi Germany not take over Britain that would have been bad for America so if a bunch of kind of fake loans is what that takes great a small price to pay literally speaking um it's a little more complicated with the aid to Ukraine because when we talk about these AIDS packages some of it is direct financial aid but if I'm remembering rightly it's a lot of just giving them giving the ukrainians Weaponry that's just sort of sitting there and um and then like loans to quote unquote buy the weapons that they're never going to pay back and no one is expecting them to pay back and we know they're not paying it back they know they're not paying it back it's fine um but but then of course we have to sort of use a bunch of money to build kind of rebuild the weapons right if we're giving them a bunch of bullets in theory we have to go make a bunch of bullets next year so that we can have some bullets around because the US military doesn't want to run out of bullets um so your question was about what what these events in history teach us about about this present moment and and I guess I would argue that what they would show is that um neither money printing nor these huge debts are intrinsically bad if we're using them for the right thing and if we're using them to build productive capacity like the US left the second world war in much better shape economically than she entered it um I would argue that the American this isn't even my argument this is a pretty commonly accepted argument that the American economic um success of the 1940s and 1950s through the 1960s was because of how well we did economically during the war we made we shrank unemployment we made all these jobs we used government money to build these factories and then sure enough those factories could produce cars and all sorts of stuff after the war that you know created the like life of America in 1950s that we all sort of talk about today so so what you're actually doing with the money really matters now I'm again going to argue against myself and say okay but US national debt now is significantly higher than it was during World War II and there was a war on then so really is this actually a sustainable level of debt um obviously it's a tricky question because it is by definition unprecedented the US government is in an unprecedented level of debt right now the argument I would make is that people keep buying treasury bonds so I know I was just talking [ __ ] about Adam Smith a minute ago but if the value of something is what someone will pay for it well clearly the global markets seem to think that the treasury is good for the money you if people didn't buy t- bills then we'd have a problem but we don't seem to have a problem selling them so like in theory on some theoretical level is a Deb a problem I suppose so but in the real world it's hard to find evidence of the actual problem okay so the evidence of the actual problem do you think that people will continue to buy them no matter what our debt to GDP as a I think is a good indicator not everybody agrees with that but we'll use it for now do you think there is any number at which point the debt to GDP becomes so problematic that foreign institutions stop wanting to do transactions in dollars for instance they stop buying our bonds I think it's a great question again this is sort of theoretically yes but I'm hardpressed to say what that number is because the global market for treasury bonds seems to have lost none of its appetite over the last decade much less the last 50 years what I I don't see any sign that anyone sort of going oh gosh the now that the debt to GDP ratio hit whatever it's at right now now I'm going to buy I don't see a real world actor buying fewer treasury bonds as a result of that well so that may just be um uh that you've missed some of the headlines so China is going hard in the paint to divest themselves of us bonds uh they are getting out of the US dollar game they have teamed up with the brics Nations which I'm pretty sure I've seen you right about um so you've got got but isn't that because of their own currency game I mean yes so I'm interrupting you sorry no none at all please well no I was going to say that isn't that their own I mean the uh the Chinese government is facing their own massive currency problem um you know their Co era inflation it's really hard to tell because all their government statistics are lies but from what we can tell government's lies gram Mo you it can't be true this this is great I've convinced you that bureaucrats are good and you've convinced me that government's lie oh you have not convinced me the bureaucrats are good you've convinced me that our government is full of people that have their own agenda and they are pulling in different [ __ ] directions you convinc me with something very scary very scary in fact yeah we'll we'll get I have I have one question about that that we'll get to later but first China China give me take always gosh I'm so far from a China expert um and again every time I try to look at this um I feel like it's really hard because it's you don't have to look Beyond Breton Woods as far as I'm concerned to tell me what you write about in the book ly fascinating you prompted me to do a ton of research about this um but Breton Woods I think predicts bricks and explains exactly what is going to happen and so the only question is in in Breton Woods which country is America now is America still America or are we Great Britain are we Great Britain are we uh India we're going to be somebody else's Pawn are we uh the Soviet Union and we're just going to like Hey we're not going to let any you control us we're out like what's going to what do you think this moment represents for us with if I'm getting the numbers right the debt that was crushing Germany so bad they turned into the Nazi war machine was in today's dollars $1 trillion that was the crushing debt can't see beyond it oh my God country's terrible $1 trillion guess what everybody we're $32 trillion in debt so uh interest rates go up servicing the debt becomes a problem already if I'm not mistaken we spend more in servicing our debt than we spend in uh uh military um keeping our military up this is bigger than that in like three years or something it will be our single B biggest expense and in uh now I'm making it up but it's something like in four years at the current rate of growth that uh simply servicing the interest on the debt will be more than we bring in in taxes full stop all of it together which means now your only way to service the debt is print print print which is how you keep creating the problem uh yes but back sorry because I I say that as the framework for you to answer the question who's America in the new sort of Bret and woods um a great question and I think it is vitally important to us economic interests and to US National Security that the United States do everything possible to make sure that the US dollar Remains the global Reserve col currency do you think shutting off Russia moved us towards Romania the uh the dominant Reserve currency or away from oh good question uh it probably hurt short term because Russia is doing far less of its trading in dollars um and it's going to push them towards Remy be or uh God knows what else um but the argument would be in the long term it's better if the war kind of reaches a satisfactory conclusion so a mixed bag but I think it's no secret that the Russian government does not want the US dollar to be the global Reserve currency anymore nor is it any secret that the Chinese government does not want the US dollar to be the global Reserve currency anymore um both kind I mean I don't think anyone thinks the Russian currency is about to be a global Reserve currency they've been largely cut off from the Swift interbank system it's almost impossible to trade Russian currency around the world um uh Chinese currency is a different matter and they're obviously doing everything possible to uh you know buy oil in remb they're doing everything possible to trade in Africa and Remy B to sort of get it used all around the world in the same way the United States was doing in the 1930s and 1940s and and paid off very well for us so I think winning that currency war is going to be tremendously valuable for the United States and and as you were just saying the United States benefits in Untold ways from the fact that when we print dollars everyone in the world has to deal with that like because dollars are a global Reserve currency we're printing dollars that aren't just used here but they're used everywhere um I think that's to the United States's benefit so that's the other thing when we talk about the unprecedented nature of debts GDP ratios um the other unprecedented bit is the degree to which not not only is the de to GDP ratio unprecedented but so is the ubiquity of the US dollar in which that debt is denominated around the world and the fact that our debt is denominated in dollars and not something else is both I think I think from your perspective it's scary because because our debt is denominated in the currency that we control we can just print more of it to pay back to debt which terrifies you I can see by the look on your face right now from my perspective it's okay I would much rather have debt denominated in dollars than something the United States government cannot control agreed it's the only reason it's not crippling um okay so one thing that um I would like to know is do you think bricks is a real threat or is it um it's so small we don't have to worry about it um oh gosh I wish I knew more about this from my loose understanding of this I think it's uh a threat to be taken seriously I mean again like the the ubiquity of the US dollar is tremendously valuable for me and you and American citizens and frankly for kind of global stability and so I think it's worth preserving that system and I think how big of a threat is bricks I'm not an expert enough to I don't know like quantify the I wish I could give you a 6% chance of disaster 25% chance of disaster I don't know what the percentage chance of disaster is but I know that there is a potential disaster do you think I'm crazy to say it's 100% chance I just don't know over what time period it could be another 50 years but the US dollar will lose Reserve currency status so tells me history oh that's an interesting argument I mean h I've never thought about it that way let me try and think about that for a second uh I mean you have to be right right because no currency has ever maintained Global dominance forever I mean no Empire lasts forever Rome fell the British Empire collapsed nothing lasts forever um we are what 80 years into this project of kind of a post-war American Empire um with the US dollar being and and then the sort of difference of what I would argue as the American post war Empire is that it's a it's an Empire of dollars it's not an Empire of soldiers um we don't have you know kind of soldiers Outpost everywhere around the world um we are not the United States has not for 80 years been on a path to Conquest to take new territory um when was the last time the United States government took new territory it's been a little while it's yeah I don't know the answer to that is the only real question yeah the fact that we don't yeah the fact that we don't know TI talking that one real fast here not Tik Tok but in 1947 the Mariana Islands Carolina Islands Caroline islands and Marshall Islands came the most recent US Territorial acquisition as of August 2021 we certainly haven't taken any since then so there you have it 1947 yeah it does not seem like the United States is on a massive path of territorial Conquest around the world but the US dollar has been um and that I would argue has been tremendously important for global stability um in in in in a way and that's a defense of the BR andwood system that's saying that you know at the end of the war a bunch of people got together in a hotel in New Hampshire in BR the town of Breton Woods to Fashion an economic system that would prevent a third world war and knock on this table right now so far so good I think you know you can hear the trepidation in both your voice and my voice because as we said here in June of 2024 it feels like we're uncomfortably close to something that could tip into into a war of global proportions which we haven't seen in 80 years and I think I don't feel comfortable putting words in your mouth but I think I can safely say that both of us feel like that would that is a situation to be avoided yeah there's a great quote uh anybody that lives by the crystal balls destined to eat glass uh so 100% I'm going to be wrong that I know but I think it is extremely worthwhile for people to build their internal logic and say okay based on the things that I believe here's what I think will happen and if you believe it enough then you'll act accordingly I mean this comes back to the John mayard kan's thing where he painted a picture of the next 20 years of German's existence and he was right um because he actually understood the mechan naations um and I think that's really important I posted a clip today from an interview I did with Ray doio arguably one of the greatest economic Minds certainly made more money off of his economic beliefs than anybody uh living that's got to be close certainly in terms of head fund owners there might be personal investors that have done better but um and he was saying Tom the I was putting forth a thesis that we need a leader that can unite us and he said nope you're making a mistake because that's how dictators come to power now his whole thing was you're skipping past the mechanism of action now I actually think in the final analysis he's going to end up being wrong and unfortunately I did not push him and say well Ray what's the mechanism of action in your world um and because what he'll tell you I'm so familiar with this because I've asked him this question a dozen times is it all comes down to how people are with each other and so yes if people have high trust if they're getting along well uh if they're not you know torn apart by division then things go well and for him the mechanism of action of the everything falls apart is um people have division they start pulling away from each other and there is no way to bring them back together okay so I believe that we are all in the grips of ideas and if you can put forth an idea of unity that you actually can get people to come back together uh so now whether um I have a path that will trigger the right mechanisms of action is a very valid point um but I don't think it sort of violates any sort of laws of humanity that we can do that but where where I think we are the mechanism of action that I'm trying to lay out is that money printing creates a mechanism of action that when you're the one that controls it you end up racking up debt now an interesting fact that I want everybody to burn into their soul is that at the time of Breton woods and the reason I think we're a different country now in that conference in brettonwoods back when it happened the first time right before the end of World War II uh we were the largest creditor in the world we are now the largest deor in the world and there's no way that anybody can look at brettonwoods and go oh the largest deor in the world would be the one that would be able to get their currency put as like the Global Currency and so you I look at the movements of the Brick Nations and how many more people are trying to sign on to that including Saudi Arabia and I say huh the G7 now make up 25. like 5% of Global GDP that's a quarter man they make up a quarter America alone at the time of brettonwoods was 50% just America and so dude people people can they you I'm not asking you to forecast in the future I'm just saying Look Backwards at the end of World War II America is the largest creditor and by its creditor and by itself makes up 50% of global GDP Flash Forward the G7 make up 25% of global GDP and America is the largest debtor and PS they're cutting off countries like Russia and saying uh we're just going to remove you from the global monetary system which then Russia goes a word like we're going to go talk to China China's desperate to get out from under your thumb they want to be at least a regional hedgemon uh we live in now a multi-polar world again and China is a pure competitor to the US so says John mimer shout out to John who we want to get on the show uh and it's the the whole deck is just totally different and so when I watch the US government say I'm never going to be able to convince the American people to go to war with Russia on behalf of Ukraine not even by proxy and so I'm just going to print money I'm like look all of Kane's ideas he was brilliant but I don't think he appreciated the human proclivity to abuse that power into Oblivion bringing us back to rallio rallio said there's only so many personality types that's why history Rhymes and the reality is every time somebody gets the privilege of being the reserve currency they just end up taking on debt Deb Deb Deb Deb Deb debt they can't help themselves they print to service the debt and then eventually you hit a point where it just doesn't work anymore and you hyperinflate your own currency because there is a Breaking Point and you finally find that breaking point which not like you can point to and say oh this ratio of debt to GDP I get it it's very complicated but every currency ever in human history ends up hitting that limit it hyper inflates they lose their status and in that moment you have to have a debt Jubilee and that normally comes at the cost of war and so I'm just saying when I look out at the world and I'm like hey the US is funding the Ukraine's fight with Russia that can go badly like first of all they're a nuclear power what are we doing you you're not even getting the American people to vote on it and when you put it in an economic historical context covered in an amazing book called The Wealth of Shadows uh wow that shot I was so thank you for that dude the crazy thing is I in some ways I think your book is affected me more than it's affected youting well I'm also I I think I'm uh I'm probably arguing against you more than agreeing with you for conversational purposes honestly because I feel like I learn more from arguments than I do from agreements agreed um and it's more we both grow from that experience um but yeah I look I don't I think that's a valid point I think the way that we've the way the US government has frankly in the last 80 years gotten into the habit of kind of soft declaring Wars without Congressional resolutions is this is not the first time that's been a problem um you know I ironically the it was Iraq right which we were talking about earlier was a time when Congress did vote and they gave the president authority to launch an invasion and and look how that worked out so there are difficulties both ways um I think that again I don't think that the I don't know that anyone would make the argument that the the major inflationary pressures on the American economy right now are the aid to Ukraine um I'm not saying those are helping I agree with you entirely that they're not they're hurting but the co era money money printing is kind of obviously the prime source of the inflationary pressures the American economy is feeling now I don't I don't know how you'd make an argument contrary to that agreed um so but that which is all to say that that's not to say that a to Ukraine is is helping again it's it's not that's obviously inflationary um because because theworks are not building things in the United States that we use and I think it's um it's interesting example that you're making about what you were just saying R Al was making about um what how other currencies have stopped being Global Reserve currencies I mean Sterling really lost that privilege in the second world war um it wasn't a massive s in debt yes what do you mean well they yes they did get you're right you're right they did get themselves in a tremendous amount of debt during the war to the United States um and they also got bombed it feels like the getting bombed part was pretty bad I mean huge Advantage they had to rebuild America obviously Pearl Harbor but basically we walked out of that completely unscathed so America's geography to the rescue one more time no doubt about that um so um yes but I certainly see the argument that it was the it's an interesting way of thinking about it that the problem and it sounds like the argument that you're saying Del is making and it's a smart one is that Sterling's problem as a global Reserve currency was the debt per se and not the fact that they nearly lost a massive war and nearly became you know a territory of Germany I think we sort of forget whenever I go back into the early history of the war and I did this when I was reading this book and I did this when I was um writing the imitation game the film I wrote about 10 years ago the which also gets the one you won the Academy Award for I did win an Academy Award for yeah um you know whenever you read through an exercise I recommend to anyone and actually here this is slightly tangential but if you want to feel better about life in 2024 go on the on the New York Times website they have the I think they call times machine you can look back at the sort of physical paper any day in the history of New York Times publication um and something I've done with this book and with when I was doing imitation game was just go back and read the front page of the New York Times every day from January 1st 1939 to January 1st 1940 if you read the front page of the New York Times every day for that year or even to skim through it um you will find your hand starting to shake you will find like a deep anxiety welling up in your chest uh I find myself near tears frankly half the time going through it because the sheer level of Apocalypse that it looked like the world was facing in that time was something was something that I haven't known in my lifetime I'm 42 years old and I have not in those 42 years experienced that level of civilizational Apocalypse on the precipice and I and certainly I don't find myself feeling that way in in June of 2024 uh you know knock on wood I don't start feeling that way in July of 2024 but I think you know the feeling of whenever we look back on the second world war it's very easy to look back on it I we all find ourselves looking back on it I think with these kind of rose-colored glasses where it's like oh yeah and the good guys won of course the good guys were going to win and if you look at what it must have been like to be alive in the United States much less Britain in 1939 or 1940 Not only was it unclear that the good guys were going to win it was pretty clear that the opposite was going to happen it did not at all feel like the Americans and the British were going to survive this and um you know you look at the prop the frankly the propaganda the British government was putting out at the time when their War started because they're after the invasion of Poland Britain declares war um and their war was going so disastrously badly I think there a line actually in the book where I make fun fun of it um or one of the character I have one of the characters making fun of it cuz they put they literally had to put out some press release that was um I'm probably going to mangle the text slightly but the British government kind of propaganda press release was like and in the high seas our boats have sunk a number of German ships and in the book I have a bit where the guys are reading that going a number that's the best they can muster like they don't want to tell you how many they sunk because the answer is like two and it it's so embarrassingly small that they don't even want to tell they can't even report on how badly the war effort is going on because everyone will freak out even more than they already are um so I think that sense of um the sense of in both Britain and the United States that um you know at the end of 39 Britain actually there's a scene of this in the imitation game we don't TR to talk about it but there's a bit where um uh 700,000 British school children were put on trains and sent out of London to the countryside to largely stay with relatives because they felt that London at the end of 1939 was an unsafe place for children I mean this is London this isn't like some small town somewhere this is all the children in London got put onto a bunch of trains and sent to the countryside as many as could possibly stay with relatives um uh we didn't explain an imitation this a bit in the early in the movie where you see alen Turing it was a real thing he was on the train he happened to be on the train the day that all the children were on so he's on a train filled with children it's a couple shots in the movie but um uh that we never really explain but that's what it was is that he's on a train filled with school children because he's going somewhere the same day that they're all being sent out of the city I mean imagine if imagine what it would feel like societally if all of the children were sent out of Los Angeles one day um I mean I have two children I think you don't but the we both know plenty of people with children there's children around I mean culturally what that would feel like to say okay bye kids we're probably going to get bombed soon you'll be back soon fingers crossed we hope that we're not all dead in six months but kind of it looks like we're all going to be dead in six months um I would argue that that sensation also did not contribute to people's Assurance in the stability of pound sterling to bring it back to an economic question yeah no doubt I mean war is is just Savage and when it's on your land even more brutal all right I want to ask you a question this is something that um I talked about the beginning of the book but given that I think your book picks a time in history uh but I don't think it anything is fundamentally different about the way the government operated then to now I agree with that in your book there are spies in the US government do you believe there are spies in the US government today uh hard easy yes of course there are spies in US Government today how many people work for the US government a lot a lot I mean how how many millions I I'm I I don't even want to Hazard a guess because I'm sure I'll be off but if if none of them turned out to be spies that would be statistically improbable I think of course there are Chinese spies in the US government of course there are Russian spies in the US government um of course there are French spies in the US government I mean even our allies it's no secret that we spend a lot of time it is no secret that the United States spends a lot of time spying on even our own allies so I think that's um you know we can have a separate conversation about whether we think that all the money we spend on intelligent services are kind of producing the effects that we're hoping for um you know talk you know if you want to talk about inflation and if we accept this cany an idea that inflation happens when the kind of the we're not getting value for the money we're creating money that without corresponding kind of goods and services being produced um there's there's good questions about how much value the CIA is really adding to I don't know American Security and American Life their track record has not been uh certainly not been Flawless but I think um yeah is it well here's another question why would it be why why do you ask about American about foreign spies in the US government like doesn't seem sort of obvious that would be the case and normal uh yes I think it is not I think the very reason I'm asking is because your book showed me a vision of the government that did not match the very naive Vision that I had of the government where uh spies are low-level people working in janitorial services that are paid to grab a couple documents um seeing a real life example of an extremely highlevel person that has a Major Impact in in World War II for ideological reasons this is the part that freaked me out it was not just about money he was compensated but this is yeah who just believed in the cause of the other country because here's what I see when I look at our government first of all America I love you you cannot imagine how much you really can't imagine how much you've you've given me everything I could write love song after love song I love this country I love it the most that is a Beau statement to share on this show right now that's I love that man mean it and I'm utterly heartbroken that for people the American flag has somehow become a negative thing but I grew up in the 80s baby and so that American flag swells me with pride now that doesn't mean that we don't do terrible [ __ ] such seems to be the reality of governments um but with all of my love what I see when I look out at the government is I see ideological divisions this is where my whole thesis around we're all in the grips of ideas when those ideas cause us to pull in opposite directions now we have a problem and I just see people in the grips of ideas that are pulling them in opposite directions may my small contribution to the world be that I bring on incredibly thoughtful people I map the way they think uh I find and debate the most important ideas of our time and then hopefully all together we can begin adopting better ideas that have gone through the fire of criticism uh and that we can all be in the grips of ideas that move us to a positive place which is something you and I haven't talked about but I've talked about to my audience many times you have to have a North star and um I think it is very fair to say my norstar is panish but I think you have to have one and so mine is just human flourishing so what leads to human flourishing and with that I am I'm trying to look out at the world and be honest about where we are hyper divided honest about why we're hyperd divided uh ideology that's pulling in opposite directions and then fig figure out how we bring that all back together but when I read your book and realized people are are in the grips of these ideas and they they really are active right now today in our government in high level positions pulling in directions that I would be horrified by and then when I look out at the mainstream media and I just see gaslighting on top of gaslighting I'm like oh my God like all these people that have been complaining for years that literally inside I was just like why do people think about politics like put your head down build something that matters has always been my response um but that only work works when you're standing on Solid Ground and I can feel the ground turning into a bit of sand I don't think we're quick sand yet but it's Sandy and so for the first time in my life I just feel like huh we need to be addressing these ideas headon because I can now in fact this this will bring me into one of the reasons I want to have you on is you speak to two sides of my life you were pitched To Us by your publicist I was like it's not possible that this gu into the two things that I'm hyper into the economic side of the book that you wrote and then you're a successful screenwriter I am a currently failed screenwriter uh but nonetheless love Hollywood love where all this is going now irony of ironies I am an ideologically driven screenwriter I only want to tell stories that have a message that I think will make people's lives better but I look at Hollywood today and I'm like hey kids you have to hide the slide of hand so when I see something like Disney's Star Wars I'm like I get it women are rad they're powerful we want to celebrate that we want to make young women feel like they can do anything but when you have a Jedi that's just a dope Jedi from day one and never has to learn anything I see the slide of hand I see what you're trying to do and now I can't see the story I can only see the slide of hand and clumsy slide of hand is why I would say the last however many Disney movies have just tanked I'm very curious to get your take on the current state of Hollywood oh man uh this might be a harder question than economic theory in the second world war current state of Hollywood so yes I live this funny life right where I spent half of my time writing books and the other half making movies and I've written four novels and two films and um working on it now and the uh so in a way I sort of have half of my professional life is in Hollywood so I have the kind of view of someone who's half there which in some ways is nice because I'm not I have a little bit of distance from it like I'm not sort of in Hollywood every day um I I live in Silver Lake on the east side of Los Angeles I'm kind of literally never in Hollywood except today where I get to come see you the the state of Hollywood I think uh I I honestly haven't seen a Star Wars movie in so long I can't comment on any I just don't know I'm not your stick or they turned you off no it was never it was a thing when I was a kid like it feels like um I I remain surprised in some ways that they're enduring popular in some ways I would argue the strange thing is that we're still talking about Star Wars movies like that's the thing I'm sort of surprised at I think a lot of the things like I remember being super into it as in middle school and high school um again in the 80s and 90s and I'm from that generation that when the Star Wars movies were coming out I was too young to have seen them in theater so I watched the Star Wars movies on a VHS tape in my Dad's apartment my parents split when I was seven and my dad um we mostly live with with my mom but then my brother and I would some we'd go visit our dad and he had this little apartment and he'd sort of put us in the apartment then he'd go out and uh so my little brother and I would just sit there with like a VHS player and a TV that I'm sure if you watch anything on it now the resolution quality would be so shockingly low um in some ways I wonder if I've ever seen the Star Wars movies now I'm like man I watch those things on VHS tapes on like a 14in x 14in square television in impossibly low resolution who knows what I actually watched all those years ago um I think and I loved them then it just didn't sort of stay aart of My Life um after that um oh that's not true I watched the there was an Andor show that was great I watched some of that um and that was really really good but I'm not sort of up on the currency of Star Wars things um have you seen the controversy over the acolyte I am vaguely aware that this exists but no I don't know anything about this there's a controversy there is uh and so I haven't seen the acolyte but I've certainly seen the controversy and since it fits so well into the same controversy they've been having forever it is from what I can tell Disney has become an ideologically driven company which hey like I said impact theory is an ideologically driven company but when you do that you have to be so careful because what the audience wants is just a good story so to them the moral of the story yeah it should be there as if for no other reason than I think what makes films work for the human mind is that they are an exploration of a theme and then in the end they will come to a conclusion and in a typical threea structure um sort of star warsan uh Power of myth Joseph Campbell way they will come to a nice tidy conclusion that gives you a life lesson that you can carry out the hero's journey um but you shouldn't know what the final conclusion is going to be until the end and even then it should feel right and it should feel subtle and it shouldn't feel like something that was thrown in your face and what from my perspective Disney in particular but this is rampant in Hollywood is they have an agenda they're going to wear it on their sleeve they're going to cram it down your throat they're not even going to explore it they're just going to State it so it becomes a sermon so I'm giving you a sermon about exactly how you should live and while again I respect it um once people can see the slide of hand you get into trouble and it stops being a movie and it starts being a preacher sermon H um that's interesting and I look I I can't comment on that specifically I just haven't seen it and don't know much about it or this controversy I will say though that in general I guess I would make the argument that all art is ideological whether whether you know it or not um so you were talking about impact Theory being kind of ideologically driven you have these you have these messages you have these themes that you want to bring out to people I think that my work is too I think that hopefully um again I'm going to mangle the source of this quote but there was I think it was originally a quote about journalism and someone can look up who said it but the idea was that journalism should aim to either um comfort The Afflicted or afflict the comfortable and I've always loved this and I think that's right that kind of good art should be doing one of those two things and I don't know that I've achieved this by any stpes of the imagination but I have certainly I feel like the bit where I get more excited is the afflict the comfortable part um that you I find myself wanting to I find myself getting excited about art that changes how I think about something that doesn't tell me what I already know um you know like it would be awfully silly to have written a book about World War II where the thesis was Nazis are bad no [ __ ] that's not particularly interesting that's not particularly compelling fiction um and frankly when we were doing imitation game we got into a lot of these things where um that was movie where again we do we do we need a scene where we say Nazis are bad no no [ __ ] everybody knows um do we need a scene where we say like homophobia is bad no it's assumed the movie just assumes that um and that seemed and in in fact like something in all the things we've tried to do is kind of have something in it that should hopefully challenge the preconceptions and the ideology of anyone going into it like to sort of destabilize IDE ideology a bit it's I think why it's funny actually someone was talking to me a friend said this to me years ago about uh work that I was doing and it's always stuck with me because I found it terribly um perceptive um she said you know nothing you WR ever has any villains in it like you never have any real villains and I have slowly come to R over the years that she was absolutely right um like because villains are so cuz I get bored with them quickly okay they're the bad guy like I don't care I'm much more interested in characters who are morally complicated like we were talking about this is a book with a guy who's a spy who's doing some pretty awful things but he's doing them for the right reasons and his reasons are actually really good and we're still on board with his reasons and we're in fact on board with 80% of the dastardly things he does in the book it's that last 20% with which I think both you and I go oh oh gosh man that was I was with you up till now but now you've taken it a bridge too far and as we talk about kind of narratives and sort of Storytelling that's compelling or interesting I find that sort of work really exciting where you know you're challenging you don't want to create a set of characters and maybe this is Disney thing I don't know but a set of characters where you're sort of going like these are the good guys these are the bad guys because I think whenever you start doing that if the morality is that obvious then it's not that interesting um or at least it's not that you're not asking that much from your readers from your audience you know I think there are no like there are no kind of Nazi characters in this book because it's not um they would just be bad guys that's not interesting it's much more yeah compelling to me to see people who are like Nazi adjacent sympathizers or Americans unwittingly helping the Nazi cause or something like that or there's a lot of people in the book who are um they're not even Nazi sympathizers they're just unwilling to involve themselves they're just want to go about their day and not get involved and not have anything to do with it and they want to stand in a trolley car and look at their shoes as a bunch of Nazis are kind of marching past the trolley car that's the terrifying yes they want to just look away and the morality of that is really interesting to me I think more so than kind of clearcut lines in Good and Evil you know actually what made me think of that the other day I was we were asking about Disney storytelling um uh I have a three and a half-year-old and I watched ratatouille with him for the first time the other day I had not seen Ratatouille in so long um these are my like extremely belated plugs for hit movies of a decade prior r chewy it's great oh my gosh how do we ever forget how great it is um another movie without villains like even the guys who are set up as villain actually turn out to have really interesting thoughtful points and be right about a bunch of stuff and kind of turn and change in interesting ways and you're sort of just as compelled by them as you are by the heroes um I think that was an example of I can't remember if Disney owned Pixar at the time of ratou but uh of that kind of kind of four quadrant all family story line that's still is I would argue morally complicated in in interesting ways so I don't know it's funny like I I go because I'm only half in Hollywood you're asking about the state of it um some days I find myself on calls where everyone's tearing their hair out like are people going to go see movies anymore maybe this was the end was this the end of movies is it all going to fall apart um but then it seems fine and I feel like again this is sort of looking at history every 15 or 20 years some has had we've culturally had that freak out about movies specifically um in the face of first television and now what YouTube or frankly the kind of media the kind of media channel this is right where you're you're making podcasts you're making you have a YouTube channel you're sort of doing all of these you know we're in a media environment where you look at like streaming we always forget this but you look at streaming video consumption in the United States and I've seen this dat just a little bit but like I culturally sometimes we talk about Netflix as being the kind of streaming video leader in the United States but it's not remotely it's a fifth of what YouTube gets in terms of views YouTube is unquestionably the sort of streaming leader in the United States um which is is that bad for Hollywood is that good for Hollywood I don't know it's different I think I'm excited as a consumer of a lot of I read a lot of books I watch a lot of movies I love books love movies I don't feel a current shortage of things I really like like I find myself able to find things and being driven towards things that I really love that I might not otherwise have found that I can watch really really easily um and that is very exciting to me and I hope other people are having the same experience is AI going to be good or bad for the film industry um I am super bearish on AI I think it's been widely overhyped this is among here this is good my one of my least popular opinions I feel like my wife and I play this game sometimes where she's like she's like what is your dumbest craziest opinion and and maybe my bearishness on AI is that one I honestly think and this comes from my sort of having spent some time because I wrote about alen Turing because I've spent some time sort of looking at the history of AI I think the history of AI for 100 30 years now since Charles babage on has been Rife with wild overprediction about what AI is on the cusp of being able to do from the 1880s to aluring in the 1950s to um a lot of great research researchers in the 1980s we have been on the cusp of a massive AI Revolution so many times before and I am unconvinced that this is the moment when an actual Revolution is occurring so much as like a bunch of really minor user interface improvements have been created and kind of rebranded as something called AI now so I am uh I am equally bearish in the sense of right now today right now today it cannot do the things that people think it will be able to do or want it to do but every time I see somebody tweet something like what you're saying right now I think but if you just extrapolate like okay so we're now roughly I think 18 months since chat GPT launched mhm 18 months so in 18 months we've gone from W this is crazy to oh look at the photos it can do to oh my God it can do video now but it the video is terrible and it's so weird and surreal and they can't even get the hands right uh it's uh Will Smith eating spaghetti and it's you know just like absolutely hilarious to whoa whoa whoa wait a second I can't now in a single shot sometimes I can't tell if this is real or not they they're not you know running around because as soon as they start moving it gives it away but these really subtle shots they're working okay wait a second if you've just seen literally this week a new model dropped uh for Runway ml it is insane you've got Sora which I don't still don't think is available to the public but the stuff they've shown like the puppies playing in the snow good Lord it hits the snow and then pulls back and it's got snow on its muzzle and the way it's interacting with its fur is real and I'm just like okay cool where's if if that's how far we've come in 18 months how far do we go in another 18 months but forget 18 months where are we in 10 years like it I think people are really going to be shocked at where we are in 3 years but even if you think I'm out of my mind where are we going to be in 10 years and 10 years ain't that long may I offer a reframing the point you're making uh if your point is that in the 18 months since chat GPT has been released um the number and volume of useless things that it has been able to do has increased if that is your argument I agree with you wholeheartedly they are finding ever newer and more broke useless things that this technology can do every day and I am fascinated both by the technological Brilliance the unquestionable technological Brilliance going into these things and what seems to me like maybe so let's go back to John mayard canes and talk about value and usefulness and I'm still waiting for someone to give me a real use C that maybe that would be the point I'm still waiting for a real use case because every time someone talks about a use case it's always oh yeah yeah the thing we do now well obviously it's useless it's the thing we'll be able to do in 18 months that's super useful and I would argue that that that was that argument was being made um at Stanford and Yale and the sbone in 1982 and 1983 that argument was being made made um frankly Alan Turing was making that argument in 1951 in 1951 Alan Turing went on a lecture tour of the UK where he was arguing that super intelligent AGI was months away uh he was wrong that did not happen in the mid-50s um why did he think it was going to happen it's because the people who um and Allan Turing again maybe smarter than John maner kanes among the kind of great intellectuals of the 20th century um why was he wrong about AGI he didn't call it AI I forget what his term was but that's basically what he was talking about um it's because the people who work on this tend to sort of get in the weeds of it and they get excited by these sort of technolog these like nudging improvements but again what is it maybe if you're writing code I've seen some people I've talked to some people who write code for a living who talk about it being actually useful for them in kind of real ways but look certainly on on the boring Old Pros fiction side or on the filmm side uh the people I I ask filmaker friends all the time I ask editor friends all the time I was talking to an editor last week you know do does any of this do anything can you do anything with this you couldn't do before and it's oh well no of course not I mean all this I could do two years ago I could do this all 10 years ago none of this no but look it's kind of cool look I can push a button and it like adds a dog to the shot um and you know it's like before if I had to do that I spend a little bit more work because I'd have to use a mat or something you'd have to kind of do it photochemically or whatever like it doesn't um I'm sure I'm sure I want to get a bunch of angry letters after this from AI people who are like no no no our thing is really useful but let me ask you have you seen someone with a real use case of any of this technology yeah so uh this is probably so some of the way that your friends are bamboozling you they're not lying to you because of the way you frame the question but this is probably six years ago I went to a post house and I forget the name of the actress but she was in a show called Nashville and she was pregnant while they were filming and the guy goes watch this and he pulls her up and Tucks her chin in reduces her belly in front of me and I was like what on Earth how did you do that obviously the technology that's running underneath that is AI it's not AI in the way that we think about it now but it's AI so a AI has been in all of these tools whether it's Adobe Photoshop Premiere whatever they've all been adding little pieces of algorithms here in there which is AI uh it's already doing so much the modern CGI Universe brought to you by Under the Hood um AI everything Pixar is doing brought to you by under the hood AI I mean they're running all these crazy algorithms to do like the motion in the fur and all that stuff so it's the world has been slowly being being gobbled up by AI in ways that people don't understand and so it's this how do you boil a frog slowly it it's just it we hit a critical threshold with chat GPT where suddenly people were like oh my God you've now triggered my imagination I can see where this is going to be now people's imagination is ahead of them that is very true and when we have tried to deploy it to create 3D assets it's terrible at 3D assets but it can do it badly and so what I'm saying is it's sales fish of technology I want Sam Alman to stand up in front of all his investors and be like think of the number of things that we can do badly yes but what if the difference between doing it badly and doing it well is electricity and training data then then it is so I read an amazing book called The Wealth of Shadows and basically the opening line is uh this guy looked at the the German spreadsheet and understood it was a mathematical certainty that they would invade Poland and then it was a mathematical certainty that ultimately they would collapse because even if they conquered the entire world the second they did their economy would collapse and what I'm saying is it is unless we run out of electricity it is a mathematical certainty that virtually everything that you watch visually will be generated by AI now it may still require the human soul the human Spirit to tell it what to create I I don't know if it will ever make novel leaps where we watch something and go oh my God you made me think of something I've never thought of before it may not be able to do that it may only regurgitate patterns but visuals are simply regurgitated patterns now maybe actors will forever have dots in their face and they they can just do a thing that AI will never be able to do cool but the thing that you see on screen 100% is going to be entirely from top to bottom AI generated that that is a from where I'm sitting that is a mathematical certainty of just you have to give it enough time now is that time 3 years 30 years 300 years that I don't know but it's probably closer to three than we think uh that's fascinating and I I would push back on that and say here my single word response to that is Oppenheimer my single word response from the last 24 months of film history is that uh wow audiences can in some intangible way appreciate photochemical cinematography in a way that we didn't think they could um Oppenheimer famously shot on IMX cameras um there it's not there isn't cgus used in it of course there's plenty there's plenty of cgus in everything um and that's I think both agrees with the point you're making and furthers it which is that that we find that a lot of these visual effects tools things that used to be sort of visual effects shots are now just oh yeah just things you're kind of doing in a post house like you were talking about removing um kind of changing the shape of an actress's belly or um and I think the point that you just made that um in a way that might give away the game is when you said that you had that conversation at the Post House six years ago and they weren't talking about it as AI like AI is this branding thing that as far as I can tell is entirely this like Alman driven came up with a great branding for a bunch of technology that was largely already there and some minor improvements on that technology you know when we were doing when we made imitation game like a small English period math drama we we this this was 10 years ago 12 years ago we were in post on that and we even then we had the ability to there was something I remember there was a scene that we cut up it was shot as one scene and we realized we wanted to put something another scene in the middle of it so we sort of cut a scene in half but it would be weird to have them actors wearing the same clothes in sort of two scenes two scene apart so we needed to change we changed the color of the dress that the actress Kiran and NY was wearing in the scen so the same footage but we just put a new dress on her and this was 11 years ago 12 years ago and I thought this was going to be a oh gosh we have to call a somebody call ilm somebody call like a big effects house to do this and instead it was the assistant editor just said oh do you want me to just go in my office and here just hang for an hour and I'll just come back and do it and he went in his office on his computer and came back and address that a new color I don't even know how he did it some of the software that was even around again 10 12 years ago so I think this isn't new technology some of it has gotten a little bit easier to use and the idea that audiences are suddenly going to be really receptive to entirely computer General ated imagery and I think what we find maybe we don't find this but I certainly find is that I can tell when I'm watching a movie where the sort of Base image is photochemically generated versus something that's Al algorithmically generated um you can tell in like a kind of shotly made superhero movie where suddenly they kind of go into the shot where they all look a little bit robotic and like none of it looks quite real and it all looks sort of video gamey to co to maybe give away the game by describing it that way but um or you can tell when a film and Oppenheimer is a great example here is photographed photochemically with with cameras and uh you know real Celluloid that is photochemically responding to the light in front of it why is it that that feels different audience and then you can manipulate little bits right you change the shape of shape of belly you change the color of a dress you can like change it in Little Bits but that fundamentally the image is photochemically generated fun fundamentally the image has been photographed um can all can all audiences detect that all the time no but I would argue that enough people kind of feel that on some level even still with the even as good as sort of computer generated imagery is that it doesn't it's not like we're at a point where we're saying is anyone going to watch kind of liveaction films that are is anyone going to watch live action films that are mostly computer generated soon I'm saying that um no one's even aware of no one even likes watching liveaction films any of any frames of which have been entirely computer generated now um like we sort of instinctively recoil at those things because we know the uncanny valley of that is still is still strong um and I think we find this with um so I would argue frankly this is something interesting about the funny place in media history we're in where we we thought a bunch of things we thought a bunch of technological improvements were going to kind of fundamentally change really really old and durable art forms and we've found actually that the changes have been on the margins and they've expanded the realm of kind of what those art forms look like but not that they fundamentally kind of kick the knees out from under them um a great example would be books a te a technology as old as old as time or not as old as time right as old as the printing press like we've had we've had printing presses for a while we've had printed books like the one here for a while there is there is no interesting new technology that went into like the printing of a book or frankly even the writing of it I'm trying to think of like what technology I've used spell check but even then I still have three different copy editors to go through the manuscripts kind of weeding out errors that have escaped the notice of spell Che or any kind of grammar editor so I think we find and there was this bit kind of 15 years ago when everyone thought that everyone was going to transfer on to ebooks and e-readers that ebooks people were going to stop reading kind of physical printed books and transfer and start reading ebooks and then that didn't happen they kept buying physical books and in fact uh the percentage of book purchases that have been ebooks has gone down every year for the the past however many years um there's something about the quality of the people like um I strange way the conversation that we are having right now as we sit here today is a perfect example of this because we are two human beings sitting in front of two microphones kind of talking into a bunch of Recording Technology to be listen to people on headphones or off of a speaker somewhere that is 110 year old technology um we've had radio interviews for I'm gonna say about 110 years maybe it's closer to 100 um and what we're finding with with frankly the the Resurgence of we're finding with the recent popularity of podcast I would argue is a Resurgence in really old technology like there's actually something about radio that people love um there's something and but what the technology has allowed us to do is consume even more radio than we used to and to consume audio books and I actually publishing it's a good example um the the real shift that happened when you look at what audiences were doing what readers were doing is it's not that people stopped buying print books it's they also started listening to audio books um because now we have the technology to make that super super easy um and I'll say you know I just my wife and I had a baby last summer and our second thank you very much and I cannot imagine we have a three-year-old and a one-year-old now and I cannot imagine the experience of either child without audio books or like having an infant cuz when you have to stay up from you have to stay up all night and like you get to sleep in these sort of 45 minute little increments and then you're kind of giving an infinite bottle um and I would just kind of stay up listening to audio books while kind of giving the baby bottles and soothing him and putting him in a crib and getting up and down and I can't tell you how many like great books I got to listen to last summer with an infant in the house that I would not otherwise have been able to read because of that technology so and again this isn't new technology it's weirdly a new like people reading books into microphones is really really old technology the distribution mechanism is new the part where I get to listen to it on my phone and it's super easy to just click a couple things download it on Audible start listening in 10 seconds that's the really new bit um so it's um I know that was a kind of long winded and kind of varied way of looking at a kind of media landscape but I would argue that it's this changes in distribution methods are kind of more important we're finding more important than the changing methods of how stuff is actually created as evidenced by the fact that you and I are recording recording right now in the same way if this was 80 years ago this wouldn't really look any different yeah we you have a tablet in front of you yeah we have video cameras on us but uh Johnny Carson did the same thing right like that's not new technology I agree I want to I agree with you that it's not new technology in that fundamental sense but I'm going to paint a picture for you of what I think the future looks like and then tell me what you think about that okay is this a scary picture or a happy picture um it's it is terrifying and that it passes through a valley of Despair so traumatic my God that I think it will be a fundamental paradigm shift and I don't think humans are good at Paradigm shifts um so I'm in for this journey all right here's here's what I think happens so the reason that the argument that you just made is 100% correct and yet not predictive of the future is that the difference is that the new technology that's happening now is intelligence itself and so if you can imagine what it would have what life would have looked like 5,000 years ago and if I could pull 5,000 years forward so that somebody 5,000 years ago could instantaneously experience 24 it would be disorienting beyond belief so they don't have electricity they don't have uh TVs they don't have things that look like telepathy like imagine this I could say to them in all honesty um I'm going to go over in that room and uh you're going to stay here with Graham and Graham is going to ask you to give him a number you're going to give him a number and then he's going to send it to me without moving his mouth without making a sound and I'm going to know what that number is you can give him a whole sentence you can give him a whole paragraph and I'm going to know it instantaneously and he'd be like yep nope not true or it's Witchcraft and of course you're either just going to record it on your phone and text it to me or you're just going to write it out and text it to me it it is actual telepathy but because it happens so slowly we don't really think about it okay so that would be shocking but it took a long time scale to really make something shocking what I'm saying is intelligence if we get to what they're calling super intelligence so uh there's a meme going around what did Ilia see so ilas sver was working at open AI something happens and he goes radio silent won't talk to anybody for months and then the first thing back is I'm starting my new company his new company is if I'm not mistaken SSI uh safe super intelligence so there's this whole hypothesis that he's seen that AI is way farther along than people think it is and that now he is just freaked out by what's going to happen if people don't Focus entirely around coming up with a way to um make AI safe by making sure it wants the same things that we want it's called alignment anyway so if superintelligence comes into existence now imagine that um in an hour it can have 100 Years of human advancement because it's thinking a million times faster smarter than we are and then what happens to give you an idea um I ran the math in this one time Einstein is something like 2.4 times smarter than a literal [ __ ] somebody who scores well I think it's 81 or 82 somewhere around in there is the legal definition of a [ __ ] so he was 2.4 I believe that's close uh times smarter so what happens when you have something that's a million times smarter a billion times smarter it it will be able to bring about a world that Not only would be indistinguishable you could just say um create a movie for me that looks like it was shot on Celluloid that you wouldn't be able to tell the difference it will be photorealistic and because I now again I don't know timeline so I don't know if this happens in 5 years 50 500 but again it just comes back to as long as we can generate the amount of compute which requires the electricity I don't see why we wouldn't be able to get to that point I'll never say that it will be able to make genuine leaps of cognition because I don't know if that requires some that humans have I don't know I assume it will but I don't know but even if it can only recognize patterns it will be able to do things like say this is how the proteins are going to fold in your body right and so now all of a sudden it can predict the obscenely complicated interactions of the human body that becomes down pat now you can live forever whatever so once people once you give an intelligence that is self-improving all bets are off and so that is is a world that is just so fundamentally different that it is as they say it's the technological singularity you can't anticipate what it would be like if you could you'd build it uh so utterly fascinating but now to narrow our Focus back to Hollywood and something that I think is more near- term so I think about this a lot I'm spending a lot of money to build a studio and so I'm staring at AI coming down the pipe and I'm like okay what's going to be when um right now it it can write a screenplay for you but that screenplay is not inspired by any stretch of the imagination but it can help you brainstorm and it's actually pretty interesting for that uh it can help you identify patterns so hey of the last uh 10 Academy award-winning screenplays what were the structural beats what was happening on page seven what was happening on page 27 whatever and it will break it all down for you utterly fascinating what were their genres how many speaking Parts etc etc so you can get a level of data Insight that you wouldn't be able to get but the real thing that I think is going to happen is society's going to bifurcate and there are going to be people who are like uh I want a movie starring Pikachu set in the Star Wars Universe um but based on the visual stylings of these photos from my childhood and then it will do it and it'll be like oh well it's crazy Pikachu lives in my bedroom and this is nuts and it's telling a story about whatever you can feed it what you want it to be about so you'll get people that are like I want that hyper specialized stuff and I get it's a little off um but I mean if you've ever watched bad soap operas you know there are just some things where people accept it's not great but I love it so you're going to get people that are I want the hyper personalization that AI can bring and I don't care that it's The Uncanny Valley then you have other people that will literally March in the streets and I don't know if there'll be violence but they're going to take it very seriously that I do not engage with anything that is AI driven I don't watch movies that are AI driven I don't let my kids watch things that are AI driven I want the soul of humanity I want stories that are written by real people I want real actors I don't care if it's not personalized I don't care if there are less of them whatever I just I want it to be real humans now I wore this shirt as a part of this punchline I wrote a comic book about this about what I think now it's called neon future because I think on the other side of this Valley of Despair you actually get to there's no Utopias but you get to the closest thing I think technology ultimately becomes the thing that saves us but I think that we are fooling ourselves if we don't think that that bifurcation in society happens and so the story that I wrote is about that friction the moment where it's like neither of them have hit escape velocity yet but you've got the humans on one side saying we don't like these bad uh people that are infused with AI cuz we focused a lot on people that embed technology into their bodies like neuralink style uh we don't like those bad augmented people like that becomes the new class to discriminate against so we will have to go through that and we'll have to navigate that and it will be very interesting to see how far the purus go and to see how fast people that augment uh are able to augment themselves but I do think that's the path I I think that is a fascinating scenario I'm curious see how it plays out I think I would say the part of that I certainly can latch on to is and get behind is the idea that there'll be hugely customizable kind of video in art like you as you were saying I want you know Pikachu and Batman doing a dance for 4 hours and going on like Lord of the Ring style Quest or whatever and copyright be damned I can just sort of uh make my little videos that only I'm watching and I'm not charging for them so I'm not violing any cop violating any copyright and um we uh and I can entertain myself to death with this I think that certainly seem and I don't care if it's like uncanny valish I don't care if it's not that good um I think you're right that we are kind of singled digit years away from that being a real reality and I'm curious to see how people respond to that um because I think we find in my experience the experien that I've found with my readers and my viewers has been that the things that people respond to the most are not the things that they said they wanted it's the things they didn't say they wanted um and I think that's the what I would predict will be unsatisfying about art Bruce that way that it might be a little bit satisfying and kind of diverting for a little periods of time but it's ultimately not as as satisfying to I don't think that will be as satisfying to audiences as work that they couldn't have predicted you know my my second book The Last Days of Night was about um it was about the relationship between Thomas Edison George Westing and Nicola Tesla um and the protagonist of that book of The Last Days of Night was um is a guy named Paul Kath who was George Westing House's patent lawyer um in 1893 George westing house sued Thomas Edison for a billion dollars over the patent to the light bulb um in 1893 you imagine a billion dollars was the kind of money worth going to court over um and so Paul Kass was this real guy and he was sort of young untested patent Attorney in charge of handling I think the most what I would argue is the most valuable lawsuit in in American history it was all about who invented the light bulb was it Thomas Edison was it George Westinghouse or was it Nicola Tesla and uh you know in the book Paul is our sort of um narrator and lens into this very complicated story of these three you know great Geniuses of the late 19th century who it's no secret loathed each other they all hated each other so much in part because they thought they were each the kind of Genius behind this amazing invention um and I think also in part because they had completely different values um to go back to something you were saying earlier they thought of invention in fundamentally different terms um when Thomas Edison sort of thought that he invented the light bulb he meant something different by the idea by invention than Nicola Tesla meant when he thought of himself as the guy who invented the light bulb or something different than George Westinghouse meant when he thought of himself as guy who invented the light bulb and I'm making this point to talk about how um I'm making the point to say this um one of the Thomas Edison quotes when I was working on that book that I can't remember it's in the book or not but it always stuck with me was um uh at some point he said uh people don't know what they want until you show it to them and I think that's true I think that people um it's like things that are immediately pleasing and this is sort of my point about that kind of art it's like things that are immediately pleasing tend to be a little bit ephemeral um it's like exercise or something right like you start that first 30 seconds that you start working out are kind of unpleasant I don't know if you have this experience but it's like the first 30 seconds are kind of unpleasant and then you get really into it and then after you work out you feel really good and I have two small children so I do not work out nearly as much as I used to a few years ago but my vague memory of a time in my life when I used to get to exercise a lot more was that you know that initial thing of oh this is hard this is sweaty and painful and my body doesn't like this is necessary to get to the point of oh this is fulfilling to me in a way that I didn't quite realize that it would be um so that's what I think about when you sort of talk about endlessly customizable kind of video or audio or certainly Pros um I'm curious to see what there's people who sort of will turn off AI entirely I guess I'm still sort of so bearish on the idea that AI is even a classifiable thing that there's some some set of things called like we've now everything that we describe as AI I feel like is stuff that 10 years ago we would have just called like spell check or something like it's it's just like oh a little feature in Microsoft Word that does a fun but kind of useless thing and I'm not sure calling it AI makes it sound fancier and I've read Nick bostrom's wonderful book on super intellig um which I just loved um even though I think I disagree with him kind of fundamentally about kind of the possibility of AGI and sort of self-improving AI and I guess I would just say this is not the first time these predictions have been made and I would be surprised if it was the first time they came true I love it this has been a lot of fun man where can people follow you where can they get the book you follow me through books and the films I make I'm you and I were talking about this before we turn the my micrphone on I'm not on social media which is perhaps a mistake maybe I'll go back on it I was on it before I was on it a few years ago and I found I got to some point where I felt like I was for a while it felt like the ratio of information I was getting to time I was wasting was working in my favor and then I got to some point where I felt the ratio had flipped um so I went off it it's been a couple years maybe I'll get back on um but you know people are welcome to find me wherever they can I love it all right everybody if you haven't already be sure to subscribe and until next time my friends be legendary take care peace if you like this conversation check out this episode to learn more you could ask yourself what do we celebrate my income isn't going up as an individual I'm not making more money but this guy's got $200 billion the US doesn't know pay like we have no idea there's a world where we Embrace technology