Biden chaos, Soft landing secured? AI sentiment turns bearish, French elections

1h 25m

(0:00) Bestie intros!

(4:29) Macro picture: Soft landing secured? Rate cut on the horizon? Plus: partisan economic perception

(20:48) AI sentiment turns bearish due to massive spend with little revenue

(40:51) A16Z's 20K GPU cluster

(46:41) Broad implications of France elections

(1:06:10) Hot swap update: President Biden holds firm as backers flee, press corps chaos, speed-run primary chances

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Referenced in the show:

https://x.com/teddyschleifer/status/1811423421861113915

https://www.cnbc.com/2024/07/11/cpi-inflation-report-june-2024.html

https://www.barrons.com/livecoverage/stock-market-today-071124/card/odds-of-a-september-rate-cut-jump-as-inflation-cools-Du34tNx5OPXwQpXrKTT2

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/UNRATE

https://www.google.com/finance/quote/SPY:NYSEARCA

https://ycharts.com/indicators/sp_500_pe_ratio

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-news-poll-analysis-americans-rate-economy-partisan-lens

https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20240709188/heres-how-far-the-dow-has-fallen-behind-the-sp-500-so-far-in-2024

https://youtu.be/R6hJh-OwoZw

https://www.sequoiacap.com/article/ais-600b-question

https://www.goldmansachs.com/intelligence/pages/gs-research/gen-ai-too-much-spend-too-little-benefit/report.pdf

https://www.theinformation.com/articles/andreessen-horowitz-is-building-a-stash-of-more-than-20-000-gpus-to-win-ai-deals

https://x.com/natfriedman/status/1668650915505803266

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13594307/french-election-candidates-drop-rn-le-pen-victory.html

https://x.com/CilComLFC/status/1810110921383010563

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/10/opinion/joe-biden-democratic-nominee.html

https://www.politico.com/newsletters/playbook/2024/07/11/what-obama-and-pelosi-are-doing-about-biden-00167520

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/disastrous-biden-campaign-fundraising-takes-major-hit-rcna161214

https://x.com/greenfield64/status/1811199262350532767

https://x.com/Olivianuzzi/status/1808924240529535352

https://x.com/peterjhasson/status/1811052411584164210

https://youtu.be/kOeARghNIaY

https://www.semafor.com/article/07/07/2024/blitz-primary-could-open-up-democratic-race-if-biden-drops-out

Press play and read along

Runtime: 1h 25m

Transcript

Speaker 1 Foctua! He's ready to go. Is that official merch? I got it online, so I hope she's getting royalties.

Speaker 1 I hope it's not a Fughazi. A Fugazi? Fugazi? What's up with your outfit, JK? You going on Fox News again? Dude,

Speaker 1 he didn't. He just signed on to become Deuteronomy every week.

Speaker 1 I'm a contributor.

Speaker 1 You're a contributor.

Speaker 1 They're paying me. He's hysterical.
Wait, what? For real. For real.

Speaker 1 Yeah, he's the newest contributor oh my god that's incredible do they know you have tds

Speaker 1 business allows me no they they're looking for a moderate they want a moderate independent thinker and they love no strakanishtrakanis he has to finish this in two hours because he's taping with jesse waters oh my god i honestly i will say that i i saw both of your appearances on jesse waters and i thought you crushed both of them so totally you were excellent i think it's actually a good move for them i like the idea sacks you would love for me to be a contributor on fox i would You would.

Speaker 1 I'm pulling your leg. I'm pulling your leg.
I'm pulling your leg. They haven't made the other.
They haven't made the other one. I want your training to continue, young Paduan.

Speaker 1 Oh, really? This is like I will bring balance to the force? Yes, yes.

Speaker 1 You're the chosen one.

Speaker 2 You are my brother, Anakin. You are supposed to bring balance to the force, Anakin.

Speaker 2 Let your winners ride.

Speaker 2 Rainman David Sachs.

Speaker 2 I'm going on.

Speaker 2 And instead, we open source it to the fans fans and they just go crazy with it. Love you west night, queen of king.

Speaker 3 All right, everybody, welcome back to the number one podcast in the world. It's been confirmed by

Speaker 3 the CEO of Beep, who told us we are the Beep podcast on his platform. It's episode 186

Speaker 3 from the

Speaker 3 home office in Italy, the chairman dictator Shamaf Polyhapatea.

Speaker 2 How you doing, brother?

Speaker 3 Hello, Jason.

Speaker 2 How are you?

Speaker 3 We're good. We're good.
We can see that we are definitely in July now because we have one button to go for August.

Speaker 2 And so

Speaker 2 it's kind of like the sundial.

Speaker 3 You know, the Greeks, we created the sundial, math, plumbing, philosophy, democracy, all these great things.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 3 the Italians, you guys created bare chests.

Speaker 5 Can I tell you how good Italian white wine is? on a hot, humid day?

Speaker 5 It may be the closest thing to ambrosia in

Speaker 5 modern society. It's just so good.

Speaker 3 Is that your sports drink? It's just like you get off the

Speaker 3 picture. You're on like a treadmill.

Speaker 5 I drink so much white wine during the summertime and I eat gelato every day. And I tend to still lose a couple pounds by the time I get home.

Speaker 2 A lot of walking, a lot of walking.

Speaker 2 Let me ask you this.

Speaker 3 Have you ever had a glass of wine while working out? Has that happened? Have you ever been tempted?

Speaker 2 To be honest.

Speaker 2 People brought wine to the gym. I knew it.

Speaker 2 I knew it. That's the level of.

Speaker 3 Did you open the wine bottle in the gym or did you just like

Speaker 2 the glass?

Speaker 5 No, I opened it. It had to breathe.
I went and then I had somebody just bring me a little sippy poops just so I could see if it was opening up properly. Okay.

Speaker 3 Were you on the treadmill or were you doing weights? Are you on the weight bench when you sipped?

Speaker 5 Yeah, I was pushing weight.

Speaker 3 Okay, pushing weight. Okay.
Back in 88. Okay.
And getting ready, according to reports, I don't know if we can talk about this, but David Sachs is in the think tank getting ready for his RNC debut.

Speaker 3 How are you, Rainman? Yeah, definitely, definitely giving a keynote.

Speaker 6 Well, I wasn't supposed to talk about that, but I saw that someone leaked it to the New York Times this morning, so it's out there. Okay.
And yeah, I'm going to be speaking there next week.

Speaker 3 Great. Any theme that you're going for? You can give us a little idea of maybe a theme or two that you want to.

Speaker 6 There is a theme, but I don't want to talk about it yet. I'm not supposed to talk about it.
I don't even say I'm doing it, but it got out there, so I guess there's no hiding it.

Speaker 3 So we'll keep the cards close to the chest. And

Speaker 3 from

Speaker 3 the mountains at the beep,

Speaker 3 beep, Benny can talk about your Sultan of Science looking oddly not pale. You got a little sun there, brother.
Looking good, Dave Freebrig.

Speaker 4 A lot of outdoor sunning happening last couple of weeks. Sunnings.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 4 Enjoying the vitamin D.

Speaker 3 All right, gentlemen, let's get to the docket. There's a lot to talk about.

Speaker 3 Let's start with macro. We haven't talked macro.
Everybody wants us to talk a little macro. And I got a lot of news today.
The big question is: has the soft landing been secured?

Speaker 3 Obviously, stocks are still surging records again this week. Last week, all the jobs seem to have burned off, and unemployment is moving up.
That was one of Jay Powell's major efforts.

Speaker 3 And all the STEMI savings, as you pointed out, Shamath, are long gone. And today, the big news, CPI came in at 3%.
Perhaps inflation has been cracked. Here's your chart, gentlemen.

Speaker 3 Economists were expecting 3.1, so the print was meaningfully cooler than expected. And CPI actually fell 10 bips on a month-on-month basis.

Speaker 3 Obviously, when you see that three handle, that is year over year.

Speaker 3 And this is the first time we had month-over-month CPI decrease since May of 2020. So lowest CPI in three years, Jay-Powell said.

Speaker 3 The Fed doesn't need, he said this earlier this week, he doesn't need to see the 2% inflation to start the cuts. Obviously, I guess he wants to steer or speed up going into the turn.

Speaker 3 So, September cut looks highly likely. If you look at the prediction markets, Fed funds, futures now see an 89% chance of at least one rate cut by September.
That's up from 73%

Speaker 3 before the print, according to FedWatch. That's a tool that tracks interest rate traders.
We discussed the Fed wanting to see employment and savings cool.

Speaker 3 Well, in June, unemployment was 4.1%, the highest since 2021, up from 4% in May. Here's the stunning chart of unemployment since 1948.

Speaker 3 In April 2023, unemployment bottomed out at 3.4%, the lowest since any of us were born in 1969.

Speaker 3 And you can see here there's been an uptick from this incredible historic low. So soft landing appears to be working.
The jobs market slowing down.

Speaker 3 Inflation has dropped, tempered, and the market continues to hit all those all-time highs. S p up 26% since last year.

Speaker 3 Mostly, of course, thanks to NVIDIA's record-breaking performance, but also Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, a lot of the

Speaker 3 Fang, Magnificent 7.

Speaker 3 So I guess, Shamath, let's just start with you. Has the soft landing been secured?

Speaker 5 I mean, it's pretty pretty incredible, actually, but it looks like

Speaker 5 there's a really good chance that it has.

Speaker 5 I think the bigger question, though, is if we are on the verge of a real contraction in the economy.

Speaker 5 And I think there's been enough people that have warned.

Speaker 5 You have to remember, like, even though the stock market for seven companies is hitting all-time highs, the stock market for every other company that isn't those seven companies have not. And

Speaker 5 that really is about just the broad-based demand in the economy. So yeah, I think that inflation is contracting, but it could be contracting for a combination of reasons.
One is because

Speaker 5 we have had high rates for a long time, but the other part is now people are unemployed. There is no money.

Speaker 5 And the question is whether you have some sort of contraction economically that is measured by a recession or not. I think that's the really big question.
What happens in the next couple of quarters?

Speaker 5 Do we have a little mini recession or not?

Speaker 3 Okay. Freeberg, your thoughts, and then we'll go to Sachs.

Speaker 4 I think the market's priced in a lot of the expectation already. If you look at the PE chart on the SP 500 going back five years, let's pull this one up real quick.

Speaker 4 You can see that we peaked out, obviously, in 2020, 2021, where we had a big boom with all the stimulus money coming in.

Speaker 4 All the money found its way into the markets during the end of the Zerp era. And then there was the slow wind down as we started to hike rates.
And then rate hikes peaked.

Speaker 4 And now, despite the fact that rate hikes have stopped and there have been conversations about when the reversal will happen, the market's already started to price in that reversal.

Speaker 4 So, with respect to like market valuations, we have still seen a rather significant increase in the PE ratio across the SP 500.

Speaker 4 Now, to Chamal's point, a large percentage of that is contributed to by the top seven tech companies that are driving that ratio inflation.

Speaker 4 But a lot of the market makers have already started to take action, expecting the rate cuts to come in, as you point out, JKL, 90% plus likelihood of rate cuts happening this year.

Speaker 4 So I don't know how much market action we will see, but there has been a lot of conversation from DC about the Fed should reset expectations on inflation from 2% to 3%. And if they did that,

Speaker 4 that becomes the new normal. And we're never going to get back to 2%, at least in this current kind of era.

Speaker 4 That might be the era that we start.

Speaker 4 Oh, really?

Speaker 2 People people are talking about that?

Speaker 3 Talking about that, Freeberg, of that like

Speaker 4 that's been a big push is that the Jerome Powell mandate of 2% inflation

Speaker 4 may be an expectation that cannot be met given the amount of stimulus that went into the economy during COVID, that it could take a decade to earn its way out.

Speaker 4 As a result, we will not see a normalized contraction of that capital coming out of the markets in a way that will get us back down to 2% inflation for the time being.

Speaker 4 And I just saw a presentation by a bunch of food company executives recently, and they took 13 to 15% price hikes last year. And you've heard Elizabeth Warren kind of chime on about this.

Speaker 4 But the reality is that inflation is not just in the U.S., but around the world, and it affects the U.S. markets as well, because a lot of U.S.

Speaker 4 companies have had to raise prices because of their dependence on labor and materials and commodities from other countries that are inflating.

Speaker 3 They call this the inputs, right? This is what they say, the inputs.

Speaker 4 Exactly. And because of the way that the globalized economy works today, the inflation around the world is going to continue to buoy inflation in the U.S., even if we get our house in order.

Speaker 4 So it's very unlikely that we get back to a two-handle, you know, at least in this kind of era. And as a result, you'll probably see

Speaker 4 the market kind of assume that we're going to be at a 3% kind of inflation level for quite some time.

Speaker 3 It's very interesting, the obsession with the two. I brought this up on the show.

Speaker 3 The 2% handle and this target came from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, this guy, Roger Douglas, Minister of Finance.

Speaker 3 And he came up with it because they just asked him, like, well, what's a healthy one? And he came up with that. And then everybody adopted it.

Speaker 5 The Dunder Mifflin Inflation Index.

Speaker 2 Basically, it's just sitting out there. Okay, so for a completely objective, nonpartisan view of all this incredible economic data, we go to our RNC correspondent, David Sachs.

Speaker 3 Throw a wet blanket on this incredible news.

Speaker 6 I'm as nonpartisan as you are, J. Cow.

Speaker 2 Exactly.

Speaker 6 Don't pretend like you don't have a candidate in this race.

Speaker 2 I am a moderate independent, as we all know from my Fox News hits.

Speaker 6 Yes, exactly. Fox News has hired you to provide the opposite point of view.
In any event,

Speaker 6 sorry, what's your question?

Speaker 2 Just going down the middle here, joking, obviously, but a little bit.

Speaker 3 But this is just

Speaker 3 rate the Fed's reaction to this. It seems like, you know, the Fed's supposed to be independent.
Obviously,

Speaker 3 this Fed chair has worked across administration. So

Speaker 3 we've said here very critically, they got started too late. They should have got ahead of this.
But I mean, rate their performance since since then.

Speaker 3 Do you think they're nailing this and there's going to be a soft landing? What you have concerns? You're optimistic about the economy and how they've handled it?

Speaker 6 Well, the Fed's mistake was just waiting way too long to react to the inflation. And they didn't just wait nine months after the first inflation print came in.

Speaker 6 That was too high before they started raising rates. They continued QE for six more months.

Speaker 6 So when you talk about all this stimulus that's still in the economy that they can't seem to get rid of, a lot of that was created by the Fed's QE in the second half of 2021.

Speaker 6 That should never have happened. Since then, they did what they had to do, which is they increased rates to solve inflation.
That's what you do.

Speaker 6 And yes, it does seem to be working, but we still have inflation being persistently high at 3%.

Speaker 6 And so now, like Freeberg's saying, they're trying to change the goalpost to somehow normalize 3%.

Speaker 6 We should just understand that what that means is permanently higher interest rates because the Fed has to offer, or under normal circumstances, has to offer a return above the rate of inflation.

Speaker 6 So whatever that return is, 1%, 2%,

Speaker 6 you stack that on top of the inflation rate. So in other words, let's say the Fed wanted to target a 2% real return.

Speaker 6 That means that the interest rate would be 5% with the 3% rate of inflation. Whereas if inflation could be managed down to 2%,

Speaker 6 you would have a 4% interest rate. And that persistently, if we're talking permanently higher interest rate, will create a drag on the economy because lower interest rates create more investment.

Speaker 6 They reduce the hurdle rates to take risk, whereas higher interest rates, as we've seen, create drag on equities and drag on investment.

Speaker 6 So if they redefine the inflation rate to three instead of two, there will be long-term consequences from that. That is not a free thing to do.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 6 So that would be like one part of the answer. The other thing is just, yeah, look, inflation going from 3.1 to 3.0 is positive.

Speaker 6 It's good news, better than it going from 3.1 to 3.2, but we're talking about 0.1%.

Speaker 6 And I just think people get a little too excited reading into these prints when these are not huge changes in numbers.

Speaker 6 I do think that once the inflation rate starts with a two-handle, that psychologically, I think, will be a big change for people.

Speaker 3 Psychology has so much to do with this. I thought I was doing a little research on it, why it's so contentious and there's so much of a lack of consensus about it.
Nick, pull up this chart.

Speaker 3 I wanted to share it with you guys. This is basically a psychological phenomenon called partisan economic perception.
And this has been studied for some time.

Speaker 3 And what's really interesting about it is it shows what percentage of people who are Democrats and Republicans here in the United States of America say the economy is good.

Speaker 3 And if you look at Clinton, And, you know, he got to be president at the helm during the internet revolution and this incredible economic boom. He was obviously so centrist, right?

Speaker 3 He was appealed to both sides of the aisle. And you had this very tight

Speaker 3 consensus that the economy was good. Democrats were maybe three or four percentage points above Republicans in that perception.

Speaker 3 And then Bush came in and all of a sudden Democrats hated Bush so much that they perceived the same economy.

Speaker 3 2000, and you obviously have the dot-com bust there. So they both went down in unison, especially after the Great Recession.
But you have this

Speaker 3 disparity that comes up, Chamath, where you have 25 points between how they perceive it.

Speaker 3 Obama, obviously, Democrats were incredibly enthusiastic about Obama, effusive even, but Republicans hated him with a passion, right? I mean, that was really when Fox News started to get cooking.

Speaker 3 And then you look at Trump, same exact phenomenon. It flips.
Under Trump, 80%

Speaker 3 of

Speaker 3 Republicans think, oh, the economy is good. And then Democrats say it's not good.
And that plummets and you get this big dispersion.

Speaker 3 There are two moments in time, Freeberg, where, or three, when you start to see the consensus get tighter, and that's during a crash. So there's your dot-com crash, great

Speaker 3 financial crisis, and an election. Yeah.
And a great, that's a very good point, actually. I didn't notice that.
And then also during the pandemic.

Speaker 2 So you have three crises.

Speaker 4 This is a great chart.

Speaker 3 So Freeberg, you know, looking at this, I think it explains so much of

Speaker 3 the tension in the country country that we can't even agree on, you know, hey, is the economy good? It's just everything is perceived through your partisan lens. What's your takeaway from this?

Speaker 3 Is it that we just don't run moderates anymore like Clinton?

Speaker 4 Well, look, I mean, at the end of the day, if people feel like they're progressing, they feel happier. If they feel like they're not progressing, they're unhappy, regardless of their absolute state.

Speaker 4 You know, we talked about this with Jonathan Haight on our interview show. We talked about this on the show in the past.

Speaker 4 I think that there's some some studies that show that if income growth is not roughly 10% a year, you get an unhappiness indicator.

Speaker 4 And then there are other associations with that, like, am I improving the size of my house? Am I able to buy a new car? Am I able to like progress in my career and make more money?

Speaker 4 All these factors kind of play in. And much of this ends up being buoyed by

Speaker 4 the political ideology of the candidate that's in the office and how they are popularizing what they are doing to help you progress, even if you are or are not actually progressing.

Speaker 4 So then people hear the political leadership say, this is what we're doing. You associate that as being positive or negative.

Speaker 4 If you're a Republican or you're a Democrat, you associate it as one or the other. And so you have this perception of progression without actually having economic progression be tied to it.

Speaker 4 So the reality gets decoupled. So I think

Speaker 4 it's an excellent chart to kind of highlight that fact.

Speaker 4 I'm not sure how much it ties to this inflationary issue that we're dealing with right now, but I will tell you that, and I'll restate this again, much of the inflation, like I think grocery prices are up 30 plus percent.

Speaker 4 Nick, you could probably pull this up since COVID.

Speaker 3 That is, you're correct, one of the sticky points, you know, because this CPI, you have to parse it, like you're saying, and groceries.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 4 The more globalized the businesses are that are providing the goods or services to us, the more likely they are to need to hike prices to make up for the inflationary cost structure in their business because of their global presence.

Speaker 5 You want to hear an interesting factoid?

Speaker 3 Yes, please, Kashmir.

Speaker 5 There was an article in Bloomberg. I sent it to Nick, but people have been tracking the SP 500 index versus the equal weighted index.

Speaker 5 So when you calculate the SP 500 index, you weight it for the market cap. So the top seven or eight companies obviously get a lot more weight in it.

Speaker 5 And so they look at the spread between that index and an equal weighted index where every 500 companies are, you know, the 500 companies are each equal.

Speaker 5 And what's interesting is the spread right now is the most extreme

Speaker 5 since March of 2000, right before the dot-com.

Speaker 2 Jesus Christ. Thanks, Jamat.

Speaker 5 Well, this is Bloomberg's data, so I'm just repeating it.

Speaker 5 I read that article, but that's incredible. It's a tie-in to the AI thing, I guess, that we're going to talk about soon.

Speaker 3 Next, yeah.

Speaker 5 We could be at the end of just an enormous hype cycle here where we have to contract the equity market.

Speaker 5 That's probably not a bad thing, by the way, because as Sach said, one of the things that you have to do is I think you have to underwrite to a rate of return.

Speaker 5 And right now, nobody knows really what to do because

Speaker 5 valuations would tell you that you should price to the low end, but then it's not really clear what the risk-free rate of return should be. So everybody's just sort of like

Speaker 5 they're shrugging and their arms are in the air and nobody knows what to do. So if you really want to get the economy moving at some point, you're going to have to reset something.

Speaker 5 You're going to have to reset rates, or you're going to have to set the equity risk premium in the stock market.

Speaker 5 You're going to have to reset people's expectations around

Speaker 5 what is actually happening in the economy. And right now, we're in this limbo where none of those things have been decided.
But there are all of these weird

Speaker 5 moments, like data points that you could use to kind of just justify your bias, quite honestly. But the point is that I think there's a lot of question marks right now, not a lot of answers.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 3 That phenomenon you were talking about previously is relative deprivation, Freeberg. It's the phenomenon where you compare yourself to other people and you feel like I'm getting screwed here.

Speaker 3 Sax, what's your take on

Speaker 3 this AI bubble? Because I got some data. I'm about to pull up on it, but let's just get there right now.
How much of this

Speaker 3 boom that we're seeing in the stock market is this AI

Speaker 3 bubble?

Speaker 6 Well, a lot of the boom is driven by these AI stocks, notably NVIDIA. I mean, if you take out the AI stocks, I'm not sure the market is up, or maybe it's up a little bit.

Speaker 6 I mean, a huge part of the gain is from these, I don't know, top five, top seven tech stocks.

Speaker 2 Is it a bubble?

Speaker 6 I think that's going a little too far. I mean, I personally think the AI wave is real.

Speaker 6 I think the question is whether the level of investment that we're seeing going into cloud service infrastructure is sustainable.

Speaker 6 There's a huge build out happening right now, many, many billions of dollars building out these

Speaker 6 new

Speaker 6 cloud service centers or cloud infrastructure

Speaker 6 data centers based on GPUs instead of CPUs. And I think it's a good question about whether that's sustainable.

Speaker 6 I do think that one of the things that's going on is that the chips are really expensive. I mean, these GPUs from NVIDIA, what they're like $30,000

Speaker 6 per GPU.

Speaker 6 Right. And part of the reason for that is the scarcity.
They haven't been able to produce as much as there's demand for. And so they're commanding a premium right now.

Speaker 3 And just to be clear, they're not just a chip. I mean, people think they're like a chip.
They think something you hold in the palm of your hand. They're like a racked server that's like,

Speaker 6 yeah, it's got like thousands of components in it. It's a very complicated product to make.
In any event, they're very expensive. And so it's very expensive to build out this new infrastructure.

Speaker 6 I do think that over time, the price of these chips just has to come down. It just doesn't make sense that they'd be so expensive.

Speaker 6 Just as production increases and they don't have this rate limit on the supply, then I think the price should come down and the cost of this infrastructure should normalize a bit.

Speaker 3 Well, and you heard it here first on the all-in-pot. Here's episode 181 six weeks ago.
No Shfrikanis wasn't involved in this one, but here's Jamathan Freeberg.

Speaker 7 You cannot spend this kind of money and show no incremental revenue potential. So while this is incredible for NVIDIA,

Speaker 7 the chicken is coming home to Roost.

Speaker 7 Because if you do not start seeing revenue flow to the bottom line of these companies that are spending $26 billion a quarter, the market cap of NVIDIA is not what the market cap of NVIDIA should be.

Speaker 7 And all of these other companies are going to get punished for spending this kind of money.

Speaker 7 Where are all these newfangled things that we're supposed to see that justifies $100 billion of chip spend a year, $200 billion of energy spend, $100 billion of all this other stuff.

Speaker 7 We're now spending $750 billion. This is on the order of a national

Speaker 7 transfer payment. And we've seen nothing to show for it except that you can mimic somebody's voice.
It doesn't all hang together yet.

Speaker 4 You know, the general statement might be made that perhaps the first AI mini bubble is bursting a bit.

Speaker 4 And particularly with respect to the accelerated expectations that public market investors had for public market technology stocks, that perhaps now is the time for a bit of a reckoning, that perhaps this isn't going to happen at the same margin level or the pace that folks had modeled.

Speaker 5 Correct.

Speaker 4 And this is going to cause a bit of a setback.

Speaker 3 And so I think inspired in part by that, David Kahn from Sequoia Capital, legendary venture firm here in Silicon Valley, published a blog titled AI $600 billion Question.

Speaker 3 Kahn said there was a $500 billion revenue hole when considering AI CapEx levels.

Speaker 3 He got this number by calculating that companies need to show around $600 billion in AI revenue to justify projected CapEx levels in Q4.

Speaker 3 And he generously assumes Google, Microsoft, Apple Meta, Tesla, and others will generate $100 billion annually combined. That's pretty generous, and that still leaves a $500 billion hole.

Speaker 3 Here's the NVIDIA data center run rate revenue, as you can see. Q4 of 2023, $50

Speaker 3 billion and now $150 billion. And then you have the data center facilities being built and the cost to operate those, implied data center AI spend, and then, of course, your software margin.

Speaker 3 Khan said he also thinks that the GPU shortage already peaked last year. We'll get to that later.

Speaker 3 On June 25th, a couple of weeks ago, Goldman published a 31-page report called Gen AI, Too Much Spend, Too Little Benefit. So you heard it here first on the almond pod.

Speaker 3 And I think everybody is kind of catching up with this theme. Companies are going to spend $1 trillion, according to the report, on AI CapX over the next several years.
Usually that's three to five.

Speaker 3 And we use the word several. AI productivity gains are limited in the near to midterm, the next 10 years, and AI's ROI is likely significantly limited due to costs.

Speaker 3 The costs of AI are so high and the red potential is so unclear that it's a chance the economics never make sense. Here's a choice quote, and then I'll get the reaction from the team.

Speaker 3 Replacing low-wage jobs with tremendously costly technology is basically the polar opposite of the prior technology transitions I've witnessed in my 30 years of closely following the tech industry.

Speaker 3 And that's Goldman's head of global equity research.

Speaker 3 It's an interesting concept here, Jamath, that you're saying, like, hey, making like fun images or, you know, maybe rewriting your blog post, but that's low, that's low wage work.

Speaker 3 So what are your thoughts on this report? These two reports, yeah.

Speaker 5 Well, I think we're all converging on the same realization, which is you can't spend a trillion dollars and only have toy apps to show for it. So I think we've all been amazed by these AI demos.

Speaker 5 I think the four of us have talked pretty incessantly about it now for 18 plus months, ever since we saw the first open AI demos. So that's great.

Speaker 5 And the underlying technology, I think, is really important. But it's also

Speaker 5 important to acknowledge that the underlying technology has enormous gaps.

Speaker 5 There's gaps in the quality of the products that can be created to not have hallucinations.

Speaker 5 Those gaps are too large right now for them to be used reliably in production settings unless you have a very defined scope.

Speaker 5 If you have a defined scope though, the implementation costs are not nearly what needs the level of spend to support. So there's just a big mismatch.
Second is that we have a huge problem with NVIDIA.

Speaker 5 And I'll just kind of say the quiet part out loud, which is you can't spend this kind of money to have technology lock-in to one hardware vendor. And that makes no sense.

Speaker 5 And what you're seeing now is that Amazon, Google, Microsoft, AMD, Intel, a plethora of startups, Grok, everybody trying to make now different hardware solutions.

Speaker 5 The problem though that that creates is that we have this massive lock-in right now because the code is littered with all these NVIDIA-specific ways of implementing access to GPUs.

Speaker 5 That's not sustainable. So

Speaker 5 we're in a bit of an existential thrash. And I think the only way that we're going to get around this is to do a little bit of a reset.

Speaker 5 And I think that's going to touch a lot of startups that have already taken down way too much money at really insane valuations.

Speaker 5 Part of that was just because we needed, I guess the market wanted a place to believe in again after the crypto meltdown and after all of the other SaaS meltdown and

Speaker 5 all of the other stuff that we've gone through. So yeah, I think that we are in a bit of a reckoning right now.
It's going to be a complicated

Speaker 5 couple of quarters at a minimum and probably a complicated year to sort out who's actually real.

Speaker 3 It's an interesting psychological phenomenon there, Friedberg:

Speaker 3 the capital alligators, the tech industry, the entrepreneurs, they want to believe in something. And the previous paradigm shifts were ending.
And here we are, a new paradigm shift.

Speaker 3 Perhaps we're such an efficient, capitalistic machine now that we

Speaker 3 almost like process stuff super quickly in some ways, Friedberg. You know, we deploy massive capital, we try to solve huge problems.

Speaker 3 I mean, and then maybe we hit the reckoning in the trowel of despair that we talked about, you know, many times,

Speaker 3 innovator's dilemma,

Speaker 3 you know, you know, crossing the chasm kind of style. So, what are your thoughts on Shamat's point there or any other points you might have?

Speaker 4 There's a cold hard truth here,

Speaker 4 which is there is a ton of capital that was raised during the COVID bubble era and the Zerp era that needed a place to go.

Speaker 4 And a lot of the traditional businesses, traditional business models, traditional in the technology sense, SaaS and a lot of the biotech stuff, it all became,

Speaker 4 it became uninvestable. Then there's a lot of money in the public markets that was sitting on the sidelines, that was sitting in treasuries and so on.
So every dollar is looking for growth.

Speaker 4 And there's a lot of dollars still sitting around out there from the Zerp era and coming into this kind of post-Zerp era, looking for a place for growth.

Speaker 4 And there is very little growth, as we talked about with the S ⁇ P 493, not being very performative with respect to growth and revenue and having great outlook for the next five years.

Speaker 4 So then when there is a glimmer of upside, there's a glimmer of opportunity, even if it's just painting a picture of a growth story, all the capital drives into it.

Speaker 4 And we've all heard stories about the Series A startups in AI getting bid up to a hundred million dollar valuation.

Speaker 4 And I've seen a couple of these where people have pitched me things on like protein modeling, AI startups. And it's literally like two guys from Meta and OpenAI that left and started this company.

Speaker 4 And they get, they raise 30 on a 123 or something. And it's just two guys building a model.
And that's because that capital needs to find a place where it can tell itself a growth story.

Speaker 4 And so I think that we're still dealing with the capital hangover from Zerp and the fact that there's a dearth of areas to invest for real growth that has allowed the AI bubble to kind of grow as quickly as it has.

Speaker 4 And now, as Jamarth points out, we are kind of rationalizing that back. And I do think that there's going to be a reset.

Speaker 4 Now, I'll also say that the Goldman report, which I read and some of the other analyses that have been done, I think there was some commentary or some analysis that, hey, it costs me six times as much as having an analyst do this work.

Speaker 4 Like the energy cost of the AI is still so high. The actual performance of the model is not good.
But what that fails to write, it's right and wrong.

Speaker 4 It's right in the sense that, yes, it is more expensive today, and the return on investment is not there today.

Speaker 4 It's wrong in that it ignores the performative model improvements that we're seeing in nearly any metric over the past couple of months.

Speaker 4 Every few months, as we know, we see new models, new improvements, new architectures, new ways of leveraging the chips to actually drive a lower token cost, to drive lower energy costs per answer, lower energy costs per run.

Speaker 4 And so every metric that matters is improving.

Speaker 4 So if you fast forward another 24, 36 months, I do think that there's a great reason to be optimistic that there's going to be extraordinary ROI based on the infrastructure that's being built.

Speaker 4 It's a question of are you going to get payback before the next cycle of infrastructure needs to be made and everything comes back in.

Speaker 4 We saw this during the dot-com boom where a lot of people built out data centers.

Speaker 4 And by the time they were actually able to make money on those data centers, it was like, hey, all the new telco equipment, all the new servers need to be put in and everything got written off.

Speaker 4 So there is a big cape kind of question mark here, but I do think that the fundamental economics of AI will be proven over the next couple of quarters.

Speaker 5 Yeah, I mean,

Speaker 5 I don't think it's going to be the next couple of quarters, quite honestly.

Speaker 5 I do think in the next couple of decades and in the next couple of years, what I would hope ambitiously is that there are a few really useful proof points where companies are making revenue solving very specific defined problems where, quite honestly, you're taking workloads of X and making it X over 10, right?

Speaker 5 And I think that that's possible. But I think this generalized idea that all of this spend is going to have a good ROI, I think is pretty wishful thinking.

Speaker 3 Sachs, you want to maybe give a short thoughts here?

Speaker 3 Bubble, do we work our way out of it? Are we overspending? Or is this all manifest destiny? You know, if you build it, it will come kind of situation. We throw all this capital there.

Speaker 3 We make a lot of progress on these projects and something comes out the other end, as messy as it is.

Speaker 6 I think that's what's likely to happen. I'm much more bullish than you guys about this investment that's being made.
Remember that when the internet got started in the 90s, it was via dial-up.

Speaker 6 I mean, you literally had to have a modem and you would dial up the internet and it was incredibly slow. Photo sharing didn't even work, so social networking wasn't possible.

Speaker 6 And basically what happened next was that the telecom companies spent a ton of money building out broadband and people started upgrading to broadband. Then we had the dot-com crash.

Speaker 6 Everyone thought that telecom companies had wasted billions of dollars investing in all this broadband infrastructure. And it turned out that, no, they were right to do that.

Speaker 6 It just took a while for that to get used.

Speaker 6 And this this is a pretty common pattern with technological revolutions: is that you can have a bubble in the short term, but then it gets justified in the mid to long term.

Speaker 6 The build out of the railroads in the United States, another example of this. We had huge railroad bubbles, but it turned out that that investment was all worthwhile.

Speaker 6 So I kind of think that's what's going to happen with AI. I mean, I do think that there's already enough, let's call it realness to the applications.
I mean, I'll give you three examples.

Speaker 6 Number one, Open AI. I mean, OpenAI is effectively semantic search, right?

Speaker 6 It's a different kind of search engine where it understands the question you're asking and gives you an answer instead of blue links. And they're already at, what is it?

Speaker 6 We talked about this previously, 3.4 billion in revenue.

Speaker 3 Consumer at 20 bucks and enterprise at like 30 bucks a month. And then there's also the API.

Speaker 6 Yeah, so you could tell.

Speaker 6 I mean, this company has only been around for two years with a product on the market and it's doubling year over year. So that's just example number one, right?

Speaker 6 I mean, what's the most valuable application on the internet until now? It's been Google, right? And so

Speaker 6 search. And so you have a different kind of search now that I'm not saying it's a one-for-one replacement, it's also a new market.

Speaker 6 But my point is just you already have a very powerful application in the form of this semantic search, which OpenAI is currently dominating.

Speaker 6 The second one, I think, will be when Apple comes out with iPhone 16,

Speaker 6 you know, with LLM-powered Siri, assuming they do a decent job with that,

Speaker 6 it's going to lead to a huge upgrade cycle. I mean, I'm still on an iPhone 13 because I haven't seen a reason to upgrade.
I will definitely upgrade to the iPhone 16. Snap upgrade.
Snap upgrade.

Speaker 6 Snap upgrade for that, assuming that they roll their own LLM and use that to power Siri and don't give my data to a third-party LLM. And there's been mixed reports about that.

Speaker 3 You don't trust Sam Altman with

Speaker 3 your iPhone backup?

Speaker 6 I don't want Apple sharing any of my data,

Speaker 6 which they obtain by being the operating system with a third-party LLM. But

Speaker 6 a bunch of viewers of the show posted in the comments that I had made a mistake on this and that Apple was rolling its own LLM to power Siri, and they would only go to OpenAI

Speaker 6 if

Speaker 6 their own LLM can't do it for some reason. I'm just going to turn that feature off.

Speaker 6 But in any event, so assuming Apple gets that right, everyone's going to upgrade their iPhones.

Speaker 6 The third app is, look, you know, we're using LLMs to power glue, and the results aren't always consistently awesome.

Speaker 6 I would say the results are kind of like a B-plus right now, but you do get some really great results.

Speaker 3 This is a strong start for you.

Speaker 4 It's a strong start.

Speaker 6 Yeah. And, you know, in a year or so, we're going to be at the next-gen version of all the models.

Speaker 6 You're going to be at, I'm sure, you know, ChatGPT-5 will be out and then the next version of Claude and so forth. At that point, it's going to be an A-plus.

Speaker 3 I got to tell you, I've been using Claude and ChatGPT 4.0 and it is extraordinary how fast they've fixed going to the web to get information.

Speaker 3 It used to be arduous and painful to get updated information. And so I was like, hey, get me all of these.

Speaker 3 I think I may have told this story previously here on this week in startups, but I was talking about like I was doing research on salaries.

Speaker 3 And I said, just grab me all the information from Glassdoor, Indeed, high salary, low salary, average salary of these two different cities, put it in a table and give me the links. And it did it.

Speaker 3 And I was like, that's like a college education, educated person's job for 40 bucks an hour, call it, whatever it is, a 60, 70, 80,000 a year person. So I'm in the bullish cap with you, Sachs.

Speaker 3 I think it's being overbuilt, sure. But I think we're going to see a tipping point next year where a lot of labor arbitrage occurs.

Speaker 3 And what I mean by that is like people are figuring out ways to cut jobs or have one person do three jobs. And I'm seeing it across all the startups we invest in.

Speaker 3 I'm seeing it with Athena, the company we invested in. I mentioned earlier.

Speaker 3 And I'm really interested in robotics now, too. I think there's going to be some incredible gains with Optimus and some of the other robots that are occurring.

Speaker 3 And those things are only going to cost 20 grand. So

Speaker 3 this is going to be pretty evident.

Speaker 6 Yeah, look, I think the low-hanging fruit application-wise in the enterprise is chat with a knowledge base, chat with your knowledge bases. That's what people want, right? Yes.

Speaker 6 And we're still in the early stages of being able to connect your enterprise data to an LLM in a safe, compliant way. That's where a lot of activity is happening right now.

Speaker 3 And the compliant part means

Speaker 3 you're working in the tech or the marketing group and you don't

Speaker 3 search the HR department's data. Yeah.

Speaker 5 Guys, let me ask you just a general question, though.

Speaker 2 Okay.

Speaker 5 Like, we've spent a trillion dollars. Let's say that there's forward purchasing commits for, let's be generous and say only half that number.
So now there's 1.5 trillion.

Speaker 5 So we're $1.5 trillion in the J-curve.

Speaker 5 How much total revenue does the entire AI economy that's established today need to generate to pay that back plus some reasonable rate of return, revenue, at a fair multiple?

Speaker 5 And I think what I'm getting to is

Speaker 5 OpenAI is a good example of a company that's winning, but unless they somehow figure out a way to start making $50 billion, there's another $47 billion of revenue that's missing. That's my point.

Speaker 3 Yeah, I think they get there. I'll be totally honest.
And watching.

Speaker 5 No, no, I'm just saying that's like just for the last couple of years of spend. Yeah.

Speaker 3 I mean, there's so much dry powder sitting around at these large companies.

Speaker 5 I think it's capital as a weapon kind of situation, but it could be a big- That's a different explanation, which is we can just take the rate of return to zero because we have nothing better to do with the money.

Speaker 5 That's a fair answer as well, Jason.

Speaker 3 I mean, what are they going to do? Give a dividend? I mean, God forbid, right? Like, I mean, Facebook's already giving one. Apple's given one.

Speaker 3 So maybe, you know, I think that's how, and they can't do M ⁇ A because of Lina Khan.

Speaker 6 Yeah, look,

Speaker 6 where I think Jamath has a point is that these big tech companies are not building out all of this infrastructure because they've modeled out the ROI and it's extremely positive.

Speaker 6 They're doing it because it's an arms race. It's so strategic right now.

Speaker 6 to have these AI capabilities and to power the expected next generation of AI apps, they can't afford to let one of their competitors have that. They have to compete.

Speaker 6 So they're all at an arms reach with each other, bidding up the cost of these GPUs because they have to have that supply.

Speaker 3 It's like nukes. It's like nukes.
You never use them. You build them out.
It might be the good thing.

Speaker 6 Well, I mean, I think they're going to use them, but yeah, I mean, the point is that it's a zero-sum game. And if I let you have this GPU, I have one less GPU to use.

Speaker 5 What do you think of Andreessen, this article that Andreessen just turned on 20,000 GPUs?

Speaker 3 Jamath, to your point, it was reported earlier this week that Andreessen Horowitz, that's a very large venture capital firm here in the Bay Area, is building a 20,000 GPU cluster.

Speaker 3 We mentioned earlier, $20,000, $30,000 a GPU is what you can estimate there. So this is hundreds of millions of dollars to try to cut deals and win deals with AI startups.

Speaker 3 And so they stole this idea from Daniel Gross, which you probably don't know who that is, but.

Speaker 3 It's a company called Pioneer Labs and Matt Friedman from GitHub. They did this last year.
Same exact idea.

Speaker 3 They acquired 2,500 H100s and they gave their portfolio companies access to it in something called the Andromeda cluster. Really brilliant idea.
There's the tweet from Nat.

Speaker 3 It's not clear whether A16 is purchasing these or they're just going to pay for them on AWS or Google Cloud or some other provider.

Speaker 3 But if these were purchased, obviously hundreds of millions of dollars. What's your thought here? I won't go through all the details.
I'll just go right to your opinion, Jamaf.

Speaker 3 What's your thought on this? Yeah.

Speaker 5 A friend of mine who's a very successful debt fund manager,

Speaker 5 and I talked about it this week, a friend of the pod. I won't name check him, but he knows who he is.

Speaker 5 And I were talking about this.

Speaker 5 And basically, I think if you look at the most typical deal, so like, for example, the Core Weave deal, which was floating around, was something along the lines of 40% of the cost of all the GPUs was put up in cash and 60% was lent to Core Weave by a whole group of bankers.

Speaker 5 So assuming Andreessen was able to do roughly the same thing,

Speaker 5 the 20,000 GPU cluster at Collet, say 20 to 30,000 is between 400 and 600 million of cost.

Speaker 5 And if they get 60% of it financed, I hope they did, that still leaves 40% that they would have had to pay for, which you're still talking about

Speaker 5 $100 million plus. And so then the real question is, can they get enough equity back

Speaker 5 to make that $100 million investment worthwhile? And And just to put a fine point on this, if that's $100 million of management fees, the reality is that that's actually $2 billion of value, right?

Speaker 5 Because these management companies trade it, call it, say, 20 odd times.

Speaker 5 So what's so interesting about this is like you take $100 million of management fee, that's worth $2 billion of enterprise value, you dump it into these chips and cash.

Speaker 5 So whatever equity you get from these startups will need to make about $2 billion,

Speaker 5 plus a little bit to account for

Speaker 5 the time value of money.

Speaker 5 otherwise you were probably better off not doing this that's just the math i wonder if this is

Speaker 5 the 20 times math only makes sense if it's a hundred million a year in perpetuity all right if it's a one-time spend on the hundred million then it's just a hundred million well you also have to power these you have to put them in a data center there's a lot of cost to these there's a lot of ongoing costs yeah a lot of ongoing costs so let's just say they'll spend that another 20 or 30 million over the next 10 years my point is it's a drag on your enterprise value that's probably in the billion plus dollar range and so whatever equity you get needs to make up for that plus sum.

Speaker 5 And my only comment is that if you then factor in, Sachs, as you said before, the desire to get these NVIDIA chips down in price, but also to have hardware diversity,

Speaker 5 it's a really speculative bet. And you have to be really right.

Speaker 3 It's also a crazy conflicted bet, too, because NVIDIA was using these chips in the same fashion. They were using allocations to get investment allocations in companies and then paying them off.

Speaker 3 So now you have Andreessen buying them from NVIDIA. It's also convoluted.
Amazon was doing this as well with AWS, giving credits, et cetera. So tried and true strategy, but very strange.

Speaker 6 I don't think it's that weird a strategy.

Speaker 6 Because, I mean, look, it's definitely... I'm just saying it's weird because

Speaker 3 they're giving money to NVIDIA.

Speaker 5 I don't think you need to do this to build a successful venture firm.

Speaker 5 I mean, if you wanted to maximize the value of the entity, you would keep the 100 million for yourself because then some investor will pay you you a huge multiple for that.

Speaker 6 No, what I'm saying is that they're buying these chips and then they're effectively time sharing them out to portfolio companies. And so they're going to charge for their use.

Speaker 6 They're going to amortize this cost.

Speaker 2 They're going to charge back.

Speaker 3 You think they're going to charge back the startups.

Speaker 5 I'm just saying you have to see a path to make back what you're losing in enterprise value.

Speaker 3 I think this is brilliant for year 012, like Pioneer Labs was doing, because those people really don't have the money.

Speaker 3 If you're a viable concern, you can easily get the money to buy your own or rent your own. And we just said in the previous story that the glut and the wait is over for these.
So interesting.

Speaker 6 It depends on the rate of depreciation. If you buy these chips at a premium, because they're scarce right now, and then all of a sudden they rapidly depreciate in value, then you might lose money.

Speaker 6 On the other hand, if the current value of the investment remains stable, because they don't depreciate that rapidly, and then you can charge the cost back to the startups who are using the chips, then you know you break even.

Speaker 5 I think that's an excellent point.

Speaker 6 And it's basically a business development expense.

Speaker 2 I think

Speaker 2 this is a PR marketing.

Speaker 3 This is a PR marketing exercise and it worked. Well done, Mark, because we're talking about it.

Speaker 6 I think it's a bad idea at all. I mean, I think it's kind of interesting.

Speaker 3 I think they've gotten $100 million in marketing of it just by

Speaker 6 look, it appeals to a certain category of startup who needs the GPUs.

Speaker 6 I mean, just to be clear, like there's lots of AI applications that don't need direct access to GPUs because, you know, for example, we're using the cloud models and we're using the OpenAI.

Speaker 3 You're using the language model APIs, so it's abstract, but we don't need them.

Speaker 6 Yeah, we don't deal with GPUs. I mean, you have to be in the model business effectively to need direct access to the GPUs.

Speaker 3 As we wrap up here today, Freeberg, your thoughts? And you had mentioned in the group chat last minute, addition to the docket, you wanted to talk about the French elections. And I know Sachs was...

Speaker 3 tweeting about it because all the people who hate him were sending it to me.

Speaker 3 So I always know when he tweets about something spicy.

Speaker 4 Go ahead, Free Burke, what do you got?

Speaker 4 There was effectively a center and left alignment that created kind of a surprise upset to the right that was surging in the polls leading into this election in France.

Speaker 4 And as we all saw, there was a lot of celebration in the streets and some rioting and so on. But it was a real kind of surprise shift left in this kind of important vote that happened in France.

Speaker 4 And then

Speaker 4 the party stepped up and put forward these economic proposals.

Speaker 4 They said a 90% tax on income over 400,000 euro a year, a 14% mandatory wage increase, retirement age needs to be reduced to the age of 60 from 64, which obviously massively increases social spending, and that they want to put forward proposals to put in place price controls on things like food, electricity, gas, and petrol.

Speaker 4 So effectively intervening in kind of the free market pricing system. Last month in India, We also saw elections where the BJP did not get a majority.

Speaker 4 In Mexico, we saw Scheinbaum get elected elected with 60% of the vote, retaining the leftist government. Scheinbaum's platform

Speaker 4 is that the government's role is to really solve the economic inequality kind of throughout the country.

Speaker 4 She is a Jewish scientist who believes in technological progress, but her orientation is really around having institutions manage progress, not individuals in free markets.

Speaker 4 We've seen this broad across other places.

Speaker 4 In the UK, there was a big election in this past week, but I wanted to take a step back and just highlight that there is this kind of emerging tactical alliance that we've seen repeat a few times between the left and the center that pushes back against the right globally.

Speaker 4 But really, what I think we're seeing is a much bigger shift

Speaker 4 where there's this bigger battle between socialism and free market democracy. And I think that we're seeing it all happen at once because of globalism and

Speaker 4 because of the fact that globalism has enabled, just like we've seen manifest in the United States, massive and significant economic progress, but at the cost of a small number of people becoming very wealthy and a large number of people feeling left behind as a result of the wealth accumulating in a major way to a small number of people.

Speaker 4 And the reaction that we're seeing in France, in India, in Mexico, in the US, in the UK is all very much kind of aligned, that there is this big push that socialist practices can perhaps resolve the inequality and the inefficiencies that are seen in the markets today.

Speaker 4 And this is being manifested in a lot of really nasty ways. First of all, I think it's rationalized as being, hey, there's economic excess for a few while the majority are left behind.

Speaker 4 It's activated by big bureaucracy, by anti-free market principles, and by tax policies and spending policies that will ultimately cripple economic growth.

Speaker 4 And I don't want to say I'm against taxes because I'm all for taxes to make up for budget deficits.

Speaker 4 But I think the results are ultimately across all of this going to be what we saw happen in Argentina, which I think is on the other side of this problem, which is unsustainable debt accumulation, massive inflation, and crippling unemployment.

Speaker 4 And I think that we should really take a hard look at what's happening around the world right now as being all related.

Speaker 4 All of the industrialized world is voting in a similar way and starting to shift in a similar way that we should be fairly concerned about and pay a lot of attention to. In the U.S.,

Speaker 4 there's this expectation that Trump is going to totally trounce Biden if Biden stays in the race.

Speaker 4 I think that if we see the same sort of thing happen in the U.S.

Speaker 4 in that the psyche of people are that we feel left behind, that there's a hierarchical system that disadvantages the majority of people because economic progress is not proportional to everyone.

Speaker 4 You could end up seeing a surprise sort of voting system emerge in the U.S. U.S.

Speaker 4 where the left may win because socialist principles are on the rise in the psyche of the youth in the industrialized world.

Speaker 4 And I'm not saying I'm making a prediction about how the election is going to go in the U.S., but I do think that there's a big kind of fundamental change underway here.

Speaker 3 Sax, you didn't mention immigration, specifically Muslim, Islamic immigration in France.

Speaker 3 That seems to be a big part of this issue that people aren't talking about and the lack of integration of that population into society.

Speaker 3 In fact, you know, I've been told by folks in France that it's kind of the opposite. Like

Speaker 3 Islamic, Muslim immigrants are kind of shunned and aren't integrated by the French people themselves. I'm not sure how true that is.
I don't have a lot of first-hand experience in it.

Speaker 3 But how much of that is part of what's happening in this right-left,

Speaker 6 you know,

Speaker 3 Donnybrook occurring in France? Because they're literally on the streets fighting and riding.

Speaker 6 Yeah, look, I don't think that the youth demand for socialism is what's driving the results in France at all. Let me explain what happened.

Speaker 6 So the way that the voting works in France, it's an unusual system to our eyes, where they have a first round of voting.

Speaker 6 And in that first round of voting, Marine Le Pen's party national rally won a strong plurality of the vote.

Speaker 6 And the map looked like this, where literally they won every district in the country except for Paris. I mean, it was a really dominant performance.
And so people were expecting major reform.

Speaker 6 And J.Cowell, you're right that Marine Le Pen's major issue, her party, is the unlimited immigration that's taken place into France.

Speaker 6 The French people, or a substantial portion of them, are up in arms about this. And actually, this is something that's very common across all of Europe.

Speaker 3 They're very nationalistic. Let's call it what it is.
Well, it's it.

Speaker 3 They care about their culture.

Speaker 6 The indigenous people of France are opposed to this settler colonial invasion that's happening from the global south, and they want to preserve their French culture and society and nation as it has always been.

Speaker 6 And they do not see how this unlimited immigration from the global south is good for them. It's not good for them economically.
It's not good for societal cohesiveness.

Speaker 6 It's not good for crime, and so on. So this is undoubtedly a huge driver.
of national rally success.

Speaker 6 But then what happened is that in the French system, there's a second round of voting a week later, and we got these results, where national rally still got the plurality of the vote. They got 37%

Speaker 6 of the vote, but they only won 142 seats. Whereas Macron's party got 22% of the vote, won 148.

Speaker 6 And then a collection of parties called the New Popular Front, which is basically a collection of far-left parties.

Speaker 6 under the radical socialist Jean-Luc Melenchon, won only 27% of the vote, but won the most seats. And this is what I think Freeberg's reacting to is that the socialists ended up with the most seats.

Speaker 6 Well, how did this happen if National Rally, Marine Le Pen's Party, got a lot more votes than New Popular Front? The answer is that Macrone,

Speaker 6 president of France, conspired with the far left to have 200 candidates quit to basically drive those voters, the voters and let's call it the center left, over to the far left in order to block Maureen Le Pen's party from winning the number of seats that they otherwise would have.

Speaker 3 So, just to recap what you're talking about, they have two rounds of elections here. They have a first round, a second round.

Speaker 3 If you don't win like the majority in the first round, then it goes to the second round runoff.

Speaker 3 And then, strategically, what Macron and his party did was they took the multiple parties and said, hey, we'll just have y'all drop out and consolidate our votes, almost like in a microcosm in the United States, it would be like RFK giving, dropping out at the last minute and saying, I endorse this person on left or right.

Speaker 6 So they did a very strategic thing to right, but they went district by district and they basically said, great strategy.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 6 Hold on. In this district,

Speaker 6 we're going to have Macron's candidate drop out and endorse New Popular Front. Exactly.
So that's what they did.

Speaker 2 So brilliant.

Speaker 6 Well, it's a manipulated result. And what it ends up with, look, a lot of people said, so actually, you're saying that they rigged the election.
Look, they didn't rig the votes. Okay.

Speaker 6 I have have no reason to believe that the votes aren't real, but they did rig the candidates in order to frustrate the desire of the French people for reform, the reform that Marine Le Pen was offering.

Speaker 6 And Freeberg, you're interpreting this as basically a big endorsement for socialism. I don't think that's what this is.

Speaker 6 I think that what happened here is that the center left under Macron was willing to throw the election through legal, I'm not saying they did anything illegal, through legal manipulation.

Speaker 3 Consolidated the candidates.

Speaker 6 Yeah, exactly. And so it's to me, it's just, it's sad that, you know, one person tweeted that

Speaker 6 we voted for reform. We voted for national sovereignty.
We voted to restrict unlimited immigration. And what we got was communism.
This isn't what we voted for. Right.

Speaker 6 And so it's just kind of sad that what's happening is that the system, the system politicians are essentially getting together to frustrate. the popular will of the people.

Speaker 3 Le Pen's party still got outvoted in each of those districts, right? Is that correct?

Speaker 6 Only because they dropped a candidate. 200 candidates basically were strategically dropped out in order to throw the vote in those districts.

Speaker 4 So all these systems ultimately resolve to a two-party system where some minority can hijack one of the parties to enforce their will ideologically. I think that's kind of my point.

Speaker 4 Sachs, I mean, you know, the day after the election, there was this statement on some of their economic priorities.

Speaker 4 Increase the tax rate to 90% on income over 400K, drop the retirement age from 64 to 60.

Speaker 4 I mean, you know, you go down the list, you know, putting in price controls on, you know, free market services and products and goods.

Speaker 4 This is a lot of what we're seeing kind of repeated in a bunch of different ways. It's all the same story with different characters all over the industrialized world.

Speaker 6 You're right about that part. So basically, on the heels of this vote, with New Popular Front winning all these seats, John Lucmelchon gives this speech in which he

Speaker 6 rails basically against Macron's neoliberal policies. He wants to go back to the restricted number of hours in the work week.
He wants a 90% wealth tax and so on across the board.

Speaker 6 He does want radical socialism. And he says that he will not cooperate with Macron's party.
So, I mean, this is like just, it's almost cartoonish and clownish. how much this is backfired on Macron.

Speaker 6 He was so hell-bent on trying to frustrate Maureen Le Pen that he threw the election election to New Popular Front, who has now announced that they will not work with him. Okay.

Speaker 6 Now, Jake, you may want to say, well, this is the will of the majority, but the majority of the country did not want to vote for chaos.

Speaker 6 But chaos is what they've got because now there is no dominant faction in their parliament, right?

Speaker 2 And New Popular Frontier. By the way, same in India.

Speaker 4 They just lost majority in India, right? Which is the first time in 12 years. And the UK is also up in disarray.

Speaker 5 No, no, no.

Speaker 5 It's a majority, but not a super majority.

Speaker 4 Not a super majority. Sorry.
Yeah. Sorry.

Speaker 6 the good news freeberg is that melon channel will not have a majority in the assembly to push through those radical policies that he wants no faction will have a majority because they're not going to work with each other you've got three three big parties here or three big groups and you need two of them working together to get anything done so what's going to happen is you're just going to have basically a log jam and like maureen le pen said reform in france is just going to have to wait and we're going to lose another year do you think socialist ideologies are on the rise in in the youth in the industrialized world?

Speaker 4 And is that showing up in elections around the world?

Speaker 6 I think what's happening is that there is a pent-up demand for reform. People are craving reform.
They understand that the system does not work.

Speaker 2 It feels rigged for everyone.

Speaker 6 It feels rigged. It feels corrupt.
And

Speaker 6 it's resistant to reform. And so they are basically clamoring for that.

Speaker 6 They will get it wherever they can take it.

Speaker 4 In the past, socialism has won when this has happened. This has happened.
This happened after World War I.

Speaker 4 It's happened multiple times in history where we've seen the socialists rise in these moments.

Speaker 6 Well, I don't think it's because socialism is that desirable.

Speaker 6 I actually think that the desire for reform, I think it is first and foremost looking for what I would call a nationalist populist solution.

Speaker 6 And you can see here that National Rally did do better than New Popular Front, considerably better. But it was the system's desire to hand a victory to New Popular Front that gave them the win.

Speaker 6 And I think you see a similar thing in the United States. Look, if Joe Biden had just shut down the border for the last four years,

Speaker 6 he would be in a materially different position. Absolutely.
But the radicals and his party didn't want to do that.

Speaker 6 So in a way, you could say that you have a similar type of conspiracy taking place where the center left would rather enable and support the radical progressives as opposed to making sensible moderations or sensible adjustments

Speaker 6 that would actually make them much more popular.

Speaker 3 It would.

Speaker 3 And what has Trump done in Trump 2.0 that I think, I don't know who could have possibly coached or given any feedback to Trump of how to win this election, but he seems much more presidential.

Speaker 3 He seems normal. He basically went right to the middle on abortion.
He went right to the middle on immigration. And he's not acting like a lunatic and name-calling.

Speaker 3 And, you know, his debate performance. was fantastic.
He just sat back.

Speaker 5 By the way, look who's been the most ardent supporter of Joe Biden. It's been the progressive left, right? Those are the folks that have actually said, hey,

Speaker 5 and I think probably it's because there's a underlying quid pro quo at play, AOC,

Speaker 5 Bernie Sanders, all of these folks. Elizabeth Warren.

Speaker 5 If they support Biden and he wins a second term, I suspect that there's going to be a lot of their legislative agenda that basically gets put up for vote. 100%.

Speaker 3 100%. Yes.

Speaker 6 I think there's a common denominator here that both Macron and Biden would rather throw the government of the country to radicals and communists than implement sensible restrictions on immigration.

Speaker 6 It's mind-blowing to me that neither Macron nor Biden can simply make a sensible adjustment on immigration. People do not want open borders.

Speaker 6 They especially don't want them in Europe, and they don't want them here either.

Speaker 3 They want reasonable borders, reasonable immigration.

Speaker 5 If I had to kind of give you my opinion on all of this, I do think that when you look across all of these countries, I do think Freeberg is touching on something, but I think the explanation doesn't have to be this idea that people are embracing socialism.

Speaker 5 I think there's a much simpler explanation as well, which is that we've gone through a very difficult period of joblessness, of inflation, of high costs.

Speaker 5 And I think typically what happens is you have governmental turnover in these moments.

Speaker 5 And so the incumbent gets tossed out and somebody else comes in and whatever they're saying seems like the new thing.

Speaker 5 So for example, in Canada right now, the opposite is trending, which is the liberal socialist government just looks totally incompetent.

Speaker 5 And it looks like the progressives, when this election happens, is just going to completely run over them. And so that's more of a swing to the right.
So I think it's less left or right.

Speaker 5 I think it's incumbent people who have not done necessarily a great job in these last four years getting tossed out for folks that are new.

Speaker 5 And I think that explains a lot of these elections more than socialism or anything else.

Speaker 4 I really hope you're right.

Speaker 4 I just worry about like the trend of economic globalization has kind of moved every, because it used to be that every country kind of looked like its own country politically.

Speaker 4 And there's just a lot of alignment happening.

Speaker 5 Where Sachs is right, it's like, look, it's in every other country of the world,

Speaker 5 other than the West, you embrace the national traditions that make a culture its own. But if you came to Sri Lanka, you'd see people in saris, you'd see people dressed in traditional garb.

Speaker 5 You speak this one language that somewhat complicated, not spoken anywhere else, although we teach English as well. But the point is that there are these cultural traditions.

Speaker 5 And that's just an example of a country that I know well, but many countries, if you look across Africa, it's the same. If you look across Asia, Central and South America.

Speaker 5 In the West, it's more of that, you know, you come and there's this kind of like, kind of like odd monoculture.

Speaker 5 And I think at some point people are pushing back against that i do agree with david that there is that pushback and i and i think that that's well america

Speaker 3 america is very unique in that we we had a concept called the melting pot where you would culturally assimilate and if you say that today and you were to teach that in schools i think people would get very upset very thinking like you are giving up your culture no you've chosen to leave your land and make a new world here in this new experiment called America.

Speaker 3 And if you assimilate, you're welcome here. If you don't want to assimilate, you're not welcome in America.
That's what they taught when we went to school as Gen Xers in the 70s and 80s.

Speaker 2 No, no, no. So my only point,

Speaker 5 and I agree with you, Jakel, is as a country, you're allowed to have those beliefs. It's not that just because you're in the West, you have to throw that out.

Speaker 5 And all of a sudden, you have to succumb to this belief that everybody else's culture is better than the one that you've had for the last four or five hundred years.

Speaker 5 I don't think that that's necessarily true. And I think you miss out on a lot by saying that.
So to your point,

Speaker 5 I just think that when you look globally, there's a really interesting quote from Peter Thiel that actually is,

Speaker 5 he made this comment, which is, if you look at the 10 commandments, he's like, the first and the tenth are the most powerful because the first one is about looking up and the second one and the tenth is not about looking down.

Speaker 5 And everything else is about looking left and right of you.

Speaker 5 And he brings it up in this context of all of these commandments, the middle eight, are all about how you should not be looking to the left and the right, figuring out and making yourself getting tilted about the fact that you have less than the other person.

Speaker 5 No coveting.

Speaker 5 And I just think that there may be something interesting in that idea, which is that what we've really done is we've created tools that have allowed you to just obsess and fantasize about all these random people's lives who you think are perfect.

Speaker 5 but they're just manufactured trying to get views anyways. And you just leave being angry and thinking your life sucks.
And in fact, your life is actually not that bad.

Speaker 5 And I think if we had more truth and honesty and authenticity, maybe there would be less of this perception and you'd actually try to just enjoy what you have.

Speaker 5 And I don't think we figured that out.

Speaker 3 Let's wrap up here on the hot swap summer update and the speed run primary.

Speaker 3 Biden still insists he's still running for president and he will not stand down.

Speaker 3 Since the last episode, so much has happened, including George Clooney writing an op-ed in the New York Times this week. I love Joe Biden, but we need a new nominee.

Speaker 3 Two weeks ago, Clooney co-hosted a fundraiser with Katzenberg and some other Hollywood bigwigs that raised 30 million for President Biden, twice as much as you guys did for Trump.

Speaker 3 But I mean, this is Hollywood and Colin.

Speaker 5 They had 95,000 people. We had 100 people.

Speaker 2 I know. I'm just saying.
It's impressive what you guys did.

Speaker 3 Clooney is also besties with Obama.

Speaker 3 And Obama has put out a tweet in support of Biden.

Speaker 3 But according to a political report, Clooney gave Obama the heads up before he published this. NBC is reporting that Biden has lost his donor base.
Anonymous quotes, the money has absolutely shut off.

Speaker 3 It's already disastrous. Two of the sources said this month is on a path to be down by possibly half or much more from large donors.

Speaker 3 Adam Schiff, who is as partisan as they come, said Biden should slow down and make the right decision here. He also said he should get new counsel, independent counsel.
So that was on Meet the Press.

Speaker 3 And Nancy Pelosi gave a non-answer when asked if she supports Biden as the nominee. And again, as partisan as they come,

Speaker 3 Tim Kaine said, complete confidence, Joe Biden will do the patriotic thing. In regards to Future's nominee,

Speaker 3 yeah, that's pretty rough.

Speaker 2 And axios for points. Jason Dyson, let me shoot me.

Speaker 5 Let me ask you. I'm putting you on the spot here.

Speaker 5 You've seen all these clips. Yeah.
Do you think that there's an active cover-up going on by the White House about his cognitive situation? Hold on.

Speaker 3 No Strachanist is going to make a prediction.

Speaker 2 I've got it.

Speaker 3 A whistleblower will emerge in the next 10 days. If you are a doctor, a nurse, a secretary, an EA, or part of the inner circle here, and you know he's in cognitive decline,

Speaker 3 whistleblowing, hawk two on that whistle and get it out there, folks, because

Speaker 2 we know there's a cover-up.

Speaker 2 We know there's a cover-up.

Speaker 3 So spin on that thing.

Speaker 6 That's right. All right, hock two of that whistle.

Speaker 2 Huck two.

Speaker 2 And let's get it out there because all of us are putting out.

Speaker 5 Sorry, kidding aside. You think there's a cover-up?

Speaker 3 Of course there's a cover-up. I mean, come on.

Speaker 3 Did you see this report that a doctor, a neurologist went to the White House.

Speaker 5 Visited the White House. Visited.

Speaker 3 And the New York Times is putting this out there. And then watch this clip of KJP, KJP,

Speaker 3 who is absolutely covering everything up. We all play poker.
This person is bluffing. They're lying.
It's so obvious. Play the clip, Nick.

Speaker 8 That's a very basic direct question.

Speaker 2 Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.

Speaker 9 Hold on, hold on, wait, wait.

Speaker 2 Wait,

Speaker 9 wait a second.

Speaker 6 Eight times, or at least once, in regards to the president specifically.

Speaker 9 Hold on a second. I thought you should be able to answer by this point.
Wait, no, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 9 No, wait a minute.

Speaker 9 Ed, please, a little respect here. Please.

Speaker 6 Every year around

Speaker 9 the president's physical examination, he sees a neurologist. That's three times, right? So I am telling you that he has seen a neurologist three times while he has been in this presidency.

Speaker 9 So that is answering that question. No, it's not.
No, it is. It is.

Speaker 8 You're asking.

Speaker 9 Can I just answer? I also said to you,

Speaker 9 Ed, I also said to you, for security reasons, we cannot share names. It is public.

Speaker 8 I hear that.

Speaker 2 Your name

Speaker 8 It's in the wrong book.

Speaker 9 Guys,

Speaker 9 hold on a second.

Speaker 3 The point of a press conference is that you ask questions and you ask hard questions. This person is covering it up.
It is a huge cover-up.

Speaker 3 I haven't seen somebody lie this bold face since Elizabeth Holmes. If you had the machine that did the blood test, you'd show the machine.

Speaker 3 If there's a cognitive test that shows he's not in decline, they would show the test. Show the test.
If you're a whistleblower, release the test. Somebody out there has the results of these tests.

Speaker 3 And if you're a doctor and you're covering this up, if you work in that White House and you're covering this up, it's the most unethical, un-American, immoral thing you can do.

Speaker 3 And this is the reason we have whistleblower protections. There are 50 people who probably know what's going on here.
And I know there's at least five.

Speaker 3 So somewhere in that number is somebody who has a profile in courage who will come out and tell the American people what the hell is going on here.

Speaker 6 Oh, I think we already know what's going on, JK.

Speaker 3 I know, but this not telling the truth in a press conference with the press and then admonishing the press,

Speaker 3 admonishing the press like this, it's complete utter bullshit.

Speaker 6 So in that press conference, it's nice to see the press actually doing their job because their job is to hold truth to account and to actually ask tough questions and they're finally doing it.

Speaker 6 But I see in that press conference, not just a liar at the podium.

Speaker 6 I think the entire audience are a bunch of liars too, because they knew, they knew the truth about about the situation and they refused to report it and they refused to investigate it until now.

Speaker 6 Now, what you've heard in the past week or so is a bunch of people who knew about the situation telling on themselves.

Speaker 6 So first you had George Clooney and that New York Times op-ed, he says that after the fundraiser we did, yeah, I knew and everyone there knew. That was a month ago.
What took you so long to come out?

Speaker 6 Olivia Newsy says she had the story for New York magazine six months ago. Okay.

Speaker 6 She had anonymous sources, but she said she was afraid to publish it because the White House would basically push back and she didn't think the press corps would back her.

Speaker 6 Chuck Todd just said it on a podcast that a cabinet official

Speaker 6 in the Biden White House told him two years ago that he could not get a meeting with the president because the president was effectively incapacitated and his inner circle was keeping him shielded.

Speaker 6 Chuck Todd knew. Why didn't Chuck Todd report that? Why didn't Chuck Todd pass it on to an investigative reporter to NBC to investigate that?

Speaker 2 These people are not going to be able to do that. Dereliction of duty is the answer.

Speaker 3 It's a dereliction of duty.

Speaker 6 Of course. But let me tell you what they were trying to do.
Okay.

Speaker 6 They were trying to weaken the Bernie's this thing.

Speaker 2 Absolutely.

Speaker 6 They thought they could get Biden through the election. And so they were on narrative.
And they weren't going to report the truth about his condition. 100%.

Speaker 6 They're just going to try and get him across the finish line.

Speaker 6 They're all complicit in this cover-up, and they don't deserve any credibility because now they're finally reporting it because the only reason they're reporting it is because of concerns about Biden's electability.

Speaker 6 They're afraid that he's going to lose. And the turning point was that debate because the whole country could see it.

Speaker 6 So in the wake of that, they're starting to panic and they're realizing, oh, wait, we need a new candidate. So finally, they're telling the truth about this situation.

Speaker 6 But they had absolutely no intention of telling the truth about it because they could have done it a long time ago. And here

Speaker 6 they were just going to try and drag Biden across the finish line.

Speaker 3 And we need to give one person person his flowers here. Dean Phillips came on this program seven months ago.

Speaker 3 And if you listen to All In, the number one podcast in the world, you're going to know what's going to happen in the future. It's not just No Shrikanis here.
The guests come on and tell us the truth.

Speaker 3 Dean Phillips told us, I quote, when I asked him, I'm not sure who asked him, when we asked him, he said, people are saying that I'm causing his problems, that I could risk his reelection.

Speaker 3 I'm certainly not the guy that has shown his decline. That's on video.
That's on audio. You see it.
He's a human being, for goodness sake. Seven months ago, he said this.
He's a human being.

Speaker 3 He's now in his 80s. He is clearly in decline.
But do I think he will be in a position to continue leading this company, this country in the future? I do not.

Speaker 3 I think I'm joined about 75% of the country in saying that. He was clear on this podcast.

Speaker 6 He was clear on this podcast. And kudos to Dean Phillips for having the courage to tell the truth.
He was one of the only people in the Democratic Party to tell the truth.

Speaker 6 Remember, he also said on our podcast that he called up J.B. Pritzker.
He called up Gretchen Whitmer. He said, Where are you guys? You're the leaders of the Democratic Party.

Speaker 6 Why aren't you challenging President Biden? He obviously isn't fit to serve. They told him, shut up.
They wouldn't take his phone calls. Okay.

Speaker 6 And look, Dean Phillips knew the truth without having special access to the president. Quite frankly, he's a backbencher, right? But it was obvious to him.
They all knew. The whole party knew.

Speaker 6 But their strategy was to pretend and deny and to betray anyone who told, to excommunicate anyone like Dean Phillips who told the truth, and to try and discredit anyone who reported the truth as basically a partisan or a liar who was trafficking in the truth fakes.

Speaker 6 Remember that?

Speaker 6 So all these people are complicit. They're all complicit.
And the only reason they're telling the truth now is because they're afraid of losing an election.

Speaker 3 Well, and the receipts are coming.

Speaker 5 Well, let's just play this out. So if there is a grand cover-up, I think, Jason, you are right that there's too much time between now and the election.
There will be a

Speaker 5 deep throat Watergate style leak here. You know, there will be a Woodward and Bernstein that gets to the bottom of this.
I just think the odds of that

Speaker 5 of it not happening are too low. So I guess then the real question is, is it that the only way to keep the charade going is the quote-unquote threat of the Donald Trump boogeyman?

Speaker 5 Is that what they use basically to hang over these people?

Speaker 3 Of course.

Speaker 2 Yes.

Speaker 3 I mean, that, listen, that worked last time.

Speaker 2 Trump, in the

Speaker 3 overwhelming majority of Americans felt Trump's first presidency was too divisive and it was too chaotic. They used that to win.
Okay, fair enough. Now they're trying to use that again.

Speaker 3 It's not working. Why? Trump 2.0.
He's coming across as reasonable. A lot of the things he got right when you re-underwrited him about the border, he got that right.

Speaker 3 The economy was pretty good under him. He did some things correct.
He's not like all demagogue and all evil. I have my problems with his behavior.

Speaker 3 I've made it documented here, but you cannot use that excuse anymore because Americans are going to say cognitive decline, somebody with Alzheimer's, like my aunt, my uncle, my parent, whatever, they've experienced it firsthand, or Trump, it's an easy choice for most Americans.

Speaker 3 And that's why Trump will beat Biden. And that's why they're going to do the speed run.
And that's catching steam next. And let's just, we can wrap on that.

Speaker 3 I think I mentioned here the speedrun primary a couple of weeks ago. Nick, roll the clip.

Speaker 3 Must Must credit No Strakanis. They're going to do Democratic primary speed run.
Here's what's going to happen. They're going to do five debates in 10 weeks, and then whoever wins wins.

Speaker 3 Kamala, he's going to resign. Kamala becomes president.
Kamala gets to

Speaker 3 run in the speed run. She gets to speed run like everybody else.
Dean Phillips gets to come in. Everybody speedruns it.

Speaker 3 They take over the media. The media will go crazy over the summer.
Massive ratings.

Speaker 2 Boom.

Speaker 3 Pull up the semaphore article after I made my prediction. Two Democratic Party insiders have floated this very unique idea in Semaphore.
It's a pretty obvious idea, I guess.

Speaker 3 Biden steps down as the news.

Speaker 6 Where did you get it from, JK?

Speaker 3 It was my idea.

Speaker 2 I did not hear it anywhere.

Speaker 6 Okay. I personally don't think it's going to happen, but I still think you deserve credit for being the first.
Agreed. So you came up with this and now it's just spread or what?

Speaker 2 Well, here we go.

Speaker 2 This is amazing. I mean, you're name-checking yourself here.
So this is pretty.

Speaker 2 I don't know what's happening in this bizarro universe.

Speaker 3 I put on a red tie and all of a sudden I'm getting everything right.

Speaker 3 Who knows? Biden steps down. I mean, you're not.

Speaker 5 Listen, so many times in the past, your head has been so far up your ass, but this time it's really real. You open it and you see your face, but it's you just name-checking yourself.

Speaker 3 I guess I got to name-check me. But here's what Semaphore says.
This is their version. Biden steps down as the nominee mid-July.
Okay, that's now. Biden announces the new system with support.

Speaker 3 from Kamala Harris. Candidates would have a few days to throw their hats in the ring.
Democrats would start a primary sprint.

Speaker 3 Oh, not a speedrun, a primary sprint, where six candidates, not 10, who received the most votes from delegates pledged to run positive-only campaigns in the month leading up to the DNC.

Speaker 3 Weekly forums for each candidate would be moderated by culture icons. Oh, interesting punch-up.

Speaker 3 Michelle Obama, Oprah, Taylor Swift, in order to engage voters, as I talked about, taking over the media.

Speaker 3 Nominee would be chosen by delegates using ranged choice voting, your favorite sax, before the start of the DNC on August 9th. So, anyway, there you have it, folks.

Speaker 3 Speedrun coming, whistleblower, August 19th. Speedrun and the whistleblower.
Look for it this month.

Speaker 6 Okay, look, I think you deserve credit for being the first to talk about this. And that idea is clearly gaining some currency on the left.

Speaker 6 However, at the end of the day, I don't think the Democrats can afford to do that because they're already in the state of chaos right now.

Speaker 6 And if they finally succeed in pushing Biden overboard, the last thing they're going to want to do is have the chaos of an open primary, even if it is a speedrun primary.

Speaker 6 I think they're just going to have to go to Kamala Harris. I think that's what they've decided.

Speaker 6 I think that if they succeed in pushing Biden out, which does seem probably more likely than not at this point, I think it's got to be Harris. And I think she's going to be the nominee.
So

Speaker 2 I think Trump.

Speaker 3 You worried about him?

Speaker 6 Well, no, look, I think that Trump should win regardless, but it's an opportunity for them to reset the race. And that's what's driving all of this is that they're concerned about losing.

Speaker 6 But look, let me say this: that everything that's happened here with Biden's cognitive state is just one in a series of hoaxes and cover-ups that the Democrat Party has transpired over the last several years.

Speaker 6 It's gotten to the point where you have to wonder, can these guys even run a presidential campaign without hoaxes? You had the Steele dossier, okay? You have the whole suckers and losers hoax.

Speaker 6 You have the very fine people hoax. You have the this is the best version of Biden hoax.
You had the whole cheap fake hoax.

Speaker 6 And you've just got to wonder, is this a party who deserves the trust of the American people?

Speaker 6 I think that Trump deserves another term just as a rebuke to all of the misinformation and lies that the Democratic Party has told about him. And I think that he should win.

Speaker 3 Shout out to Scott Adams and his hoax list.

Speaker 2 Here we go. The Scott Adams,

Speaker 3 Scott Adams is obsessed with

Speaker 2 20% of the hoax list. There's like 10 more.
Okay.

Speaker 3 No,

Speaker 3 he's been keeping a list.

Speaker 6 Trump deserves to win just based on all the hoaxes that have been thrown at him. All right.
And you know what?

Speaker 6 You got to give him credit because it was his decision to go on CNN in that debate that really called their birth on this whole thing.

Speaker 3 God, when, when they started, this is when you knew something was in the air.

Speaker 3 When he got like, started getting ovations and clapping from the rigged CNN audience for the town hall, I mean, or maybe CNN did that and set up themselves and set up the Democrats. I don't know.

Speaker 2 I don't think it was a setup.

Speaker 6 I don't think so. I don't think it was a setup.
No, I think, look, there are a lot of people who do think that it was a controlled demolition. and they want Biden out.
I don't think so.

Speaker 2 I think this situation is...

Speaker 6 It is a conspiracy theory. And I understand why people might think that because so many conspiracy theories have turned out to be true.
However, I don't believe that's what happened.

Speaker 6 I believe that Biden's staff created conditions for the debate that they thought would be untenable to Trump, right? They said that we're going to choose the host.

Speaker 6 They're going to be hosts who've basically already called Trump Hitler, right? So it's like the most favorable setting. They said there's not going to be an audience.

Speaker 6 We're going to turn off your microphone. And they thought that Trump would just say no to all of this and they'd be able to get Biden through without a debate.
But Trump called their bluff.

Speaker 6 He said, okay, I'll do it. Sure.
And he walked into the lion's den, just like, remember a year ago, he walked into the lion's den at CNN to do that town hall.

Speaker 2 He could beat anybody

Speaker 3 comedically.

Speaker 2 You got to admit that Trump has the wavos.

Speaker 3 Anybody in mainstream media.

Speaker 6 You got to admit that Trump has the wavos. Like Tony Montana said, the only thing in this world that gives orders is balls.

Speaker 2 Absolutely. You got to admit.

Speaker 2 You got to hop in. Don't forget the balls.

Speaker 3 Episodes off the rails. For the chairman dictator calling in from Italy, my bestie, David Sachs.
I'll see you on Jesse Waters and at the RNC.

Speaker 3 For Freeberg, who's genuine somewhere in a retreat center, I am.

Speaker 3 No Strakanis, and

Speaker 3 I have a prediction.

Speaker 3 I have a prediction.

Speaker 3 We're going to see you at the next episode, everybody.

Speaker 2 Bye-bye.

Speaker 5 Love you boys.

Speaker 2 Bye-bye.

Speaker 2 We'll let your winners ride.

Speaker 3 Rainman David Sachs.

Speaker 6 And it says, We open source it to the fans, and they've just gone crazy with it. Love you, Bestie.
I'm the queen of Kino.

Speaker 6 Besties are all

Speaker 6 thinking to notice your driveway.

Speaker 6 Oh, man.

Speaker 6 We should all just get a room and just have one big huge orchief because they're all just useless. It's like this like sexual tension that they just need to release somehow.

Speaker 2 We need to get mercy. Besties are

Speaker 2 going all in.

Speaker 3 And now, the plugs. The all-in summit is taking place in Los Angeles, September 8th, 9th, and 10th.
You can apply for tickets. Summit.allinpodcast.co.

Speaker 3 And you can subscribe to this show on YouTube. Yes, watch all the videos.
Our YouTube channel has passed 500,000 subscribers. Shout out to Donnie from Queens.

Speaker 3 Follow the show, x.com/slash the all-in pod, TikTok, all underscore in, underscore, talk, Instagram, the all in pod, LinkedIn search for all in podcast and to follow chamoth he's x.com slash chamath sign up for his weekly email what I read this week at chamoth.substack.com and sign up for a developer account at console.grok.com and see what all the excitement is about.

Speaker 3 Follow Sachs at x.com slash david sacks and sign up for glue at glue.ai. Follow Friedberg x.com slash Friedberg.
And Ohollo is hiring. Click on the careers page at ohalogenetics.com.

Speaker 3 I am the world's greatest moderator jason calacanis if you are a founder and you want to come to my accelerators and my programs founder.university lunch.close slash apply to apply for funding from your boy jcal for your startup and check out athenawow.com this is the company i am most excited about at the moment athenawow.com to get a virtual assistant for about three thousand dollars a month i have two of them thanks for tuning in to the world's number one podcast you can help by telling just two friends that's all i ask forward this podcast to two friends and say, this is the world's greatest podcast.

Speaker 3 You got to check it out. It'll make you smarter and make you laugh, laugh while learning.
We'll see you all next time.

Speaker 2 Bye-bye.