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Title: The New World Order Is Here – Peter Zeihan
Duration: 01:19:27
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America doesn't win the next era because
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it's brilliant. It wins because everyone
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else is screwed. What's that mean?
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Doesn't exactly fit on a bumper sticker,
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but yeah, that broadly works. Uh, you
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got two big things that are going on.
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Uh, number one, in the globalized world,
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it's all about who you can access
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safely. And in the Western Hemisphere,
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we really don't have to worry about any
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security threats from a trade point of
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view. So, people always talk about, oh,
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if the US and China get into a war,
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won't that be bad for X, Y, or Z? say I
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don't mean to suggest it would be a
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piece of cake, but that the Chinese are
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dependent on trade and we're not. Uh
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it's really that simple. And if we can
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nail down Canada and Mexico in a
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productive relationship, you know, we
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used to call that NAFTA or NAFTA 2.
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We're now having second thoughts. Uh
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that's half the hard work right there.
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Uh in addition, we export food, we
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export energy, the Chinese import both,
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biggest in the world in fact. Uh and so
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maintaining supply chains for us is an
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issue of building the industrial plant.
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And while you can't just wave a magic
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wand and make that happen overnight,
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we've done this several times before.
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Every country on the planet has. Of
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course, we can do it again. It would
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just be nice if we started sooner rather
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than later. Uh the other piece is that
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the Chinese stopped having babies about
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45 years ago, and they're now on the
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verge of running out of 50-year-olds,
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and there is not an economic model that
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humans have yet to dream up that will
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work with where they will be
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demographically in less than 10 years
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time. So, we are living in the
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equivalent of like 2006 subprime where
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everyone's like all ooh and ah and it's
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all about to go tits up. [laughter]
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uh appropriately apocalyptic from you uh
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to start. Um the stuff about China is is
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that a challenge of just geography
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uh vyro biome top soil just sort of the
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the constitution of where they are is
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that that's sort of one of the
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fundamental problems.
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>> All of that all of that is a legitimate
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concern. uh the river where most of them
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live on uh the Yellow isn't navigable.
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They have never been able to use it for
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trade. So, they've never internally
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traded among themselves. Uh the one
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river they have that is navigable, the
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Yang Sea, has always been an
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independent, well, I should say always,
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but often been a political uh an
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independent political entity going back
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for 3,000 years of Chinese history. And
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down in the south and the tropics where
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you've got Hong Kong, you've got
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citystates on little enclaves of flat
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land that have always looked to the
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outside world rather than the Chinese.
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Uh the soil sucks. uh the northern part
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where 70% of the population lives, it's
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lowest soil in a drought zone. So if
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anything ever happened to logistics or
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distribution, what would go down in
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northern China would be what has gone
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down in northern China 27 times before
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and that's civilizational collapse. If
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we were talking about any country that
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had fewer people than the Chinese have
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always had, you know, that would just be
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the end of them. just that there have
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always been enough Chinese in the past
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to pick up the pieces and move forward
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on the other side of the break. But that
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requires you having children. And so
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this really is an end to the concept of
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China and the concept of even the Han
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Chinese because we're in a situation now
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where where probably they have more
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people over age 54 than under. And I'm
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sorry that just doesn't work. Uh and
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very soon it will be over. That's before
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you consider the broader geography of
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China versus the rest of the world. You
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got the first island chain off the
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coast. So the Chinese have never ever
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ever been able to be a global commercial
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power except when the United States when
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it created the global system told
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everybody that they couldn't bring guns
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to trade talks. And that one decision
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that we made allowed the Chinese to play
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on the global field in a way that they
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just never could until that point. And
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so lo and behold, this is the one era of
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Chinese history where they're unified
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and successful.
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>> Tell me more about the guns to the
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meetings rule and how that helped.
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>> Sure. So before World War II, it's a
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good break. Um, we basically had an
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imperial system where if you wanted
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links to resources and markets and
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populations that were outside of your
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home country, you had to build a navy
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and you went and took it. You built your
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empire. And those empires attempted to
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not trade with one another if they could
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help it. They just traded within their
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own network. Uh that model generated
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what we like to call history and it led
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to World War II when all the empires
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crashed and burned at the same time
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fighting for dominance. Well, at the end
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of World War II, the only navy that was
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left that was worthy of the name was the
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American Navy. And we had never been a
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trading power because we more or less
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had a continent to ourselves and we're
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still digesting the continent. So we had
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this idea that we will use our navy to
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protect everyone and we will allow
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everyone to trade with anyone else and
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we will allow our market to be open to
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your goods if if in exchange we get to
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write your security policies so we don't
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get another conflict like this again.
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And so one of the things that people
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want to break down the trade
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relationships and say that it's unfair
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for the United States, what they forget
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is it was supposed to be unfair to the
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United States from an economic point of
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view. We bribed up an alliance. And if
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you remember your history, it wasn't
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just Britain and Germany and Japan and
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Korea and Taiwan and Italy that were
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allies during the Cold War. It was
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China, too, because it was all about
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boxing in the Soviets. And it worked
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beautifully. Uh the idea that this
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should be reccalibrated in a post cold
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war environment, perfectly reasonable,
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but if you don't want to pay people to
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be on your side, they need another
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reason to be on your side. And so what
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we're seeing in American politics right
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now is this kind of um cognitive
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disconnect where we [snorts] still want
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everyone to do everything we say,
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but we also don't want our market open.
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And that is not a viable long-term plan.
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>> Okay. So, Chinese demographic collapse.
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You've said China will be gone in 10
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years. China as we currently understand
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it. Yeah. There'll still be some Han.
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Give it 50 years there might not be.
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>> Uh so, China very populous. Uh people
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would might say, well, if I just look at
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the numbers, you said before that
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numbers were the solution last time.
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There's more numbers now. I'm going to
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guess that the issue is that the numbers
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are trending in the wrong direction.
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that it wasn't a good so bad. So bad.
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[laughter]
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>> So um
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since I talked to you last there there
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seems to be this reckoning that's going
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on in the statistical community in can
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in I said Canada. Where'd that come
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from? Sorry you picked me up right after
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doing another project in China. Uh the
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issue appears to be that um
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they now believe the stata stat
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statisticians now believe that the local
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and regional governments have been lying
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about their demographic data for over 25
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years. Uh and so after let me back up um
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after Tianaan Square you know 10,000
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people killed by tanks in the in
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downtown Beijing the Chinese Communist
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Party is like well that was no fun
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whatsoever. Let's try to not ever have
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to do that again. Uh, one of the ways
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we're going to make sure that happens is
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we discovered that, you know, there were
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kind of two kinds of protesters. You had
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the white collar workers that just made
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signs and they were really easy to run
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over with tanks. And then you had the
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ones that were kind of scary that
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brought wrenches and guns. So, you had
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white collar and you had blue collar.
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So, why don't we move our entire economy
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from a blue collar economy to a white
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collar economy? Problem solved. Because
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white collar folks live in high-rise
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apartments. You can cut off their water.
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You can bolt them into their house. You
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know, there's lots of ways you can deal
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with white collar protesters. Blue
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collar a little different. So, they
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started advancing their STEM work. They
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started secondary and tertiary education
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systems. And, you know, well, this
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wasn't a stupid plan. Uh, we can
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critique how successful the transition
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was and why they were a manufacturing
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economy and still are and really weren't
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ready for that kind of fast transition.
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Different topic. But the thing is when
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you go to primary school and secondary
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school and tertiary school, the first
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time you pay taxes is typically when
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you're 21, 22, or 23. So there's a
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delayed gratification here, which as
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Americans like to say, the Chinese have
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no problem with. It's false, but
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whatever. So
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the first big crop of these new white
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collar workers who were supposed to be
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working at high paid jobs and paying
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lots of taxes that was supposed to
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manifest in calendar year 2019
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but then there was co and in China co
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lasted a lot longer and they really
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didn't get recovery until 2023 maybe
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even early in 2024 and so they didn't
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get any good data and then when they did
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get the data they're like whoa
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tax receipts are down. That's the
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opposite of what's supposed to be
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happening. And when the statistitians in
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Shanghai went and looked back at
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everything like, okay, here's the
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problem. In a first world country, there
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are dozens, hundreds of touch points
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where the government becomes convinced
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that you're a real person. You know, you
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your mom goes to neonatal, you're born,
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every immunization, metriculation for
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every grade level, you pay taxes, you
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you get your driver's permit, you get
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your driver's license. There's thousands
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throughout your lifetimes. The first
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three in China, not birth because until
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recently, not all Chinese were born in
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hospitals. The first one was when you
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get a single battery of immunizations at
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some point around 6 months old. What
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they discovered was that the doctor who
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was giving the shots got paid per shot.
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So the doctors lied about the number of
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shots that they got. [snorts]
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The second point is when you enroll in
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kindergarten. Well, local governments
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get subsidies from the federal system
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based on how many students metriculate.
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So the local government's lied about
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that. The third point is when you pay
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pay national taxes for the first time,
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which is typically 17, 18, 19, unless
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you switch to tertiary education, then
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it's 21, 22, 23. So, you get to calendar
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year 2024
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and the Chinese realize that the
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children that they thought started to be
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born in the late 1990s were never born
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at all.
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And so the question they have and
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there's no way to get the data is um did
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we overount our population by 100
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million people or did we overount by 300
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million people
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or more?
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So even according to the official
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statistics, China is no longer the most
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populous country. That's India. Has been
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for a while. Probably has been since
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about 2006. The Chinese are now publicly
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admitting that their birth rate has been
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lower than the United States's since
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1991
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And it looks like it might be
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significantly worse than that. So yeah,
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10 years, high confidence.
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Wow. Um, since the last time that we
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spoke, AI has taken on even more of an
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important role. Uh, yeah, I'm aware. I'm
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aware. [snorts] like just I think one of
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the
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it's it's an odd uh it's not happening
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and it's good that it is uh sort of
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scenarios that happens especially when
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it comes to birth rate decline is
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whether it's we don't need more people
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on the planet we're a scourge on the
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earth fragile world hypothesis climate
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change in future it doesn't matter in
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any case capitalism life's miserable and
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I don't want kids or young people to be
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born into
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>> everyone's trying to shoehorn it into
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their existing world view
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>> correct yeah yeah the demand for answers
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outstrips their supply. So they
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repurpose old answers into a new
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problem. Um, one thing that I am
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interested about is uh some of the
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losses in productivity uh being offset
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by increases in efficiency enabled
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through robotics and AI. China seems to
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be pushing pretty hard on this stuff and
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not bad at stealing AI technology when
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push comes to shove and repurposing it.
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I mean honestly it's it's software. It's
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really easy to steal. You just need a
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jump drive.
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>> Yeah. Um
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how much could that be a lifeline uh for
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somebody like China and then also for
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the rest of the world when we think
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about demographic decline uh more
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broadly?
(00:12:29)
>> Sure. Well, let's start with the
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obvious. Um 80% of applications for AI
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that I have seen and the other 20% are
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not a different category. They're just
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in in flux. But 80% I've seen it's not
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about where we have the work shortage.
(00:12:42)
It's about white collar workers. It's
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about making white collar workers either
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redundant or more productive. And if
(00:12:48)
you're into some degree of data
(00:12:50)
coalation and assessment, uh you're in
(00:12:54)
real trouble. Uh if you have the brain
(00:12:57)
power to take the data in front of you
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and make something of it, you're
(00:13:00)
probably fine, at least for now. So
(00:13:02)
right now, if you're like say a
(00:13:03)
parallegal, oh god, you're screwed. that
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whole job category is going to go away
(00:13:06)
because your job is basically to
(00:13:08)
research multiple cases and bring the
(00:13:10)
information together for someone who
(00:13:12)
will then take it and do value ad. Your
(00:13:15)
job is to collate and AI can do that in
(00:13:18)
seconds. Um once you start doing the
(00:13:20)
value ad, uh the way my doctor put it is
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it's kind of like 8020. It's like 80% of
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it's pretty good and 20% of it is really
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not. And when you're prescribing
(00:13:29)
medications, the 20% really matters.
(00:13:33)
So doctors are fine, but the people who
(00:13:38)
do the research for them maybe not so
(00:13:40)
much. That's not where the job shortages
(00:13:43)
are. The job shortages in the advanced
(00:13:44)
world, especially in the United States,
(00:13:46)
are all blue collar. They're welders.
(00:13:47)
They're electricians. They're not
(00:13:49)
coders. Uh so it's not that this is a
(00:13:52)
negative from my point of view. It's
(00:13:54)
just it's getting a little overhyped.
(00:13:56)
And most of the people who are doing the
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the writing and the panicking about it
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are of course white collar workers. Um,
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and that colors the discussion. Uh, it
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doesn't mean that it will always be like
(00:14:05)
that, but that's where we are now. And
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the pace of improvement, while it's very
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noticeable, I would yet I would not yet
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call it revolutionary or particularly
(00:14:15)
impressive. Uh, I mean, I use it, but
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I'd like to think I'm pretty good at
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that 20%.
(00:14:21)
>> All right, that's piece one. Uh, piece
(00:14:23)
two, the Chinese. Um, the Chinese
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problem is that they've run out of
(00:14:28)
people under age 50. And it's people
(00:14:30)
under age roughly 45 that do the
(00:14:32)
consuming and have the kits. And there
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is no way that a can AI AI can help with
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consumption or child rate.
(00:14:39)
So the robotic systems that the Chinese
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are working on, not that they're not
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important, but AI only helps to a degree
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there. Uh AI is cannot physically move
(00:14:48)
things. Um it can learn from systems. It
(00:14:52)
can design systems even to a degree
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again 8020. uh but it can't actually
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produce.
(00:14:59)
Artificial intelligence is a completely
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different technological suite from
(00:15:02)
automation.
(00:15:05)
And even if automation could s solve the
(00:15:08)
production side of the equation as the
(00:15:09)
Chinese run out of workers, robots don't
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pay taxes.
(00:15:13)
>> Mhm.
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>> And they can't raise kids
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and they can't consume product. And so
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even if the Chinese could maintain their
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production levels without people,
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they'd still be dependent on
(00:15:28)
international trade that they can't
(00:15:29)
guarantee and on the large asset of the
(00:15:31)
United States in the long term. Doesn't
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change their core problem.
(00:15:34)
>> Yeah. AI isn't going to be able to fix
(00:15:36)
the top soil.
(00:15:37)
>> No. No. I mean, not as we understand it.
(00:15:40)
>> Yeah. Well, may you give us 50 years.
(00:15:42)
We'll see. Um
(00:15:42)
>> Yeah, we'll see.
(00:15:44)
>> Uh Japan, South Korea,
(00:15:46)
>> 50 years, that is the right time frame.
(00:15:48)
I I haven't talked to anyone who's
(00:15:51)
involved in Silicon Valley at all who
(00:15:53)
expects us to get general thinking AI
(00:15:56)
before the 2040s. And based on what's
(00:15:59)
going on with the large language models,
(00:16:01)
that date keeps getting moved back. This
(00:16:03)
is not a technology that's leading us in
(00:16:05)
that direction.
(00:16:06)
>> Interesting. the sort of uh
(00:16:09)
technological progress that typically
(00:16:12)
you see at this exponential curve with
(00:16:14)
AI seems to be doing what history does,
(00:16:16)
crawling and then leaping and then
(00:16:17)
crawling and then leaping and it makes
(00:16:19)
it kind of inherently unpredictable. I
(00:16:21)
don't think many people saw what was
(00:16:23)
going to happen with LLMs in advance. I
(00:16:26)
remember reading Nick Boston from Super
(00:16:28)
Intelligence what a decade ago I think
(00:16:29)
that came out maybe. Yeah, a decade,
(00:16:31)
let's call it 10 years ago, something
(00:16:32)
like that. And uh that was the best
(00:16:35)
minds on the planet contributing to the
(00:16:37)
best mind on the planet trying to work
(00:16:38)
out whether or not. At no point was it
(00:16:41)
well, you know, these sort of things are
(00:16:43)
going to predict what you're going to
(00:16:44)
say next and then if you just scale that
(00:16:45)
up enough and Nvidia becomes a $3
(00:16:48)
trillion company, maybe you'll be f
(00:16:50)
maybe maybe we're going to get it that
(00:16:51)
way. Nobody saw it coming. Um, so yeah,
(00:16:53)
there were some
(00:16:54)
>> considering considering that you can fit
(00:16:56)
the entire algorithm set and training
(00:16:59)
data for chat GPT on a thumb drive
(00:17:02)
that's about half the size of this. No,
(00:17:05)
it's like it's like I look at Nvidia's
(00:17:07)
uh valuation like you know this I mean
(00:17:09)
great for them but you know this is this
(00:17:11)
this is the very definition of a bubble.
(00:17:14)
All it takes is a couple of corporate
(00:17:15)
thefts and everything that's special
(00:17:17)
about them goes away.
(00:17:19)
>> Wow. Yeah. the uh the security must be
(00:17:21)
intense for that. Okay, so uh Japan,
(00:17:24)
South Korea, Italy hitting new fertility
(00:17:26)
lows even more than in the past.
(00:17:29)
Interesting that this has now sort of
(00:17:30)
come across into into Europe. When when
(00:17:34)
will the media and sort of the wider
(00:17:35)
world accept that birth rates are as big
(00:17:38)
of a priority as they are?
(00:17:40)
>> I mean, everything with demographics is
(00:17:42)
glacial. It takes decades for it to
(00:17:44)
arrive and so everyone's just like, you
(00:17:46)
know, hurry up and wait, hurry up and
(00:17:47)
wait. and then the day it arrives it's
(00:17:49)
too late because you are now a bloody
(00:17:51)
smear under the glacier. Um in the case
(00:17:53)
of Japan we actually have a culture that
(00:17:55)
saw this coming and they have done a
(00:17:57)
number of things over the last 30 years
(00:17:59)
to make it easier to have children to
(00:18:01)
stay in the workforce longer and so
(00:18:03)
their birth rate is actually right risen
(00:18:05)
quite a bit nowhere near replacement
(00:18:07)
levels. I don't want to oversell it but
(00:18:08)
it's now higher than not just China and
(00:18:10)
Japan and Taiwan and Germany and Italy
(00:18:12)
but also the Netherlands and India and
(00:18:16)
[laughter]
(00:18:16)
Thailand. Yeah, India India is aging. Uh
(00:18:20)
so the the math is going in a different
(00:18:21)
direction. Um everyone is still sliding
(00:18:24)
but we're all sliding at a little bit
(00:18:25)
different rates and you play that out
(00:18:26)
over decades and it really matters. So
(00:18:29)
China probably with the data we have
(00:18:32)
right now is in the worst shape and
(00:18:34)
after that it's a kind of a three-way
(00:18:36)
tie between or among Germany, Italy and
(00:18:38)
Korea most likely.
(00:18:41)
The fact that this bleeds across into
(00:18:43)
Europe sort of west is um I don't know
(00:18:48)
it feels it it definitely feels like
(00:18:50)
it's coming home to roost in a way. It
(00:18:53)
it's way less theoretical uh with the
(00:18:56)
fact that it's it's already spread over
(00:18:57)
here.
(00:18:58)
>> Yeah. At at the moment, most people are
(00:19:01)
when they think about demographics at
(00:19:02)
all, they think about it in terms of
(00:19:04)
federal budgets and the baby boomer
(00:19:06)
retirement and how much it costs to pay
(00:19:08)
for pensions. And you know, that's
(00:19:09)
that's part of it, but that's just the
(00:19:10)
leading edge. Uh the baby boomers are
(00:19:13)
aging out. The last of them are going to
(00:19:16)
be retired in 5 years. Uh and in most of
(00:19:19)
the world, there wasn't an echo
(00:19:20)
generation like the millennials in the
(00:19:22)
United States. So, we really are at the
(00:19:23)
beginning of the end here.
(00:19:26)
Are we entering a labor shortage that no
(00:19:28)
one's ready for? Is there is there any
(00:19:30)
country that can handle demographic
(00:19:32)
collapse the best better?
(00:19:36)
The bottom line is if you still have
(00:19:38)
people in 30 in your 30s uh that you
(00:19:40)
still have a chance to have kids. So
(00:19:42)
when I look at countries like say you
(00:19:44)
know not just the United States but
(00:19:45)
Germany no excuse me not just the United
(00:19:47)
States like India or Mexico or Poland or
(00:19:51)
Brazil you know these are all places
(00:19:53)
that have not passed that Rubicon just
(00:19:56)
yet. And so with the way we understand
(00:19:58)
economic theory and the way that we
(00:20:00)
understand biology and parenting they
(00:20:03)
don't require a reinvention. they just
(00:20:05)
need to encourage their young people to
(00:20:08)
have kids for some in some way for
(00:20:11)
whatever reason they want to modify uh
(00:20:13)
the language. But once you pass that,
(00:20:15)
once your average age slips past 40 and
(00:20:17)
especially past 45, there's no longer a
(00:20:20)
traditional biological path.
(00:20:22)
>> It's about smoothing the decline,
(00:20:24)
stretching it out. And a number of
(00:20:26)
European states have proven to be very
(00:20:27)
good at that. Japan has proven to be
(00:20:29)
surprisingly good at that, but it's
(00:20:31)
still a bit of a starvation diet in the
(00:20:33)
long run unless you change the economic
(00:20:35)
model. So whether it's fascism or
(00:20:38)
socialism or capitalism, everything is
(00:20:41)
based upon the balance between labor and
(00:20:43)
capital and supply and demand. That's
(00:20:45)
how we understand economics, how we have
(00:20:47)
understood them for a millennia, half a
(00:20:49)
millennia. [gasps]
(00:20:51)
If you can come up with something new,
(00:20:53)
and I'm all ears, then maybe it will
(00:20:56)
work in a different demographic profile.
(00:20:58)
Um, at the moment, the leading theory,
(00:21:02)
and it's it won't work, is of course,
(00:21:04)
um, modern monetary theory. Uh, that
(00:21:07)
just shuffles those four factors. It
(00:21:10)
doesn't really change the math. What
(00:21:11)
[snorts] the Trump administration seems
(00:21:13)
to be trying, whether or not they're
(00:21:14)
doing this consciously or not is a
(00:21:16)
question, uh is some sort of um metered
(00:21:20)
demand, a restricted demand model where
(00:21:23)
your demand is only met if the
(00:21:28)
government greenlights it and other
(00:21:30)
people's demand that just doesn't count.
(00:21:32)
That doesn't factor in. I'm not saying I
(00:21:33)
think this is a good idea. I'm saying
(00:21:35)
it's like the only thing that I've seen
(00:21:36)
in the last decade that might
(00:21:39)
theoretically apply to a future society.
(00:21:46)
I I keep on hoping for some sort of
(00:21:49)
fantastic hopeful
(00:21:53)
legup, some lifeline that's going to be
(00:21:55)
thrown. And every time that I do deeper
(00:21:57)
and deeper research into it, it it just
(00:21:59)
gets kind of worse. Well, I guess what
(00:22:01)
I'm interested from a geopolitics
(00:22:03)
standpoint is how a shrinking workforce
(00:22:07)
changes the relationship between
(00:22:10)
countries. We understand sort of what it
(00:22:11)
does within countries. Um, but how does
(00:22:14)
that change the geo part of the
(00:22:16)
geopolitics?
(00:22:18)
>> Countries that are aging out but haven't
(00:22:20)
yet crossed that line, they've run out
(00:22:23)
of consumption but they're not yet a
(00:22:25)
retirement home. Those countries are
(00:22:27)
really, really dependent upon exports.
(00:22:29)
And Korea is probably the poster child
(00:22:31)
for that. China is very close second.
(00:22:35)
They need an open globalized world
(00:22:38)
because they can never consume what they
(00:22:40)
produce. And so if they're going to have
(00:22:41)
any income and any long-term tax
(00:22:44)
capacity, it's going to come from
(00:22:45)
selling stuff to other countries. thing
(00:22:47)
is of course
(00:22:48)
>> the the countries that have the youth
(00:22:50)
India, Brazil, Indonesia, Turkey haven't
(00:22:54)
risen in wealth to a level to absorb
(00:22:57)
global manufacturing capacity. The only
(00:23:00)
first world country of size that's left
(00:23:03)
that is still a net consumer is the
(00:23:06)
United States. And while I can say a lot
(00:23:09)
of negative things about the Trump
(00:23:10)
administration, one thing that they
(00:23:12)
really do understand is the consumer
(00:23:14)
base of the United States is a tool of
(00:23:16)
geopolitical power and extending or
(00:23:19)
denying that to other countries is a
(00:23:22)
very powerful negotiation tactic. I
(00:23:25)
mean, we we needed to negotiate a second
(00:23:28)
round of Bretonwoods, a second round of
(00:23:30)
globalization. This is one way to do it.
(00:23:33)
>> Wow. I totally Yeah, that that makes
(00:23:35)
complete sense. If you have a shrinking
(00:23:37)
population internally and you don't want
(00:23:40)
your GDP to just fall through the floor,
(00:23:44)
you need to get people who do have spare
(00:23:46)
people, you do have countries that have
(00:23:47)
spare people to buy your stuff.
(00:23:50)
>> The alternative is absolutely limitless
(00:23:52)
mass immigration, which from a cultural
(00:23:53)
point of view, no one's a real fan of.
(00:23:57)
>> No. Uh, how much of a solution versus a
(00:24:00)
crutch is immigration when it comes to
(00:24:05)
stemming the tide?
(00:24:06)
>> At this point in time, it's at best a
(00:24:09)
like a really thin cane. Uh, if you
(00:24:11)
[laughter]
(00:24:12)
if if your goal is to use someone else's
(00:24:16)
young people to pad your demographic so
(00:24:18)
you don't fade away, you need to start
(00:24:20)
before you have a problem. And this is
(00:24:22)
one of the reasons why the settler
(00:24:24)
societies have always had faster growth
(00:24:26)
than the rest of the world. So the
(00:24:27)
Aussies, the Kiwis, the Americans, the
(00:24:29)
the Canadians, uh this has been less of
(00:24:31)
a problem for us because none of us are
(00:24:33)
from where we're living now. And we've
(00:24:36)
been bringing in waves of people over
(00:24:37)
and over decade and decade into the
(00:24:39)
centuries. Um but if you start it today,
(00:24:43)
so let's let's just take Germany because
(00:24:44)
the numbers there are really clear and
(00:24:45)
the Germans are great with numbers. So
(00:24:47)
we can trust them. You know the Germans
(00:24:49)
just to hold where they are average age
(00:24:51)
of like 50 just to hold here already
(00:24:54)
export dependent just just to not slide
(00:24:56)
anymore. They need to bring in 2 million
(00:24:58)
people a year that are under age 25
(00:25:00)
forever
(00:25:01)
in a country that only has 80 million
(00:25:03)
people.
(00:25:04)
>> Wow.
(00:25:04)
>> Fast forward 20 years and the Germans
(00:25:07)
are less than a third of the population.
(00:25:09)
>> It's not viable anymore. Had they
(00:25:11)
started back in the 50s be a different
(00:25:14)
conversation.
(00:25:17)
Yeah, that's crazy. I didn't realize the
(00:25:19)
numbers were that bad. Okay, you
(00:25:20)
mentioned uh Trump administration there.
(00:25:22)
What do you make of Mandani's New York
(00:25:24)
win? Is it remarkable? Is it indicative
(00:25:28)
of some important trend?
(00:25:30)
>> No. I mean,
(00:25:32)
if if there is a trend for Mandani, it's
(00:25:34)
the same trend for from Trump. These are
(00:25:36)
two people who never had a real job in
(00:25:38)
their lives and all of a sudden are now
(00:25:40)
political leaders. We should not expect
(00:25:43)
this to go well.
(00:25:46)
in New York, just like it hasn't exactly
(00:25:48)
gone well in Washington.
(00:25:52)
>> I'm I'm interested in whether or not
(00:25:55)
there is something
(00:25:57)
remarkable or or unique, noteworthy uh
(00:26:01)
happening with elections and and
(00:26:03)
populism and sort of rising nationalism.
(00:26:05)
You've got uh US election cycle
(00:26:08)
volatility, a little bit of that. You
(00:26:10)
got farmer protests in Europe. You
(00:26:13)
mentioned migration and a ton of people
(00:26:16)
having problems with that.
(00:26:18)
>> I wonder whether that could be driving
(00:26:19)
some political change, not just inside
(00:26:22)
the US, but I'm I'm interested in what
(00:26:24)
you think about um those dynamics and
(00:26:27)
the others impacting how the world at
(00:26:29)
large generally thinks about populism,
(00:26:31)
nationalism,
(00:26:33)
internal politics.
(00:26:34)
>> Well, a couple broad demographic
(00:26:36)
thoughts. As a rule, the younger cohort,
(00:26:40)
25 and under, tends to be more
(00:26:41)
politically radicalized, more
(00:26:43)
classically, excuse me, not classically
(00:26:45)
liberal, more projoratively liberal,
(00:26:48)
woke, whatever you want to call it, uh,
(00:26:51)
and uh, much more in favor of things
(00:26:53)
like redistributive economic policies
(00:26:56)
because they don't have anything to
(00:26:58)
lose. They only have the possibility of
(00:27:00)
gains. It's it's just it's age math. And
(00:27:03)
that has been true in every part of the
(00:27:05)
world throughout the entire modern era.
(00:27:07)
Nothing's weird there.
(00:27:10)
Flip it. When you turn 65, your income
(00:27:14)
goes away. You're now either on a fixed
(00:27:16)
income or the assets you've accured over
(00:27:18)
your life, that's all you have. That's
(00:27:20)
all you will ever have. And so you get a
(00:27:23)
little crotchety. And so the environment
(00:27:26)
we're in today in most of the world, the
(00:27:30)
young cohort is getting smaller and
(00:27:32)
smaller and smaller and more brittle and
(00:27:34)
more desperate, whereas the older cohort
(00:27:36)
is getting larger and larger and larger
(00:27:38)
and more oified and more unwilling to
(00:27:42)
make any compromises.
(00:27:44)
Throw that against a globalization. We
(00:27:46)
have the time where we're looking
(00:27:47)
through some of the most radical
(00:27:49)
economic transformations because of
(00:27:51)
what's going on with globalization and
(00:27:53)
deglobalization at least in our lives.
(00:27:55)
Certainly since the 70s I'm sorry
(00:27:57)
certainly since the 40s probably since
(00:27:59)
the 1870s and based on definition maybe
(00:28:02)
since the 1500s. At the same time we
(00:28:05)
have our first ever as a species
(00:28:07)
demographic inversion. Of course it's
(00:28:10)
going to be a shitow.
(00:28:13)
Yeah. I wonder whether
(00:28:16)
I wonder whether the increased
(00:28:17)
radicalization will have some sort of a
(00:28:19)
bump when those young people become
(00:28:21)
slightly older. If their economic uh
(00:28:24)
situation doesn't improve by as much as
(00:28:26)
they'd hoped, as much as their previous
(00:28:28)
generations has hoped, I wonder whether
(00:28:30)
that will hold on to some of that sort
(00:28:33)
of progressive radicalization uh or tamp
(00:28:36)
down
(00:28:36)
>> be the first time in history if it
(00:28:38)
happens.
(00:28:38)
>> Yeah. uh t down the inevitable
(00:28:40)
trajectory that goes from higher
(00:28:42)
openness to lower openness, higher sort
(00:28:45)
of liberal worldview to more
(00:28:46)
conservative worldview. Um but yeah, I
(00:28:50)
mean the the prospect that the future is
(00:28:52)
going to be owned by the people who have
(00:28:54)
children and the only people who are
(00:28:55)
having children really fascinating stats
(00:28:57)
I'm sure that you saw um looking at
(00:28:59)
where the birth rate decline has come
(00:29:03)
from if you organize it by political
(00:29:05)
cohort inside of the US and from 1990
(00:29:07)
it's almost exclusively been taken out
(00:29:10)
of people that are left-leaning. So that
(00:29:14)
>> no there's a couple problems with that
(00:29:16)
data point. Um I saw the same study.
(00:29:18)
Number one, they the way they defined
(00:29:21)
left lead. Okay. The um the classic
(00:29:23)
Democratic party in the United States.
(00:29:25)
There are three clusters to it. You've
(00:29:27)
got racial minorities, you've got
(00:29:30)
organized labor, and you have the the
(00:29:33)
educated coastal elites. The way that
(00:29:35)
study defined it, it was just that third
(00:29:37)
group.
(00:29:39)
[laughter]
(00:29:40)
>> And interesting,
(00:29:41)
>> the first two groups tell us something
(00:29:43)
different. Uh number one, the uh the
(00:29:45)
middle group, the organized labor,
(00:29:47)
they're socially conservative, always
(00:29:49)
have been. And now they're voting that
(00:29:52)
way. And they really like I would well
(00:29:54)
really like Trump. Might be a bit of a
(00:29:55)
stretch, but Trump is not a pro business
(00:29:59)
guy. He's probably the most anti-
(00:30:01)
business president US has had in my
(00:30:02)
lifetime.
(00:30:04)
And the unions love it.
(00:30:06)
Then you've got the racial minorities
(00:30:08)
and blacks and Hispanics and Asians
(00:30:11)
agree on nothing. Um, Asians tend to be
(00:30:15)
much better educated, much more wealthy,
(00:30:17)
not necessarily politically conservative
(00:30:18)
or liberal, more likely to be
(00:30:19)
independent.
(00:30:22)
>> African-Americans tend to have been
(00:30:24)
locktop into the Democratic party for
(00:30:26)
quite some time, but they voted for
(00:30:28)
Trump in the biggest uh percentages
(00:30:30)
we've ever seen in modern history. and
(00:30:33)
the Hispanic split right down the middle
(00:30:35)
this last election. Uh they are
(00:30:38)
economically
(00:30:40)
for a degree of redistribution not
(00:30:45)
anything like uh the coastal elites. Um
(00:30:48)
they tend to be the most upand cominging
(00:30:51)
part of the United States. So they're
(00:30:53)
most likely to shift economically
(00:30:54)
conservative which doesn't put them in
(00:30:56)
the Republican party either anymore
(00:30:57)
because that's not what the Republican
(00:30:59)
party is today. But at the same time,
(00:31:02)
they're the most anti-immigration group
(00:31:04)
we have. They want family reunification
(00:31:07)
for their family and no one else.
(00:31:11)
So the Democratic Party has shattered as
(00:31:14)
an institution. And when people start
(00:31:16)
talking about conservative or liberal,
(00:31:18)
you really have to ask what it is
(00:31:19)
they're how they define those terms
(00:31:20)
because the way America defines those
(00:31:22)
terms has changed radically in just the
(00:31:24)
last 5 years.
(00:31:26)
>> It is crazy. the the top line of data
(00:31:29)
that we're seeing at the moment. I'm
(00:31:30)
seeing more and more graphs from stuff
(00:31:32)
like our world in data and and like we
(00:31:34)
got the stats etc. uh being posted on
(00:31:37)
social media. There's a great great guy
(00:31:39)
from the FT that's doing a load of stuff
(00:31:40)
in terms of data visualization. His
(00:31:42)
stuff's getting shared around a lot. Uh
(00:31:44)
but there always are nuances and when
(00:31:46)
you dig into those you find out that the
(00:31:48)
story might not be the story as is
(00:31:50)
>> politics has always been messy and now
(00:31:52)
we're in a time of change so it's really
(00:31:54)
messy. M uh speaking of Trump, Trump
(00:31:56)
elevates Saudi Arabia to major non-NATO
(00:31:59)
ally status. That sounds like the the
(00:32:03)
most ligious slap on the wrists that I
(00:32:07)
can think of. Uh but is that a big deal?
(00:32:09)
Like what US Middle East tensions are
(00:32:12)
they important? How how much should we
(00:32:14)
be concerned? [sighs]
(00:32:15)
>> I'm not going to say they're unimportant
(00:32:17)
because that would just be rude. But um
(00:32:19)
the idea that Saudi Arabia is an ally is
(00:32:21)
a real stretch. And I'm not just saying
(00:32:23)
that because uh Muhammad bin Salman
(00:32:25)
ordered the dismemberment and cooking of
(00:32:28)
a journalist and then used the same
(00:32:30)
barbecue pit for a diplomatic party for
(00:32:32)
300 people later.
(00:32:34)
>> And they cooked Jamal Kosigible as well.
(00:32:36)
>> They I mean they didn't eat him. I was
(00:32:40)
cooked him.
(00:32:41)
>> Yeah. They [clears throat] dismembered
(00:32:42)
him. They put him in a giant barbecue
(00:32:44)
pit. They burned all the evidence. And
(00:32:46)
then later that day, they held a
(00:32:49)
diplomatic barbecue event using that
(00:32:52)
barbecue pit to make sure they could
(00:32:53)
destroy all the forensic evidence.
(00:32:56)
>> So there was little little particles of
(00:32:58)
Jamal Kosigible probably inside of a
(00:33:00)
little bit of the barbecue.
(00:33:02)
>> Yeah. Let's just put that to the side
(00:33:03)
for the moment.
(00:33:04)
>> Seasoned with journalist. What a [ __ ]
(00:33:06)
horrendous story.
(00:33:08)
Uh
(00:33:10)
the rulers of Saudi Arabia are literally
(00:33:14)
the house of Saul. It's a family and MBS
(00:33:19)
is a member of that family and King
(00:33:20)
Abdella of old was part of that family
(00:33:23)
and it is this family that created the
(00:33:26)
global jihadist movement that the world
(00:33:28)
has had so much heartburn with. It is
(00:33:30)
this family who their support created
(00:33:32)
things like al Qaeda and ISIS
(00:33:37)
and is indirectly at worst responsible
(00:33:40)
for things like the 9/11 attacks. So the
(00:33:42)
idea that Saudi Arabia is an ally in any
(00:33:47)
way requires an immense stretch unless
(00:33:53)
you go back to the cold war when we
(00:33:55)
needed Saudi crude to fuel the tanks of
(00:33:58)
Germany and Italy and Britain and Japan
(00:34:00)
and Korea and China in order to fuel the
(00:34:04)
alliance. So if you want to rebuild that
(00:34:07)
world,
(00:34:10)
Arab oil to fuel an alliance to fight
(00:34:12)
whoever, you know, there's a
(00:34:14)
conversation to be had there on
(00:34:15)
strategy.
(00:34:17)
But anything else, uh, this is not a
(00:34:19)
country that has been our friend for a
(00:34:20)
very long time.
(00:34:22)
>> Wow.
(00:34:24)
What do you make of the future of
(00:34:26)
energy? EV demand slowing a little bit,
(00:34:28)
shale production and stuff's going on,
(00:34:30)
nuclear renaissance. What's the future
(00:34:32)
of energy look like in your opinion?
(00:34:35)
uh any country where
(00:34:38)
EVs are not subsidized, there are no
(00:34:39)
EVs. So, uh that hopefully would tell
(00:34:42)
you everything you need to know about
(00:34:44)
that supply chain. Um that doesn't mean
(00:34:46)
that all green tech is stupid. Just that
(00:34:48)
one piece. As for green check large, if
(00:34:51)
you're in a sunny place, put up solar.
(00:34:52)
If you're a windy place, put up wind. Uh
(00:34:54)
you know, I would like to think that
(00:34:55)
that's not a particularly complicated
(00:34:57)
conversation.
(00:34:58)
If you're not in a sunny place, maybe
(00:35:02)
you shouldn't put up solar. Why people
(00:35:06)
have trouble with that statement bothers
(00:35:09)
me. I mean, I I I live at 7,500 ft above
(00:35:11)
Denver. I get 330 days of sunshine a
(00:35:15)
day. Of course, I have solar panels on
(00:35:17)
my roof. But if I lived outside of
(00:35:19)
Toronto, I would get the solar radiation
(00:35:23)
per year. Why would I be so stupid as to
(00:35:26)
put solar panels on my roof in Toronto?
(00:35:28)
It's like this this idea that the
(00:35:30)
technology works everywhere is really a
(00:35:33)
problem. Uh and that goes for the others
(00:35:35)
too. Natural gas, oil, nuclear, all of
(00:35:38)
them. Um because if you you have to have
(00:35:40)
the infrastructure that goes with it and
(00:35:42)
that infrastructure is there, why would
(00:35:43)
you burn that power source? Nukes are
(00:35:45)
getting interesting. Uh the United
(00:35:47)
States seems to in bits and pieces being
(00:35:50)
moving on from 1973 finally. It's only
(00:35:53)
been 51 years to 52 years.
(00:35:57)
Uh the hope is that the small modulars
(00:36:00)
will work, but right now we still have
(00:36:02)
yet to build a prototype. And so until
(00:36:05)
there is a prototype, I can't tell you
(00:36:07)
what the supply chain might look like.
(00:36:09)
But the the sexy nature of it is if you
(00:36:13)
can fit a nuclear reactor into a 10 20
(00:36:15)
foot container unit and just plug it
(00:36:18)
into a decommissioned coal plant's
(00:36:20)
transformer network and basically
(00:36:23)
produce as much power as the old coal
(00:36:26)
plant did for 5% of the cost of building
(00:36:30)
a new power plant. Well, that that
(00:36:32)
sounds great.
(00:36:35)
If the technology works, let's build it
(00:36:37)
once and then we'll talk about it.
(00:36:40)
How far away from that technology are
(00:36:41)
we?
(00:36:42)
>> We were supposed to get the prototype
(00:36:43)
last November and then the company doing
(00:36:45)
it went belly up. We've had three more
(00:36:48)
countries, excuse me, three more
(00:36:49)
companies say that they're working on
(00:36:50)
it. Uh I have not seen what I consider
(00:36:52)
to be a reliable time frame for when
(00:36:54)
their prototype will come online.
(00:36:56)
>> The labs are involved. People are
(00:36:58)
working on it. But I'm sorry.
(00:37:00)
>> Without that is nuclear dominance not as
(00:37:02)
inevitable.
(00:37:04)
>> Yeah. nuclear. If you're going to build
(00:37:06)
a large plant, let's just put the
(00:37:07)
regulatory and the the nimi concerns to
(00:37:10)
the side for a moment. From the day that
(00:37:12)
you put a shovel in the ground and you
(00:37:14)
have every dollar that you need to get
(00:37:15)
it set up, you're talking about 4 to 8
(00:37:17)
years, probably closer to eight. And
(00:37:19)
that assumes that the power grid can
(00:37:21)
take the power. One of the problems we
(00:37:23)
have in the United States is because the
(00:37:26)
period from roughly 1985 until roughly
(00:37:29)
2020 was a period where we were moving
(00:37:31)
towards higher and higherend industry
(00:37:34)
that used more precision labor and more
(00:37:37)
equipment uh but less smelting and
(00:37:41)
electrical work. It meant that the
(00:37:44)
amount of stuff that we were producing
(00:37:45)
was actually going up in value but the
(00:37:47)
amount of power that we needed to do it
(00:37:48)
was going down in value. And as we move
(00:37:50)
from manufacturing and agriculture to a
(00:37:52)
services economy, same thing. Power
(00:37:54)
demand stagnated or dropped until very
(00:37:56)
very recently, largely because of AI,
(00:37:58)
but also because of the
(00:37:59)
re-industrialization effort we're now
(00:38:01)
going through because of the Chinese
(00:38:02)
problems and decolonization. So for 35
(00:38:05)
years, we really didn't build out the
(00:38:06)
grid because we didn't need to. Now we
(00:38:08)
need to. And the biggest thing that is
(00:38:11)
missing is high voltage long range
(00:38:14)
transmission lines. Something that's
(00:38:16)
like 70 kilovolts or higher. The only
(00:38:18)
part of the country right now that has
(00:38:21)
spare transmission capacity is this
(00:38:24)
little triangle from Pittsburgh to St.
(00:38:26)
Louis to Chicago, uh, Appalachia, coal
(00:38:30)
country. Because in the ' 60s, '7s, and
(00:38:32)
' 80s, we had a [clears throat] number
(00:38:33)
of administrations who realized, here's
(00:38:35)
where the coal is. It's cheaper to move
(00:38:37)
electricity than coal. So, let's burn
(00:38:39)
the coal locally and send the power out
(00:38:41)
to the population centers. You basic
(00:38:44)
math. Uh so the federal government
(00:38:46)
stepped in and helped push through all
(00:38:48)
of this development work. And so now
(00:38:51)
this zone has like quadruple the long
(00:38:55)
range transmission that they're using.
(00:38:56)
In some places less than a fifth.
(00:38:58)
[gasps] Uh it's the only place that
(00:39:00)
could really build out what we need
(00:39:02)
quickly. Um everyone else in the country
(00:39:05)
needs to build those lines before they
(00:39:07)
think about things like nuclear power.
(00:39:09)
Because if you build nuclear power, you
(00:39:10)
might be able to supply your city right
(00:39:12)
there, but you're not going to be able
(00:39:14)
to ship it anywhere else.
(00:39:16)
>> That's in part a regulatory issue, but
(00:39:18)
it's mostly just hardware.
(00:39:20)
>> How effective is nuclear when it comes
(00:39:22)
to the um excess capacity from the grid?
(00:39:26)
I have a friend who helps to build uh
(00:39:29)
crypto mining facilities in West Texas
(00:39:33)
and one of the things that they do which
(00:39:35)
is supposedly of a massive benefit to
(00:39:37)
the grid is they are able to turn on and
(00:39:40)
turn off their requirement for buying
(00:39:43)
energy. So there is additional energy
(00:39:45)
that's available on the grid and he
(00:39:47)
pushes a button or the people that he
(00:39:49)
builds the plants for push a button and
(00:39:51)
they go we'll take your cheap energy.
(00:39:52)
Fantastic. We'll go and mine us some
(00:39:54)
more Ethereum. Um
(00:39:57)
how uh how much tolerance how much foot
(00:39:59)
on foot off gas do you have with nuclear
(00:40:02)
plants? Do you know?
(00:40:04)
>> Uh from a technical point of view, you
(00:40:07)
can go up and down whatever you want.
(00:40:09)
But going up looks a lot to the nuclear
(00:40:12)
regulatory commission like a meltdown.
(00:40:15)
So functionally, no, not at all. So
(00:40:18)
nuclear is only for base load in the
(00:40:20)
United States. And I think that's
(00:40:22)
broadly a good way to look at it. Uh so
(00:40:26)
for data centers, nuclear is a good
(00:40:28)
match because data centers churn 24
(00:40:31)
hours a day. Nuclear goes 24 hours a
(00:40:33)
day. Solar and wind for data centers are
(00:40:36)
some of the stupidest things I've ever
(00:40:38)
seen people put on paper. Uh because to
(00:40:40)
make that work, you need to build five
(00:40:41)
times the solar and wind that you would
(00:40:44)
need to power the center and then build
(00:40:46)
a massive at least 24hour duration
(00:40:49)
battery system. By the way, no one in
(00:40:51)
the country has more than 10 minutes
(00:40:55)
and just the cost is just extreme and
(00:40:57)
even then it wouldn't be stable or
(00:40:59)
reliable. Uh so nukes, yeah, nukes would
(00:41:02)
work for that. You mentioned EVs when
(00:41:05)
they're not subsidized.
(00:41:07)
No bueno.
(00:41:09)
What are the underlying d is that
(00:41:11)
consumer demand? Is that cost? Is that
(00:41:14)
prohibitive ability to produce? Like
(00:41:16)
what what are the underlying dynamics?
(00:41:17)
>> It's electricity. It's really simple.
(00:41:20)
Electricity is easy to generate. It's
(00:41:22)
kind of squirrely to transmit and it's
(00:41:24)
almost impossible to store in an
(00:41:26)
economically viable manner. You need a
(00:41:28)
supply chain that is among the most
(00:41:30)
sophisticated that humanity has ever
(00:41:32)
produced that produces and processes a
(00:41:34)
dozen major elements. And in order to
(00:41:39)
do the transition the United States
(00:41:41)
under the B administration said that it
(00:41:43)
wanted to do get to a majority EV
(00:41:45)
situation in less than 25 years, we
(00:41:47)
would need every scrap of lithium and
(00:41:51)
copper and malipium and tantelum
(00:41:55)
[sighs] and graphite and all the rest
(00:41:58)
from the entire planet and no one else
(00:41:59)
could have any at all just to do EVs
(00:42:04)
just here. So, no, it was always [ __ ]
(00:42:07)
moronic.
(00:42:08)
Uh, that
(00:42:10)
and the cost that's attached to it is
(00:42:13)
ownorous. So, of course, if you aren't
(00:42:16)
if you have to pay for it all yourself,
(00:42:19)
sales are basically dropping to zero. Um
(00:42:24)
Tesla
(00:42:26)
Musk talked to good game not viable
(00:42:29)
economically not viable geop viable
(00:42:32)
geopolitically and we don't have the
(00:42:35)
processing materials uh here in the
(00:42:37)
United States to do it anyway.
(00:42:39)
>> So that suggests assuming that Elon
(00:42:43)
isn't
(00:42:45)
ignorant of this I I have to assume that
(00:42:46)
he isn't. He tends to do his researcher.
(00:42:48)
You should think of everything that he
(00:42:50)
says in that light. But the that the
(00:42:53)
knowledge that this is the future of the
(00:42:55)
EV market that in order to be able to
(00:42:58)
make this work within the US, you need
(00:42:59)
this absurd volume of rare earth
(00:43:02)
minerals processed in the right way,
(00:43:04)
capacity, all the rest of the thing. Not
(00:43:06)
only did the stars need to align, but
(00:43:07)
you also need to align a bunch of weird
(00:43:09)
rocks in one of those rock towers on the
(00:43:11)
ground.
(00:43:13)
that is betting the entire future of the
(00:43:16)
com company on the direction of the
(00:43:19)
country and
(00:43:22)
is he basically in your opinion is he
(00:43:24)
making an assumption that the subsidies
(00:43:27)
will continue to roll in because that
(00:43:28)
makes Tesla very
(00:43:31)
uh
(00:43:32)
>> it's a nonviable company by any normal
(00:43:34)
math
(00:43:34)
>> but if you get continuing support
(00:43:37)
because there is a push toward green
(00:43:39)
because EVs are seen as the best way to
(00:43:41)
help climate change so on and so forth
(00:43:43)
it it is riding that the EV revolution
(00:43:46)
is riding off the back of subsidies
(00:43:47)
coming from any government. Is that the
(00:43:49)
way to look at it?
(00:43:50)
>> Uh for for for Tesla at this moment as
(00:43:53)
we understand physical chemistry. Yes.
(00:43:55)
Uh there's nothing viable at Tesl there
(00:43:56)
there's very little that's viable at EV
(00:43:59)
large anyway even before you consider
(00:44:02)
the cost of the supporting
(00:44:03)
infrastructure buildout which is a
(00:44:05)
couple of trillion dollars on top of
(00:44:06)
everything else. Uh just the vehicles
(00:44:08)
don't do what they were have been
(00:44:09)
advertised to do. uh they're also net
(00:44:13)
dirtier than gasoline because of the
(00:44:16)
production cycle on the front end. Now,
(00:44:19)
if you change the electrical system in a
(00:44:22)
way that I don't understand today, I
(00:44:24)
reserve the right to change my mind. If
(00:44:26)
you move away from lithium as the core
(00:44:29)
component of battery storage into
(00:44:31)
something that is less environmentally
(00:44:33)
damaging its production and more energy
(00:44:35)
dense and can take the vibrations
(00:44:37)
better, I reserve the right to change my
(00:44:39)
mind. But in the last five years, I
(00:44:41)
haven't even seen a prototype system for
(00:44:43)
suggested for any of this. The closest I
(00:44:47)
would say would be the slow motion move
(00:44:49)
from lithium cobalt batteries to lithium
(00:44:52)
iron batteries.
(00:44:54)
That might help with energy storage at
(00:44:56)
the grid level. Might really make a
(00:44:58)
difference. But for transport, no. It's
(00:45:01)
less dense than what we had.
(00:45:04)
>> Where does the net dirty come from? What
(00:45:06)
what is the dirty? Well, people always
(00:45:08)
forget that the electricity comes from
(00:45:09)
somewhere. And if let's say I I've got
(00:45:12)
an 11 kilowatt system on my house. If I
(00:45:15)
had a Tesla and the sun shone for 24
(00:45:19)
hours a day at my high altitude noon
(00:45:22)
peak, took me 2 and 1 half days to
(00:45:24)
charge the car.
(00:45:26)
So you're not using solar and wind to
(00:45:29)
charge your car. You're using fossil
(00:45:31)
fuels. And so the only potential gain
(00:45:33)
that you're getting is that an EV engine
(00:45:36)
is more energy efficient than a gas
(00:45:38)
engine on a mile per mile basis. But the
(00:45:41)
cost, the carbon cost of generating the
(00:45:44)
vehicle in the especially the battery in
(00:45:45)
the front end is just so much more. Uh
(00:45:48)
and if you're living in a place that's
(00:45:50)
predominantly coal and you're driving an
(00:45:51)
American style sedan, you're over the
(00:45:53)
long term generating a lot more carbon
(00:45:56)
than anything before. Now those are some
(00:45:58)
very broad statements and there are a
(00:46:01)
thousand exceptions to them based on
(00:46:03)
local situation. So for example the
(00:46:05)
Chinese vehicles uh from a weight basis
(00:46:08)
are less than half that of the American
(00:46:10)
vehicles. They would never pass our
(00:46:11)
safety tests but they're smaller and
(00:46:14)
they kill a lot of people but because
(00:46:17)
they're so much lighter a lot of what I
(00:46:20)
just said does not apply to the Chinese
(00:46:22)
situation. So a Chinese e Chinese EV can
(00:46:26)
break even on a carbon cost basis within
(00:46:29)
10 years maybe
(00:46:30)
>> but at the price of a few pedestrians.
(00:46:34)
>> Societies make choices when they start
(00:46:36)
crafting policy. [laughter]
(00:46:40)
Okay. Um
(00:46:42)
what are the what are the other sort of
(00:46:45)
damages with with regards to production
(00:46:47)
when it I know I understand about the
(00:46:49)
the lithium. Uh I I remember Joe had
(00:46:52)
some guy on his show talking about
(00:46:53)
cobalt mining and it was [ __ ]
(00:46:55)
disgusting. It was insane. Um
(00:46:57)
>> it's disgusting in every sense of the
(00:46:59)
word. Yeah. Environmentally, chemically,
(00:47:02)
and socially.
(00:47:03)
>> Yeah. Um what what else what else is
(00:47:05)
there going into EVs which are a little
(00:47:08)
uh byproducts we wouldn't realize?
(00:47:09)
>> I didn't top off my study for this. A
(00:47:11)
big one's graphite. Uh graphite is
(00:47:13)
basically a synthetic form of carbon.
(00:47:15)
[clears throat]
(00:47:15)
Uh there is a natural graphite which is
(00:47:18)
vastly preferred but the chemical
(00:47:19)
structure is very limited to a few
(00:47:21)
specific minds. So the cost goes up as
(00:47:23)
it's more of it's used. There's a
(00:47:25)
synthetic version. Uh basically you're
(00:47:26)
using it for the electricity regulating
(00:47:29)
the electricity flow in a battery. And
(00:47:31)
if the graphite is not the right kind,
(00:47:33)
you basically get the electricity
(00:47:35)
starting to leak out into the battery
(00:47:36)
itself, which can get a little blammy,
(00:47:38)
but more likely it's just going to be a
(00:47:40)
huge efficiency loss. Um, copper,
(00:47:43)
obviously, anything that uses
(00:47:45)
electricity is going to use a huge
(00:47:46)
amount of copper. Lithium, we've already
(00:47:48)
covered. Cobalt's a mess. Uh, manganese
(00:47:52)
using a lot of alloys for both copper
(00:47:54)
and steel. Um, sometimes you're going to
(00:47:56)
put this in the electrodes as well.
(00:47:58)
>> There just there's a lot of moving
(00:48:00)
pieces. Um, and that's one of the
(00:48:01)
reasons why I'm a little hopeful because
(00:48:03)
a lot of people are playing with a lot
(00:48:04)
of different chemistries to see if they
(00:48:06)
can kind of come up with something
(00:48:07)
better. We just haven't hit it.
(00:48:09)
Isn't there a rule in the UK that they
(00:48:12)
want to go completely
(00:48:14)
gaspowered vehicle free by 2030? That
(00:48:17)
there's no more or is that is that
(00:48:19)
elsewhere?
(00:48:19)
>> Lots of countries have announced that
(00:48:21)
either for their cities or for their
(00:48:24)
countries and unless they're willing to
(00:48:26)
subsidize it to a huge degree, it's not
(00:48:28)
going to happen anywhere. Um, that
(00:48:30)
doesn't necessarily mean that I have a
(00:48:32)
problem with those goals. I mean, lots
(00:48:34)
of time, well, you know, let me use the
(00:48:36)
California example. California gets a
(00:48:37)
lot of [ __ ] California deserves a lot
(00:48:39)
of the [ __ ] that they get. But when it
(00:48:41)
comes to regulation, uh the state
(00:48:43)
legislature has empowered their
(00:48:45)
regulatory bodies to create these
(00:48:46)
regulations to say, you know, we want to
(00:48:48)
be carbon-f free or we want to on the
(00:48:50)
grid by this year, we want to have no
(00:48:52)
non-EVs sold in the state by this year.
(00:48:55)
And as time moves on, if the technology
(00:48:58)
is not manifesting, make that policy,
(00:49:00)
the regulator has the authority without
(00:49:03)
going back to the state legislature to
(00:49:05)
move the date or change the mandate. Uh
(00:49:08)
it's a little bit more intelligent than
(00:49:10)
most people give California credit for.
(00:49:12)
And we're going to probably see a lot of
(00:49:13)
places climbing down. Uh we've seen a
(00:49:16)
lot of countries in the last couple of
(00:49:18)
years back away from a lot of what
(00:49:21)
they've done with EVs because it's just
(00:49:22)
not working out.
(00:49:25)
Which country do you think is closest to
(00:49:28)
being wiped out by energy shortages?
(00:49:31)
Which one is the most precarious
(00:49:35)
at scale? The Chinese are the ones in
(00:49:37)
the in the biggest pickle. Uh they
(00:49:39)
import about 70% of their oil about
(00:49:44)
similar number for natural gas and the
(00:49:46)
major vast majority of that comes
(00:49:48)
through the straight of Mala probably
(00:49:49)
were originating in the Middle East. And
(00:49:51)
so if you ever have a real dust up with
(00:49:53)
either Japan or the United States or
(00:49:55)
India, Vietnam or Australia or Sri Lanka
(00:49:59)
or Pakistan or Roman, that all stops.
(00:50:03)
It's really easy to cut completely. Um,
(00:50:08)
for more traditional places, uh, the
(00:50:11)
Europeans are getting clever. I'm not as
(00:50:14)
worried about the Europeans as I used to
(00:50:15)
be, uh, three years ago.
(00:50:18)
>> There's plenty of reason to be worried.
(00:50:20)
[snorts]
(00:50:21)
Uh three years ago when the Ukraine war
(00:50:24)
started uh the Europeans were in the
(00:50:26)
situation where they thought that if
(00:50:27)
they didn't side with the Russians that
(00:50:30)
the lights were going to go out but in
(00:50:32)
the three years since they've built a
(00:50:34)
lot of infrastructure to bring in carbon
(00:50:37)
energy [clears throat] from other places
(00:50:39)
and it has been broadly successful. Uh
(00:50:42)
and so they've backed away from a
(00:50:44)
political
(00:50:46)
goal that was questionable economically
(00:50:49)
and made a very clear strategic decision
(00:50:51)
that is broadly working out for them.
(00:50:53)
But they didn't sacrifice all of their
(00:50:57)
plans. So they realize, you know, maybe
(00:51:00)
solar and wind does not work in the
(00:51:02)
world's
(00:51:04)
least windy, least sunny continent.
(00:51:07)
[laughter]
(00:51:10)
But conservation and efficiency are
(00:51:13)
still very good plans.
(00:51:15)
>> So you you've seen some change in
(00:51:18)
mindset and a little bit more realism in
(00:51:21)
the policy and it's it's showing
(00:51:23)
benefits.
(00:51:25)
>> I'm interested in sort of what the
(00:51:26)
future of the green energy movement
(00:51:28)
looks like. This sort of green
(00:51:30)
transition and it's how possible it is
(00:51:33)
at the current levels of stability and
(00:51:35)
technology and rollout and instability.
(00:51:39)
There are no EVs. There are no battery
(00:51:41)
chassis. There is no solar. There is no
(00:51:43)
wind. There is no nuclear without
(00:51:45)
globalization. Too many of the parts,
(00:51:48)
too many of the materials come from a
(00:51:49)
different continent. And so if we're not
(00:51:51)
all doing this together, none of that
(00:51:53)
happens. And so you should move on. Uh
(00:51:56)
if you're in the Western Hemisphere
(00:51:58)
where there is more mining than
(00:51:59)
consumption, that's probably going to be
(00:52:01)
a little easier. But for the Eastern
(00:52:04)
Hemisphere, hard pass. It's just not
(00:52:06)
going to work. Now again, if you change
(00:52:08)
the technology on me, I reserve the
(00:52:09)
right to change my mind. But that's
(00:52:11)
where we've been for the last 25 years.
(00:52:13)
>> How much of the Eastern Hemisphere being
(00:52:15)
card carrying, flag waving, we are going
(00:52:18)
green people? It seems to be mostly a
(00:52:20)
western thing in any case. No,
(00:52:22)
>> for the most part, yeah.
(00:52:26)
>> How hopeful are you for a green
(00:52:28)
transition in the west?
(00:52:31)
If the technology is not ready and if
(00:52:33)
westerners are not leaving living living
(00:52:35)
in places where the technology can be
(00:52:37)
applied in a way that actually drops
(00:52:39)
your carbon. Putting up a solar panel
(00:52:41)
doesn't make you green. Putting up a
(00:52:42)
solar panel that reduces your carbon
(00:52:44)
footprint that makes you green. And most
(00:52:47)
people who live in the west don't live
(00:52:49)
in a place where that is true.
(00:52:51)
I think that's one of the reasons why uh
(00:52:54)
there is a lot of criticism in the UK
(00:52:57)
around the sort of green movement that
(00:52:59)
we've had a very viciferous government
(00:53:01)
uh pushing hard toward this as an
(00:53:03)
outcome that they want and a country
(00:53:06)
that really doesn't seem to be
(00:53:08)
particularly well suited for most of the
(00:53:10)
technologies like I I you mentioned
(00:53:13)
Toronto's sort of 1/5ifth of the amount
(00:53:15)
of sun that you got I I have to assume
(00:53:17)
that the UK is maybe even worse. We have
(00:53:19)
to go down. We have to go south in order
(00:53:21)
to get to Toronto if you fly from the
(00:53:23)
UK. So, we're further up. Um,
(00:53:25)
>> believe it or not, London actually gets
(00:53:27)
a little bit more sun than Toronto, but
(00:53:29)
like just minuscule. Glasgow though.
(00:53:31)
God, no.
(00:53:32)
>> Yes. And I was from 3 hours away from
(00:53:34)
Glasgow. So, yeah. I
(00:53:36)
>> wind offshore wind in the North Sea is
(00:53:39)
brilliant. Look at Norway. I mean,
(00:53:41)
Norway has been subsidizing. I don't
(00:53:42)
mean to suggest that they're not, but
(00:53:44)
they get over half of their electricity
(00:53:45)
from wind now. Now, because of the
(00:53:48)
dispatchability issue, they're probably
(00:53:50)
pretty close to peaked on that. They
(00:53:52)
probably can't do much more.
(00:53:53)
>> What's dis dispatchability?
(00:53:55)
>> The availab ability just to flip a
(00:53:57)
switch and more electricity surges into
(00:53:59)
the system. You can't do that with green
(00:54:01)
tech at all. You can do it with
(00:54:02)
batteries, but batteries are not good
(00:54:04)
enough to store more than a few minutes
(00:54:05)
of power on a grid level for most
(00:54:08)
places. So, the first half for the for
(00:54:11)
the Danes was easy. The second half, I
(00:54:13)
have no idea how they're going to do
(00:54:14)
that.
(00:54:15)
>> How interesting.
(00:54:16)
What is uh what's an important mineral?
(00:54:19)
What's the most important mineral that
(00:54:21)
no one's paying attention to?
(00:54:25)
>> I mean, it's really unsexy, but copper,
(00:54:28)
it's like you want to expand your grid,
(00:54:30)
you need copper. You want to do more
(00:54:32)
industry, you need copper. You want to
(00:54:33)
do anything with green tech, you need
(00:54:35)
copper, and you need a lot of it. Uh the
(00:54:37)
United States wants to double the size
(00:54:39)
of its industrial plant. The United
(00:54:41)
States, in order to do that, needs to
(00:54:42)
increase its grid by half. That means we
(00:54:44)
need to consume about 12 times as much
(00:54:46)
copper for the next 30 years as we have
(00:54:47)
for the last 30.
(00:54:50)
>> Where does that come from? Where where
(00:54:51)
is most of the copper in the world?
(00:54:53)
>> The only country in the world that has
(00:54:55)
what you would consider maybe surge
(00:54:57)
capacity to increase output on anything
(00:55:00)
less than a 5year time frame is Chile uh
(00:55:01)
the outcome the desert. Uh number two is
(00:55:04)
the United States. Uh number three is
(00:55:06)
Canada. Number four is Mexico. But
(00:55:08)
>> is that good for the US then that all of
(00:55:10)
it?
(00:55:11)
>> That's great. But that's the ore. Then
(00:55:12)
you got to turn it into copper metal.
(00:55:15)
That's China and India.
(00:55:17)
>> So either way,
(00:55:18)
>> we can't keep it. We can't keep it
(00:55:20)
domestically and then convert it over
(00:55:21)
here.
(00:55:22)
>> Well, I mean, we could. We've chosen not
(00:55:24)
to. But um and you know, it's not a new
(00:55:27)
technology. This dates back to like the
(00:55:29)
early 1800s. You basically heat it up,
(00:55:32)
you boil off the sulfur, uh you heat it
(00:55:35)
up some more, you purify into metal, and
(00:55:37)
then you turn it into other things. Uh
(00:55:38)
there's nothing that to stop us from
(00:55:40)
doing that except for the cost, the
(00:55:42)
footprint, the pollution. These are real
(00:55:44)
things and to this point, America has
(00:55:47)
chosen to just let someone else do it.
(00:55:49)
>> Isn't it an interesting oraborous thing
(00:55:52)
that in order to be able to increase the
(00:55:54)
capacity of the grid to be able to move
(00:55:56)
to something like nuclear, which would
(00:55:58)
be a cleaner fuel, you need to do
(00:56:00)
something which on the front end would
(00:56:02)
look like pissing out more pollution
(00:56:04)
into the atmosphere and would cause an
(00:56:06)
awful lot of protests. Because look at
(00:56:07)
these big we shouldn't be doing our
(00:56:10)
copper ore at home. Look at the big
(00:56:11)
black clouds. It's perspective being
(00:56:14)
able to see over big timelines is uh is
(00:56:17)
is
(00:56:17)
>> one of the many many many and that
(00:56:19)
assumes it works and the green
(00:56:22)
technologies that we have right now
(00:56:25)
don't. So spending $30 trillion or
(00:56:28)
whatever the most current number is to
(00:56:30)
achieve net zero in the United States by
(00:56:32)
2050 assumes these technologies actually
(00:56:35)
do what they say they're going to. And
(00:56:36)
we already know that they don't. We have
(00:56:37)
plenty of math to prove that. This is
(00:56:39)
why I'm really big on physical chemistry
(00:56:42)
because we need to find new ways to do
(00:56:43)
things. And we don't know what chunks of
(00:56:46)
the land on the planet we're going to
(00:56:48)
need access to to make those
(00:56:49)
technologies work until we've built some
(00:56:51)
of them. And
(00:56:52)
>> yeah, this one is based on gadalinium.
(00:56:54)
This one is based on whatever the [ __ ]
(00:56:57)
>> Yeah. Until we know the answer to that
(00:57:00)
question, we don't know how to prepare.
(00:57:04)
>> How fascinating. What do you think? What
(00:57:05)
do you think the biggest surprise in
(00:57:08)
energy is going to be over the next
(00:57:10)
decade or two, it seems to me, at least
(00:57:12)
based on what you're saying, the
(00:57:14)
technology that is promised is not able
(00:57:16)
to deliver that which it is promising.
(00:57:19)
Uh, so will the surprise be
(00:57:22)
disappointment or will the surprise be
(00:57:23)
an actual surprise?
(00:57:25)
>> It's going to be one of each. Uh, let me
(00:57:27)
give you the bad and then the good. Uh,
(00:57:29)
first [laughter] first the bad. Uh,
(00:57:32)
we're we're very close and we have been
(00:57:34)
very close for three years to a
(00:57:35)
significant break in international
(00:57:37)
energy markets. Whether it's the Russian
(00:57:38)
stuff going away or something happening
(00:57:40)
in the Persian Gulf or something
(00:57:41)
happening in Malaa or something
(00:57:42)
happening to China, the
(00:57:45)
production of vast volumes of crude is
(00:57:48)
going to fall away. And the consumption
(00:57:51)
of vast volumes of crude is going to
(00:57:53)
fall away for demographic and
(00:57:54)
geopolitical reasons. And I can't tell
(00:57:56)
you which one's going to happen first. I
(00:57:59)
can tell you that whichever one does
(00:58:00)
happen first will then lead to the other
(00:58:02)
one. And [ __ ] will get real in a lot of
(00:58:04)
places very, very quickly. uh and for
(00:58:07)
those of us who still want electricity,
(00:58:08)
we will then basically have to fight to
(00:58:10)
get access to the fossil fuels that will
(00:58:12)
allow us to have it. And that will look
(00:58:14)
different in every part of the world.
(00:58:16)
>> Second thing, at some point in the next
(00:58:20)
decade, our physical chemistry is going
(00:58:22)
to improve to the point that we have a
(00:58:25)
new idea that we will then want to apply
(00:58:27)
whether it's in generation,
(00:58:29)
transmission, or storage. I don't know,
(00:58:30)
one of the three, maybe more than one,
(00:58:33)
that will generate a completely new
(00:58:37)
arms race in order to access that
(00:58:40)
technology and apply it. And whoever can
(00:58:42)
figure that out leaves the old problems
(00:58:44)
behind. I mean, the petroleum age was a
(00:58:47)
was a mess. I understand why people
(00:58:49)
would like to go beyond it. The green
(00:58:52)
age, if it happens with today's
(00:58:53)
technologies, would be worse.
(00:58:56)
But that's not going to stop us from
(00:58:58)
trying to invent something new. And as
(00:59:00)
soon as we do, maybe it's a capacitor,
(00:59:02)
maybe it's a battery, maybe it's power
(00:59:04)
beaming, I don't know.
(00:59:06)
>> We start with a completely new set of
(00:59:08)
goals, needing a completely different
(00:59:09)
set of materials and different
(00:59:11)
concentrations, and that changes the
(00:59:13)
geography of what we are concerned
(00:59:14)
about. So we might 10 years from now be
(00:59:19)
more obsessed with Bolivia than we right
(00:59:22)
now are with Saudi Arabia and Iraq.
(00:59:25)
[laughter]
(00:59:26)
All depends upon where the technology
(00:59:27)
goes.
(00:59:27)
>> Well, it's interesting. America was
(00:59:29)
obsessed with Bolivia for a little
(00:59:30)
while, but for a different type of
(00:59:31)
substance that they were exporting.
(00:59:33)
>> Yeah,
(00:59:35)
>> we're good.
(00:59:35)
>> Bring back those days. Um,
(00:59:38)
>> cocaine. Sorry, I just had to say that.
(00:59:40)
>> That's okay. That's a statement that
(00:59:41)
needs to be made. Unless it can power an
(00:59:42)
electric vehicle, in which case, has
(00:59:44)
anyone tried that? Who knows? Um,
(00:59:46)
>> I'm sure somebody in New York has.
(00:59:48)
>> Yeah. Um, global. So this increasing
(00:59:52)
reliance globally because if you're
(00:59:55)
going to increase capacity it means that
(00:59:56)
you need to uh coordinate more and you
(01:00:00)
need to be more reli I didn't I totally
(01:00:02)
didn't realize the fact that just
(01:00:03)
because you have the raw material
(01:00:04)
doesn't mean that you can process it
(01:00:05)
where it is it can be sent away and then
(01:00:07)
come back. So global supply chains are
(01:00:09)
more important than ever. Been a few
(01:00:12)
years since we spoke. What's happening
(01:00:14)
with the state of global supply chains?
(01:00:16)
I've heard you say that they don't
(01:00:18)
survive without a global security
(01:00:19)
guarantor and that that era is over.
(01:00:21)
>> Yeah. Right now the ore comes from one
(01:00:23)
place. It's primarily processed in
(01:00:25)
China. It's sent to a third loca
(01:00:27)
location to be purified to a degree that
(01:00:29)
you can then actually use it and then it
(01:00:31)
gets turned into an intermediate
(01:00:33)
product. Uh so step one no matter who
(01:00:36)
you are, no matter where you are, uh
(01:00:39)
that second that first processing step
(01:00:41)
that's done in China, that has to be
(01:00:42)
done somewhere else. uh if we don't get
(01:00:45)
that right, we don't get to try at
(01:00:47)
anything else.
(01:00:48)
>> What about the rest of the global supply
(01:00:50)
chain? Uh global food systems, other
(01:00:52)
stuff like that. What what what else has
(01:00:54)
changed?
(01:00:54)
>> Uh I've been pleasantly surprised about
(01:00:56)
global f fuel food systems. Um the
(01:01:00)
sanctions against the Russians have not
(01:01:03)
yet uh impacted the fertilizer supply
(01:01:07)
system. and fertilizer as a category.
(01:01:08)
There's like 11 different kinds, but
(01:01:10)
fertilizer as a mass category. Russians
(01:01:12)
are still the world's largest exporter.
(01:01:14)
Without that, there is no food
(01:01:15)
production in Brazil at all. And it
(01:01:17)
looks pretty dicey in the Middle East,
(01:01:19)
North Africa, and especially um the
(01:01:21)
South Asian zone. We haven't had that
(01:01:23)
problem. Uh in the meantime, the
(01:01:26)
Americans continue to spin up more and
(01:01:27)
more nitrogen fertilizer because that's
(01:01:29)
primarily made from natural gas. and the
(01:01:31)
Canadians continue to spin up more and
(01:01:33)
more potachsh fertilizer because they've
(01:01:35)
got that in Saskatchewan. So, we're
(01:01:38)
seeing other suppliers come into the
(01:01:40)
system. Uh they realize that it's a
(01:01:44)
race. Uh and so far that's working out.
(01:01:46)
Um long-term still a real problem, but
(01:01:49)
we're not facing the acute crunch that
(01:01:52)
we were. [sighs] Uh Trump's tariffs are
(01:01:56)
pushing manufactured goods for
(01:01:58)
agriculture the other direction. Um,
(01:02:01)
basically oversimplifying here, but the
(01:02:04)
more complicated the se the uh the more
(01:02:06)
complicated the manufacturing supply
(01:02:07)
chain happens to be, the more steps
(01:02:09)
there are, the more players. If you have
(01:02:12)
a high tariff system, it pushes your
(01:02:14)
steps out into somewhere else because
(01:02:17)
otherwise you're paying the tariff every
(01:02:19)
time something crosses your border. Yep.
(01:02:21)
>> And so easier to take the handful of the
(01:02:23)
steps that you do and do them somewhere
(01:02:25)
else and just pay the tariff once when
(01:02:26)
the thing comes in finished. for simple
(01:02:30)
manufactured products that only have a
(01:02:31)
half dozen steps or so that tends to
(01:02:34)
come to you because that's easier to
(01:02:37)
collate. So when it comes to things like
(01:02:40)
plastics and textiles and furniture,
(01:02:44)
Trump's tariffs have reshort
(01:02:46)
manufacturing, but when it comes to
(01:02:48)
aerospace and computing and electronics
(01:02:50)
and automotive, it's pushing stuff away.
(01:02:54)
And agricultural equipment is definitely
(01:02:56)
in that se second category. So, we're
(01:02:58)
seeing John Deere, for example, has
(01:03:00)
already cut more jobs in the last 10
(01:03:02)
months than it did in the previous 20
(01:03:04)
years.
(01:03:06)
>> Wow. I did not know that.
(01:03:08)
>> Yeah, it's it's getting pretty bad in
(01:03:09)
the Midwest right now.
(01:03:12)
>> Shipping disruptions. How big of a deal
(01:03:15)
is that?
(01:03:17)
>> Yeah. Right now, the Asians realize that
(01:03:20)
this is where their bread is sputtered
(01:03:21)
and they're going out of their way to
(01:03:22)
get along. Uh the Chinese have not
(01:03:24)
interrupted any uh shipping. And in
(01:03:27)
fact, they've even leaned on the
(01:03:29)
Houthies and the Iranians uh to stop
(01:03:31)
[ __ ] around in the Red Sea because
(01:03:33)
they realize they're the ones who would
(01:03:34)
be most screwed if that gets broken.
(01:03:36)
[sighs and gasps]
(01:03:39)
>> So far,
(01:03:40)
>> good news.
(01:03:41)
>> Yeah. Well, look, you mentioned you
(01:03:42)
mentioned Russia there. Uh the last time
(01:03:45)
that we spoke, that was that was sort of
(01:03:47)
front page news. What is happening with
(01:03:50)
the Russia Ukraine conflict? Is it
(01:03:53)
entering a new stage at the moment?
(01:03:54)
What's going on?
(01:03:55)
>> Every three months we're in a new stage.
(01:03:56)
Uh we're in something called the second
(01:03:58)
revolution in military affairs which is
(01:04:00)
applying digital technologies to
(01:04:02)
warfare. Uh the first phase was in the
(01:04:04)
1980s and 90s when the United States
(01:04:06)
started making things like smart bombs
(01:04:07)
or cruise missiles. Now it's going onto
(01:04:10)
much cheaper platforms because uh
(01:04:12)
lowcost semiconductors are ubiquitous
(01:04:14)
around the world and anyone can make a
(01:04:17)
drone. And so we've got Ukraine, which
(01:04:20)
inherited part of the old brain trust
(01:04:22)
from the Soviet missile and aerospace
(01:04:24)
things, combined with a country that's
(01:04:26)
desperate to survive, combined with
(01:04:28)
these new inputs that they can bring in
(01:04:30)
from abroad and making thousands of
(01:04:31)
drones a day. So every 3 months there's
(01:04:35)
a new page. Uh, first it was
(01:04:38)
singleperson drones, then it was
(01:04:41)
jamming, then it was drones with
(01:04:42)
missiles, then it was water-based
(01:04:44)
drones, then it was mass drones, then it
(01:04:46)
was Shahed drones, and it was Shahed
(01:04:48)
drones that could do a limited amount of
(01:04:49)
target selection. Now, uh, it's
(01:04:52)
something called the the Octopus drone,
(01:04:53)
which the Ukrainians are just starting
(01:04:55)
to use, which is a drone interceptor.
(01:04:57)
Uh, it's a new day every day, and I have
(01:05:01)
no idea how this is going to play. I can
(01:05:04)
tell you with the technologies that
(01:05:05)
existed pre-war exactly how this war
(01:05:07)
would have gone.
(01:05:09)
>> Those aren't the technologies that are
(01:05:10)
being used in the war anymore.
(01:05:13)
Isn't that so so interesting that all of
(01:05:16)
the dangerous assumptions people had
(01:05:18)
about modern warfare, all of the
(01:05:19)
predictability, I mean war war is
(01:05:21)
unpredictable enough, uh but when you
(01:05:24)
apply the uh growth curve of technology
(01:05:28)
to warfare, uh you just end up with I
(01:05:32)
mean that that weird evolution between
(01:05:35)
uh offense and defense that we saw
(01:05:38)
happen. Well, drones have come out and
(01:05:41)
this is better than using a Hellfire
(01:05:44)
missile. And then instead of using that,
(01:05:46)
you get a net and these drones are
(01:05:48)
defeated by a net. And now the drones
(01:05:50)
have a little thing on the front that
(01:05:51)
cuts the net. And now the nets are made
(01:05:52)
of this material. And now there's an EMP
(01:05:54)
that blasts them out of the sky. And now
(01:05:55)
there and the uh pace of innovation with
(01:06:01)
kinetic consequences
(01:06:03)
is it's mad. It re it's been absurd. Uh
(01:06:07)
>> right. But this is why it's called the
(01:06:08)
revolution in military affairs. Um, if
(01:06:12)
you go back to roughly 1935,
(01:06:18)
the technologies we were using then up
(01:06:20)
until 2022 with the exception of the
(01:06:22)
introduc introduction of the jet really
(01:06:26)
hadn't changed. I mean, it was guns, it
(01:06:28)
was artillery, it was tanks, it was
(01:06:30)
ships, it was subs, it was helicopters.
(01:06:33)
The jet was the only one that was
(01:06:34)
introduced and that was introduced late
(01:06:35)
in World War II, 1944.
(01:06:38)
We've had more technological evolutions
(01:06:40)
in the last 3 years just in Ukraine than
(01:06:43)
the rest of the world combined has had
(01:06:45)
since 1960.
(01:06:47)
>> Wow.
(01:06:47)
>> And so the rules we don't know. We are
(01:06:52)
only in the very very early stages of
(01:06:55)
developing the weapons much less the
(01:06:58)
doctrine much less being able to play
(01:07:00)
that against a battlefield. Um and we
(01:07:04)
are very fortunate in the west that the
(01:07:06)
Ukrainians will want to partner with us
(01:07:08)
because they are doing in real time uh
(01:07:11)
the sort of experimentation that is
(01:07:13)
costing lives that if we were doing this
(01:07:15)
in a broader conflict would have already
(01:07:18)
claimed a million people.
(01:07:20)
>> Yeah, I was going to say I wonder how
(01:07:21)
many countries are uh watching Ukraine
(01:07:25)
and Russia almost like a lab. Yeah, the
(01:07:28)
last time something at this scale
(01:07:30)
happened, a major conflict in which
(01:07:32)
people were watching, it was either the
(01:07:34)
Crimean War or the American Civil War,
(01:07:36)
because those were the two conflicts
(01:07:38)
where industrialized technologies first
(01:07:40)
really hit the field, whether it was a
(01:07:42)
Gatling gun or penicellin or the
(01:07:45)
railway.
(01:07:47)
And people are watching and thinking,
(01:07:48)
well, this is a good explainer, uh, a
(01:07:52)
good, um, sandbox for us to observe what
(01:07:55)
these new technologies are going to be
(01:07:57)
like. How how are these
(01:07:58)
>> say I'm dark? [laughter]
(01:08:00)
>> Well, look, I mean, yeah, I'm not saying
(01:08:02)
that Russia and Ukraine is being used as
(01:08:04)
an experiment for the rest of the world
(01:08:06)
to watch, but that's what the people who
(01:08:08)
are not invested in it directly will be
(01:08:10)
will be thinking, right? Look at this.
(01:08:12)
Look at look at look at the way that
(01:08:13)
this goes forward. I that seems to me I
(01:08:16)
was interested in what the most
(01:08:17)
dangerous assumption about modern
(01:08:18)
warfare was, but the uh the the
(01:08:22)
assumption that it is predictable or
(01:08:24)
that it follows any of the rules that
(01:08:25)
have been established in the past seems
(01:08:27)
to be a pretty [ __ ] good one.
(01:08:29)
>> Yeah. Now, we still need energy. We need
(01:08:31)
still still need food. When you're
(01:08:32)
talking about drones, you need
(01:08:33)
electricity specifically. So, that adds
(01:08:35)
another layer of things to it. But yeah,
(01:08:38)
uh the rules are changing very quickly.
(01:08:41)
What conflicts are more important than
(01:08:44)
Ukraine at the moment?
(01:08:46)
>> At the moment, that's really the only
(01:08:49)
one that matters because that has the
(01:08:50)
nuclear question because of the Russians
(01:08:52)
that deals with the northern European
(01:08:53)
plane. So, automatically draws in all
(01:08:54)
the Europeans. It has the issue of
(01:08:57)
uniting Eurasia under a single power.
(01:08:59)
So, the Americans get interested. Uh,
(01:09:01)
and then of course the Chinese are
(01:09:02)
providing the industrial base that's
(01:09:04)
necessary for the Russians to carry out
(01:09:05)
the war in the first place. So,
(01:09:06)
everyone's involved uh in some way. Uh
(01:09:10)
it is by far the most critical one out
(01:09:12)
there. Uh we'll probably have a few new
(01:09:14)
ones in the next few years. Um whenever
(01:09:17)
you break the economic model, politics
(01:09:19)
gets all wonky and security issues
(01:09:22)
naturally bubble up from that. And
(01:09:23)
that's before you consider a
(01:09:24)
technological change. So you know, maybe
(01:09:27)
we figure out what the next energy
(01:09:28)
technology is. We have something fresh
(01:09:30)
to fight over in a world where all of a
(01:09:32)
sudden oil is not as reliable. It's one
(01:09:34)
of many ways this could go. M what about
(01:09:37)
South China Sea stuff that was big deal
(01:09:40)
for a while.
(01:09:41)
>> I never found that sexy. Never. It's
(01:09:44)
just I mean just it's ringed by hostile
(01:09:49)
countries. Vietnam, Philippines,
(01:09:51)
Indonesia, Malaysia. Um it's not that
(01:09:54)
deep so subs don't play a big role. The
(01:09:58)
energy in it, the reserves are not all
(01:10:00)
that interesting. And the sand islands
(01:10:03)
that the Chinese have built are, as the
(01:10:06)
name suggests, built of sand. And so the
(01:10:08)
Chinese have already stopped stationing
(01:10:10)
aircraft on them because the runways
(01:10:12)
aren't functional.
(01:10:14)
And if you see this as a naval
(01:10:16)
projection issue, projecting through an
(01:10:19)
area rung by ringed by a half a dozen
(01:10:21)
countries who hate you, you put a few of
(01:10:23)
the new tomahawks that the United States
(01:10:25)
is developing that are truck mounted and
(01:10:27)
you can't do anything with that except
(01:10:28)
for loose ships. And even if you could
(01:10:31)
secure it, you have now made it 17th of
(01:10:34)
the way to the Persian Gulf. Big [ __ ]
(01:10:37)
deal. Uh the Chinese are boxed in. I
(01:10:40)
I've never found the South China Sea
(01:10:42)
interesting.
(01:10:42)
>> Wow. You I've seen so many uh video
(01:10:45)
documentaries and stuff talking about
(01:10:47)
these land grabs that breathless.
(01:10:50)
>> Yeah. Yeah. This is, you know, it's this
(01:10:52)
sort of um odd geopolitical red tape
(01:10:56)
loophole which is permitting China to
(01:10:59)
expand the size of its country by saying
(01:11:01)
this is us and this is us and this is us
(01:11:03)
and it's slowly going to engulf the
(01:11:05)
entire South China Sea. Uh
(01:11:07)
>> yeah, when public relations is your
(01:11:09)
strategic policy, it's not a very good
(01:11:11)
policy. Uh, if you want to take it
(01:11:14)
seriously, the Chinese have to conquer
(01:11:16)
Vietnam first, then we'll talk because
(01:11:19)
if they don't control the coast, there's
(01:11:20)
no point in controlling the water.
(01:11:25)
Surely based on your theory about China
(01:11:28)
being in a lot of [ __ ] over the next
(01:11:32)
decade and a metric ton of [ __ ] over the
(01:11:34)
next 50 years,
(01:11:35)
>> is there not the potential for them to
(01:11:39)
do something desperate, whatever that
(01:11:41)
means, silly, more aggressive, more rule
(01:11:44)
it out, but there's nothing that they
(01:11:46)
could do that would fix their underlying
(01:11:48)
core problems. They can't change their
(01:11:50)
geography.
(01:11:52)
They'd have to conquer the entire first
(01:11:54)
island chain to have a chance to project
(01:11:55)
beyond. And even then, they're not going
(01:11:57)
to have a two ocean navy because there's
(01:12:00)
only one ocean.
(01:12:02)
Um, they're not going to solve their
(01:12:04)
demographic problems with the war. The
(01:12:06)
only country where you could maybe turn
(01:12:08)
enough people into slaves to round out
(01:12:11)
your demographic structure would be
(01:12:12)
India. The Himalayas are in the way
(01:12:14)
independent of the fact that that would
(01:12:16)
be really hard. [gasps]
(01:12:17)
Uh, so there's nowhere they can go. Uh,
(01:12:20)
the resources aren't within easy reach.
(01:12:22)
The demographic situation requires Star
(01:12:24)
Wars style cloning and the strategic
(01:12:27)
situation can't be solved with a navy
(01:12:29)
that is anything less than five times
(01:12:30)
the powerful power of the American Navy.
(01:12:32)
And they're nowhere close. They have a
(01:12:34)
lot of ships, but whenever you see like
(01:12:36)
a tonnage per tonage comparison for a
(01:12:37)
ship, keep in mind that their ships suck
(01:12:39)
and are a lot heavier.
(01:12:42)
So, a 40,000 ton Chinese carrier and a
(01:12:46)
40,000 ton American carrier, this one is
(01:12:48)
an order of magnitude more powerful than
(01:12:50)
this one. They're slower. They can't
(01:12:52)
maneuver. They need too much fuel.
(01:12:55)
>> Uh before you consider things about the
(01:12:57)
hardware that they might launch,
(01:13:00)
>> okay, that does not necessarily preclude
(01:13:04)
them from doing something silly or
(01:13:06)
something kinetic or aggressive.
(01:13:08)
>> Exactly. just purely out of desperation
(01:13:10)
shape the environment on their way out
(01:13:12)
the door. I can't rule it out. But
(01:13:16)
generally countries don't die that way.
(01:13:18)
There has to be something that they
(01:13:19)
think that they can achieve.
(01:13:21)
>> The reason that I don't dismiss it
(01:13:23)
completely
(01:13:25)
is that um Chairman Xi has basically
(01:13:28)
gotten rid of all of his adviserss. Uh
(01:13:30)
his last real one was seven years ago
(01:13:32)
now. And when you eat nothing but the
(01:13:34)
propaganda all day, you know, it kind of
(01:13:36)
messes with your head. I mean, this is a
(01:13:38)
guy who has written 30,000 pages of
(01:13:41)
ideological treatises in the last 10
(01:13:43)
years. That doesn't leave a lot of time
(01:13:45)
to govern. And it may be that his mind
(01:13:48)
is just mush now and that yes, he pulls
(01:13:50)
the trigger. Uh it's not a very
(01:13:52)
satisfying explanation, but that's
(01:13:54)
really the only way I see it happening.
(01:13:55)
Yeah. Wow. Wow. I It really does sort of
(01:13:59)
go to show the the issues of intense
(01:14:04)
isolation. Uh, you know, we've it's one
(01:14:06)
of the reasons that supposedly Japan has
(01:14:09)
a particularly unique culture, which is
(01:14:11)
what happens if nobody's allowed to
(01:14:13)
leave or enter for half a millennia. And
(01:14:16)
look at this. It's formed into this
(01:14:18)
place that's as close to an alien planet
(01:14:20)
as you can whilst staying on Earth. And
(01:14:22)
isn't isn't that interesting? Um, but it
(01:14:24)
also
(01:14:26)
>> doesn't have the uh corrective
(01:14:28)
mechanisms for stress testing your
(01:14:31)
ideas. If all of the people around you
(01:14:33)
and all of the country around you
(01:14:34)
basically is sort of a yes country, like
(01:14:37)
a yes men, uh
(01:14:40)
you can end up with some pretty
(01:14:42)
squirrely ideas that you start
(01:14:43)
believing. I suppose
(01:14:44)
>> that's one of the reasons why I really
(01:14:46)
like countries like the United States or
(01:14:48)
Germany or Australia uh or Brazil
(01:14:51)
because the states have as much power as
(01:14:53)
the national authorities. And so you get
(01:14:55)
a lot of policy experimentations on
(01:14:58)
everything from labor policy to tax
(01:15:00)
policy to culture policy uh throughout
(01:15:02)
the entire system. And we we make some
(01:15:04)
bad decisions. No argument.
(01:15:06)
>> But we also make some good ones and then
(01:15:08)
we learn from one another.
(01:15:10)
>> Which which country is quietly becoming
(01:15:14)
uh a greater power than most people
(01:15:16)
might realize, do you think?
(01:15:18)
>> Mexico. If Mexico was located anywhere
(01:15:20)
else in the world with the industrial
(01:15:22)
plant that it is, we would already talk
(01:15:24)
about it as being more powerful than
(01:15:25)
Germany or France.
(01:15:28)
>> But wow,
(01:15:29)
>> all that trade relationship was with the
(01:15:30)
United States. So excuse everybody's
(01:15:32)
perspective.
(01:15:34)
Doesn't mean that they don't have very
(01:15:35)
real problems. They do. But from as an
(01:15:38)
industrial power, they're already
(01:15:39)
massive.
(01:15:40)
>> What What is their advantage?
(01:15:43)
>> They're right next to the United States.
(01:15:45)
So you you've got the technology, you
(01:15:47)
got the infrastructure, you got the the
(01:15:50)
consumption base, and they can
(01:15:51)
complement what they do with what we do.
(01:15:54)
It's a great relationship. I literally
(01:15:56)
trickle down.
(01:15:58)
>> Yeah,
(01:15:58)
>> that's a little harsh. Mexicans are very
(01:16:01)
good at what they do, too. But if Mexico
(01:16:04)
hadn't been to the next next to the
(01:16:06)
United States, it probably wouldn't have
(01:16:07)
the trade or economic half that it has.
(01:16:10)
But if you could take this somehow and
(01:16:12)
move it somewhere else. Yeah. Massive.
(01:16:14)
Massive. Wow. Okay. And when it comes to
(01:16:18)
alliances,
(01:16:20)
tenuous ones, which is what's the one
(01:16:23)
that you're concerned about in terms of
(01:16:25)
fragility? What's what are the or what
(01:16:26)
are the alliances that you think are
(01:16:28)
more fragile than they seem?
(01:16:29)
>> Um, let me give you two. One that's up
(01:16:32)
and coming and one that I thought we had
(01:16:34)
solved and now I'm not so sure. So, up
(01:16:35)
and coming is Vietnam. Uh, huge
(01:16:38)
population, very young, excellent
(01:16:40)
educational system. uh 40% of their
(01:16:43)
college grads are STEM. Uh and they're
(01:16:46)
now at a higher average technical skill
(01:16:49)
set for their workforce than the Chinese
(01:16:51)
are. And they're now trying to catch up
(01:16:52)
with the industrial workforce or I'm
(01:16:54)
sorry, with the industrial
(01:16:55)
infrastructure. Um long-term, they're
(01:16:59)
absolutely going to be a top five
(01:17:00)
trading partner for the United States
(01:17:01)
unless we absolutely muck it up. Uh
(01:17:03)
they're fascists, so we have to keep
(01:17:05)
that in mind. Um just because they're
(01:17:07)
they're good at what we need them to be
(01:17:09)
good at doesn't mean they're wonderful
(01:17:10)
people. their government's kind of
(01:17:12)
goooo. Um the one the other one is
(01:17:14)
Japan. Now Japan is a country that I
(01:17:16)
used to be concerned about because it
(01:17:18)
was another naval power. Uh most of the
(01:17:20)
resources they need are not local. So
(01:17:22)
they have to go out and get them. And in
(01:17:24)
a world where the United States cares
(01:17:25)
less about globalization, that means
(01:17:27)
that the Japanese by default have to be
(01:17:29)
more aggressive. That doesn't mean a
(01:17:31)
fight is inevitable or much less
(01:17:33)
imminent, but all of a sudden it is a
(01:17:35)
possibility.
(01:17:37)
And the Japanese under Trump won came to
(01:17:41)
the United States to cut a deal on the
(01:17:43)
future and basically signed a deal that
(01:17:45)
was mixed economic and security uh needs
(01:17:49)
and basically gave in to Trump on
(01:17:50)
everything they cared about. And so they
(01:17:53)
thought that if they could sign a deal
(01:17:54)
with Donald Trump that they were in
(01:17:57)
because he was the most reactionary,
(01:18:00)
erratic American president we've ever
(01:18:01)
had. And they're like, if we can cut a
(01:18:03)
deal with him, we're good. Reasonable.
(01:18:05)
Trump 2 comes along, badmouths the deal
(01:18:08)
that Trump won cut, and all of a sudden
(01:18:11)
the Japanese are in the wind again. The
(01:18:13)
difference between eight years ago and
(01:18:15)
now is now the Japanese have two super
(01:18:18)
carriers that they didn't have 8 years
(01:18:20)
ago and all of a sudden they are a naval
(01:18:22)
superpower and they were already the
(01:18:24)
second most powerful naval power in the
(01:18:27)
world. And so now it matters a great
(01:18:31)
deal if this relationship falls on the
(01:18:34)
rocks.
(01:18:36)
So hopeful the Japanese would rather
(01:18:38)
have a deal than not have one. But
(01:18:41)
a lot of hard work was done by Trump to
(01:18:44)
get that deal and it worked and it stuck
(01:18:46)
and then he burned it.
(01:18:47)
>> Trump versus Trump.
(01:18:48)
>> Yeah,
(01:18:50)
>> Peter, you're great. I love speaking to
(01:18:52)
you. It's great to get an update,
(01:18:53)
apocalyptic as it may be. Uh,
(01:18:55)
>> welcome.
(01:18:55)
>> Let's bring this one into land. Where
(01:18:56)
should people go to keep up to date with
(01:18:57)
everything you've got going on?
(01:18:58)
>> Uh, zion.com. Zihan.com.
(01:19:01)
That's where you sign up for the
(01:19:02)
newsletter and the video logs and the
(01:19:03)
Patreon system. And there's a new book
(01:19:05)
in the works. It'll be out and about.
(01:19:06)
>> Fiction one. Congratulations.
(01:19:08)
>> Fiction. Yeah.
(01:19:10)
>> The end of the world fiction hopefully.
(01:19:12)
>> Awesome. Peter, I appreciate you, mate.
(01:19:15)
Congratulations. You made it to the end
(01:19:17)
of an episode. Your brain has not been
(01:19:19)
completely destroyed by the internet
(01:19:21)
just yet. Here's another one that you
(01:19:24)
should watch.
(01:19:26)
Go on.
