The Shawn Ryan Show

#302 Joe Lonsdale - If China Takes Taiwan, AI Sets Back 10 Years

97 min
May 7, 202623 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Joe Lonsdale discusses geopolitical threats including China's Taiwan ambitions, Iran's nuclear program, and instability in Venezuela, Cuba, and Nigeria, while highlighting AI's transformative potential for American competitiveness, defense capabilities, and economic growth across healthcare, construction, and aerospace sectors.

Insights
  • AI is compressing multiple decades of technological progress into years, fundamentally reshaping military capabilities, industrial production, and scientific discovery timelines
  • Taiwan semiconductor control is critical but not absolute—US companies capture more chip ecosystem profits than Taiwan; losing TSMC would set AI back 5-10 years but not eliminate drone/weapons production
  • Regulatory burden and guild protectionism (9 million words of regulations per state) are primary drivers of US cost inflation in healthcare, construction, and other sectors—AI and autonomous systems can reverse this by making projects economically viable domestically
  • China's primary strategy is cognitive warfare and funding anti-American movements to prevent US strength projection; Iran and Russia are secondary proxies designed to distract and divide American resources
  • The convergence of autonomous systems, AI optimization, and manufacturing cost reduction is creating a 'Jevons Paradox' effect—cheaper construction/production will increase demand and economic activity rather than eliminate jobs
Trends
Autonomous defense systems (drones, boats, ground vehicles) replacing crewed platforms for cost and scalability advantagesAI-driven healthcare cost reduction through diagnostic automation and prescription optimization, challenging regulatory scope-of-practice lawsReshoring of manufacturing and construction to US enabled by autonomous systems and AI-optimized processesCognitive warfare and information operations as primary Chinese strategy to undermine US confidence and unityRapid iteration cycles in aerospace and engineering compressed from months to days via AI-assisted design and simulationDecentralized chip ecosystem resilience—US retains design, equipment, and materials leverage despite Taiwan concentration riskFraud detection and government waste reduction becoming national security priority with AI-powered auditingVocational training transformation via VR simulation reducing cost barriers to skilled workforce developmentEnergy infrastructure buildout (LNG, nuclear, solar, batteries) as foundation for AI data center expansionVenture capital focus shifting from consumer tech to defense, infrastructure, and policy-enabling technologies
Topics
Taiwan semiconductor supply chain and geopolitical riskIran nuclear weapons development and Middle East military strategyChina's cognitive warfare and anti-American funding operationsAutonomous weapons systems and drone swarm defenseAI acceleration in military targeting and coordinationHealthcare cost reduction through AI diagnostics and automationRegulatory reform and deregulation as economic growth driverConstruction automation and excavation technologyChip manufacturing reshoring and fab developmentFraud detection in government spending and NGO fundingVenezuela and Cuba regime instabilityNigeria Christian persecution and defense industry investmentVocational training via VR simulationEnergy infrastructure for AI data centersUniversity of Austin and alternative education models
Companies
Palantir Technologies
Co-founded by Lonsdale; developing AI-powered data integration for military targeting, fraud detection, and governmen...
8VC
Lonsdale's venture capital firm investing in defense, AI, and policy-enabling technologies
Tara Industries
Nigerian defense prime backed by 8VC; building autonomous vehicles, drones, and surveillance systems for African secu...
Overland AI
Autonomous off-road vehicle navigation for military terrain; building rugged autonomous vehicles cheaper than tanks
Saronic
Building autonomous warships (25-180 feet) with more weapons capacity than crewed destroyers at lower cost
Epirus
Defense contractor building high-power microwave systems to disable drones and counter jamming; autonomous truck-moun...
Bedrock
AI-powered autonomous excavation and construction equipment; reduces 25% of construction costs through autonomous mac...
Joby Aviation
Electric vertical takeoff aircraft approved for 12-state deployment; AI-accelerated aerodynamic design enabling rapid...
Commonwealth Fusion Systems
Building fusion power plants with billions in funding; targeting late 2030s deployment for commercial energy
Valor
Small modular reactor company advancing nuclear fission technology
TAP (Training All People)
VR-based vocational training for semiconductor and manufacturing jobs; reducing cost barriers to skilled workforce de...
Esper
Policy-making software using AI to reduce regulatory complexity and improve government efficiency across states
Blink Health
Cheaper pharmacy benefit manager competing with traditional PBMs to reduce drug costs
Chaos
Building $5,000 autonomous interceptor systems for air defense; CEO helped develop Everest EMP technology
Tesla
Elon's company; mentioned for self-driving competition with Waymo and upcoming Terra Fab chip manufacturing
TSMC
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company; critical chokepoint in chip supply chain; loss would set AI back 5-10 years
Anthropic
AI lab run by Dario; advancing large language models with focus on safety and capability forecasting
OpenAI
AI company mentioned as having been 'conquered by the left' in contrast to Elon's XAI approach
Caterpillar
Heavy equipment manufacturer partnering with Bedrock to deploy autonomous excavation on existing machinery
Waymo
Google's self-driving car division; mentioned as competitor to Tesla in autonomous vehicle space
People
Joe Lonsdale
Guest discussing geopolitics, AI, defense technology, and venture capital investment strategy
Shawn Ryan
Podcast host conducting interview and asking questions about geopolitics and technology
Elon Musk
Discussed for Terra Fab chip manufacturing, AI development with xAI, and fraud detection work at PayPal
Byron Jerbil
Professor and DARPA contest winner building autonomous off-road vehicles for military applications
Dino Sejdinovic
Building autonomous warships; mentioned as upcoming guest with Lonsdale's endorsement
Jason Inspires
Former Palantir employee building VR vocational training platform; overcame incarceration to become entrepreneur
Maulka
Building policy-making software to reduce regulatory complexity; Afghan-American pro-liberty entrepreneur
Boris
Former Waymo executive building autonomous excavation and construction equipment; Soviet émigré background
Andy Lowry
Bringing autonomous drone-defense system to Shawn Ryan Show for demonstration on Monday
Travis Kalanick
Building Adams company to deploy AI in mining and autonomous systems; mentioned for manifesto on automation
Mark Cuban
Praised for pharmacy cost reduction work despite political differences with Lonsdale
Peter Thiel
Mentioned as hiring University of Austin graduates; co-founder of Palantir with Lonsdale
Dario Amodei
AI researcher forecasting 2-3 year advancement window before AI capability plateau; mentioned for technical credibility
Brooke Rollins
Former TPPF leader; Lonsdale offered to facilitate interview regarding glyphosate policy
Kelly Leffler
Leading fraud detection efforts with Palantir; praised for government efficiency work
Brad Anklet
Recent guest on Shawn Ryan Show discussing humanoid robotics and AI automation
Joe Kraft
Coal industry owner; recent guest discussing energy policy and all-of-the-above energy strategy
Quotes
"America is now growing again. We're now fixing things again. It's this optimistic time. Our enemy should all be really scared. Like we are clearly going to be dominant. This is now the American century again. If we keep it up."
Joe Lonsdale~25:00
"We're living like multiple, multiple years in one in terms of progress. So we're taking like the 2020s and the 2030s and the 2040s and we're condensing it into the next few years."
Joe Lonsdale~90:00
"If you can build buildings in America for much cheaper, suddenly a manufacturing project that you were forced to do in Mexico or Vietnam suddenly makes a lot more sense to do it here."
Joe Lonsdale~105:00
"The solution is all of the above, right? The solution is every possible energy you can get. It's going to keep energy prices healthy for a while, but it's also going to create massive investments into energy."
Joe Lonsdale~30:00
"There's like two things we all have to battle for great Americans and we believe in Western civilization. One is we got to stop the commies. And two is we got to stop the radical Islamists."
Joe Lonsdale~5:00
Full Transcript
When your meetings are powered by AI, quality matters. Sure, builds video conferencing solutions engineered for collaboration, giving AI the clarity it needs. Sure, built for collaboration. Learn more at shure.com. MUSIC Joe Lonsdale. Welcome back, man. Thanks, Sean. It's been a win at. It's good to be here. Lots of shit going down. I love a new place. Thank you. Thank you. I've been excited to show it to you. That's awesome. It's making me thirsty for a drink, but it's too early. Well, hey, we got plenty to dive into if you change your mind. All right. Maybe we'll grab a cigar later and shoot some stuff. We'll have you. Cool. Yeah. We'll bose some shit up after this. I love it. But, well, man, you texted me shit. It feels like maybe six months ago, but we were talking about, you texted me an article or a tweet or something about Christians being persecuted in Nigeria and you, I believe, invested in a company down there to kind of combat that a little bit. So I was like, hey, come on. A lot of stuff to go over. I mean, listen, there's, I think there's like two things we all have to battle for great Americans and we believe in Western civilization. One is we got to stop the commies. And two is we got to stop the radical Islamists. I think those are forces of evil all around the world. Yeah. And it doesn't mean whatever moderate left. I don't mind to disagree with them. They're not evil. Maybe some moderate Muslims, I think, are good people I work with. But these extremists, man. And by the way, even if we solve everything in the Middle East, let's just take it as, let's just pretend everything goes perfectly and we solve so many of the problems. They're obviously not going to solve it all. But let's say you solve a bunch of it. Africa is going to be a battleground for this nonsense, for sure, for the rest of our lives. Yeah. And man, it is just nasty. Like, you see what they do to the Christians? They're like, they like take 70 of them into a church and they'll slaughter them in the church and they'll rape them and they'll pillage them. They'll kidnap schoolgirls and it's just on and on and on. Thousands being murdered. Very little pushback. Let's stop these bad guys. Fucking crazy, man. I pulled some stats up where you're down here getting pictures. And yeah, it said 388 million persecuted Christians worldwide, 4,849 murdered for their faith. And that's in 2026, 72%. 72% of those murders were in Nigeria alone. 163 worshipers abducted from two churches in January of 2026. Shit is definitely popping off there. 8VC led $11.8 million around investment in Tara Industries. What is Tara Industries? Yeah. And these guys have raised tens of millions more since I backed them because once we backed them, it allows other people to get involved. Listen, it's two young, talented Nigerian men. One of them was a physics Olympiad. One of them had already built another company in the early 20s that was successful. And they're building a defense prime for Africa. And obviously, after a pound here, I built a couple other big defense companies here. I know this space. I have a few. Just a few. I appreciate you interviewing them. There's some great men. I want them to get credit, not me. I try to help them out. And it's like Africa needs stuff too. And it's going to partner with a bunch of our stuff. And listen, these are really talented young men. They were already just trying to get going on it. We thought they deserve some resources and some help. And there's some partnership. I think it's good for us to be partners with the best and the brightest there who are on the side of the good guys. So how did this pop on your radar? You know, we see a lot of things going on. I have some old friends. One of my interns built a couple of big companies in Nigeria who's from actually a big Christian family there, who's a prominent guy, really, really good guy. We have others who kind of track and try to talk to the physics Olympiad winners around the world and see what they're doing. So there's lots of different ways that you kind of see this from a couple of different sources. You see it's real. And then you send people over and get engaged. Did you, I mean, so with Terra, did you found it? Did you co-found it? This one, we were the first big institutional investor. So we took a big minority stake in the company early. I think it was about a 40 million valuation. We put, you know, we could buy a quarter of the company or give or take. And then it's since it's raised, you know, 20, 30 million more. It's close in really big contracts. And the idea is like, you know, we know a lot about this industry. Let's help them. Let's help them scale it up around Africa. Have multiple spots, multiple governments they're working with. Let's have, there's certain things they're going to be the best at. There's certain things America has companies that are going to be the best at. Let's make sure we partner and help them. So if they're building, for example, remote controlled cars that are already working, which they are, if they want to make those things autonomous, maybe you partner with someone like Overland, right? There's also all sorts of ways you can help them with our stuff as well. Where are they based out of? They're based out of a city, a suburb of Lagos in Nigeria to start with, but then they also have stuff they're doing around East Africa as well. And they're doing multiple places for their manufacturing. So what else are they doing? And how does this tie into persecution of Christians? Well, I mean, you have to be able to monitor things going on. You got to build century towers. You got to build century drones. You got to be able to build defense drones. You got to be able to build cars and other things that can drive around autonomously and watch and have guns on them. So you basically need to be able to arm these people cheaply and affordably with a way to see when the bad guys are coming and a way to fight back and a way to deter the bad guys. And so, and you know, it's not just that. It's infrastructure as well that's being attacked by these crazy people. You got to defend for the country. You got to be able to defend all sorts of different kind of assets over there. But you want and you want stuff that can that can help these these innocent places defend themselves right now. They don't have they don't have any advancement modern military, you know. Yeah, yeah, no, I'm aware. So do you know, do you have a little more context of what's going on on the ground there? Why are they persecuting Christians? Who's defending them? Well, this ties into the war that we're fighting right now in the Middle East. Let's be clear, right? This is this ties very closely into it. Is you have these basically crazy forces around the world that are that are funding Islamic jihadi terror, right? And that does unfortunately, like how the extreme Islamist view things is that it's their job for them to dominate. And for every, everyone who's not Muslim to have to have to basically like, you know, either, you know, submit or convert or pay a tax and have Muslim women. So Nigeria is a country in Africa that's close to 50 50, right? Slightly more Muslims than Christians. So it's a very obvious, very big target for these same jihadis in Iran who are sending out money to do bad things. That this is the same types of groups, the Muslim Brotherhood, that's the, you know, same ones that run care in the US and try to pretend that they're nice guys. When they're not, those are the same types of people who will go after this and say, this is a chance for us to assert our Islamist dominance. And so it's a very big target to make sure the Christians lose and the Muslims went for them in that country. What do they do unto the Christians? Over there, they're intimidating them. They're trying to scare them into converting. They're trying to kill them when they're in there. They're trying to take their woman. They're trying to, they're basically horrible things. You know? I mean, in Syria, I think they were crucifying them. I can't remember. It's hard for me to- It's hard for me to- Or if that was, if that was Nigeria. It's all over, there's all over the Middle East, they've done this. I mean, listen, Lebanon, the stepping back for a second, Lebanon was a very safe Christian dominated country, right? Like this is like, like, like Lebanon was one of the success stories still for Christians in the Middle East. It was a relatively peaceful place overall. The constitution built in where it was shared power between kind of moderate, you know, Sunnis and Maronites and others. And what happened with Iran in the 80s, when they started just to fund all of this kind of nonsense is they funded Hezbollah and they went in and they basically destroyed Lebanon as a safe place for people to live. And then they made it a horrible, broken country and they tortured people and they killed people there. They actually not only tortured the people there, we had a CIA chief who was there in the 80s under Reagan and they caught him and they kept him alive for months, skinning him alive, torturing him in every possible way to get his information. And so people say Trump's like convinced to do this recently, Trump saw that happen then. By the way, you see that happen to CIA chief of America tortured for months to get all the information. Like you want to let those guys get away with that? I wouldn't want to let those guys get away with that. When did this happen? This is the 80s under Reagan. Oh, okay. Yeah, yeah. But this is like, so this is why such a big deal right now what's happening is because for the first time, like that was one of the things that fell when Iran first started projecting its power after taking over right in the late 70s, when the crazies came in and slaughtered people and tortured people and took over and started kind of spreading their nastiness. They spread it to Africa, of course, and they have lots of things there. But Lebanon was like the first really kind of like pretty healthy Christian, like part modern country to fall to this nonsense. And we may be within a month or two of actually cleaning out his bowl and taking it back, which is awesome. Interesting. Interesting. So let me give you an introduction here real quick before we get into all the geopolitical shit that's going on in the world. So, Joe Lonsdale, co-founder of Palantir Technologies, after Palantir founded Adipar, invested or co-founded multiple US unicorns, billion dollar companies, Epirus, Palantir, Andral, Illumio, Synthego, Sironic, Yugabite, Asana, co-founding Cicero, organizing dedicated to advancing educational opportunities and policy to transform lives and societies. Co-founder and managing partner of 8VC, venture capital firm that pushes for policies that encourage innovation. Advisor to leading political figures, advocates for a future where technology and policy work hand in hand solve our biggest challenges. Welcome back. Thank you, Joe. Welcome back. Thank you. You know, we got a Patreon. They're the reason I get to sit with you here today. And so they get the opportunity to ask every single guest a question. And this is from Tim. It is being reported that the current data center infrastructure investment, roughly 650 billion will last only three years. After which GPUs can be severely degraded, it will need to be replaced. Traditional infrastructure investments like roads, railroads and high voltage, which can last for 30 to 50 years with less of investment. Is this level of maintenance for data centers feasible? I don't think they're totally useless after three years. I think the situation though is that there's so much better stuff based on the new technology that you're going to want some new stuff for certain workflows. And listen, that this is the most dynamic sector now of the US economy. There's trillions of dollars going into it. There are so many smart people from around the world figuring out what new chip designs, what new data center designs, how do you use AI to do every part of it better? How do you do the energy better? I'm getting pitches left and right. And people, top guys around Elon, top guys around Jensen, all these top guys spending so much money on this. I'm not worried they're not going to figure it out. I think it's a great space that we are spending trillions of dollars. It's going to drive America to the future. I'm super interested to talk about AI, but these guys are figuring out the infrastructure. It's going the right way. How are they going to power all this stuff? I mean, listen, I have friends who are like, getting the next natural gas turbines that we're supposed to go to Turkey and they're rerouting them and spending a bunch of money to put them in Texas, right? And doing it that way. We have all sorts of LNG massively coming online. We have all sorts of new solar. We have, you know, billions of dollars of batteries coming online to make solar work better. I think it's all of the above. As with Joe Kraft yesterday when we had a political figure over who owns a bunch of coal. I mean, listen, the solution is all of the above, right? The solution is every possible energy you can get. It's going to keep energy prices, you know, healthy for a while, but it's also going to create and is creating massive investments into energy to make it work, which you look at China, by the way, China has now about, I think, three times the power we have starting with 1999, we were about equal. We were way ahead of them, obviously in the 80s. I think that's one advantage they have is they've put more of their kind of resources into infrastructure. We're going to need to put more resources into infrastructure. I think a lot of the, that how well our working class does is going to be tied in part to how much we can build more cheap energy for everyone and bring prices down for everyone. This is going to be a big fight. Well, I mean, do you know where we're at with the nuclear stuff? There's so many great companies going as fast as they can now. There's a shit ton of good companies. The NRC. Taylor's got Valor, what are they? Valor. Valor, yeah. J.U. just started that company, LIS. Laser, Richard. Commonwealth Fusions building their first fusion plants. They're spending billions of dollars on it and it's very, very credible now how that fusion part's getting better. The late 2030s is going to be huge. The solar's getting more efficient. There's massive new plants there with batteries. Zach Dell's putting in billions of dollars of batteries in Texas grid to make it work better and make alternatives there work better. I think, you know, coal, it's also getting more efficient even though they're not supposed to talk about it. Like I think every, everyone's doing everything. I can't believe we're fucking talking about coal. I mean, well, I just went with Joe last night, this guy who's the one that's in the show. But like, there's every, I think every, I think every level is good. And the LIS and fusion and fission, really fission has been held back by stupid regulation and got, and got pushed 30, 40 years behind where it would be. I think we're going to catch up. We're going to do a massive amount of it. I think all of this stuff is good. You think policies coming around for nuclear? It really is. Like even like the Texas legislature is putting in like bonuses if someone gets a small, you know, plant done there. The NRC is now staffed by people who are no longer completely, I think we've for the first time in 40 years started approving, maybe 50 years by the way. I think we started approving new designs again. It's, we're actually turning it back on. It's like, it's like we went through this crazy deindustrialization period in the U.S. from 1971 to like 2023 or whatever. And something about like Trump revolution, but also something about AI and how AI could be used to unlock productivity growth. It's like, we're back. Like America is now growing again. We're now fixing things again. It's, this is an optimistic time. Our enemy should all be really scared. Like we are clearly going to be dominant. This is now the American century again. If we keep it up. Hope you're right. Hope you're right, man. Lots of shit going on in the world right now. Oh yeah. Iran, China's making moves on Taiwan, Russia, Ukraine's still going up. We've heard Maduro out, Cuba's in a fucking crisis. I love it. I love it. It's like leadership, man. Come on, guys are on the run. Where do you want to start? I mean, the Americas, let's just say, I mean, I love what we did in Venezuela. This is awesome. This is the guys clearly a criminal. And here's what people don't get. This is really important. When you have a place like Venezuela that gets taken over by these like cartels and these socialists and communists and just bad influences, there's lots of problems for the US. First of all, they're like allying with our adversaries. They're working with Hezbollah and other supraic weapons with them. They're allying with China for energy. They're helping Russia. But then second of all, they're spreading. It's like a virus. They're spreading their ideology all around the rest of Latin America, all around the rest of the world. I was with the conservative president of Columbia, El Duque, who was the guy before this guy. And there were protesters coming into his country and they were coming from Chile where they had just succeeded and just like worked to temporarily turn Chile left. Thank goodness we turned it back, but they turned it very left. And they were funded by Venezuela. They had Cuban people involved and they had a Russian technology. It's like these guys, fuckers in Russia, still think it's a Soviet Union or something. And they're still causing messes around the world. And you know why? Because if they succeed and they make these things go hard left, like it's like having bad guys in charge who the bad guy's gonna partner with and like plunder with. They're gonna work with the other bad guys. 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And what I really respect is the company is veteran owned and was designed by an active duty soldier. This was built for long days, heat, movement, real conditions, not just comfort. For me, that's why it's my go-to. It removes a distraction and lets me stay focused. Feel it to believe it. Go to sheath.com slash SRS and use code SRS for 20% off. And Sheath even offers a first pair guarantee. So if it's not for you, you get your money back. But honestly, once you try these, there's no going back. That's S-H-E-A-T-H dot com slash SRS and use code SRS for 20% off. Sheath, the underwear of legends. Thanks to Sheath for sponsoring this episode. So it really, and I know some people are like, oh, it's too simple, you're in preschool. No, it really is. There's like the good guys and the bad guys and you want the bad guys to lose. You don't want the far left authoritarian. Rapists like crazy people to take over. And so Trump actually using a little bit of our authority, a little bit of our strength, a little bit of our frankly total dominance and going in and saying, no, we're not gonna allow a crazy bad guy spreading evil and spreading crime to be in charge of this place three hour flight from the South Coast. Thank goodness, thank goodness there's a man in charge. I mean, Mexico is, we've been talking about Mexico for non-stop. It's complicated, yeah. Why haven't we done anything there? Well, I think we have done a little bit there. I would have done a lot more there. My wife actually researched a lot of the rules for Texas, what we could do. And we helped sponsor something that got the governor declared invasion back when Biden was president. He's a good guy, but he didn't end up acting more than declaring the invasion. If that was me and I was governor, I probably would have bombed a few fentanyl plants. I mean, dude, that's our border. Yeah, if you put a fentanyl plant next to my border, I'd blow it up. These guys are scared of Trump right now. He's definitely taken some strong actions. I think we saw, was a port of Ayurveda where they attacked the Costco and the airport after their leader got killed. I think there's some joint operations right now to put a lot of pressure on the cartels. I think the cartels are laying much lower. A lot of the border crossings were cartels. If you look at the amount under Biden, it was insane. I think we cut it off under this administration pretty dramatically. So the cartel funding has gone way down because we're not getting paid to get people across the border right now. And I think they're very scared of the fentanyl stuff. And so right now, I think we're very busy, but we are doing a lot there. I think there's a lot more we could do there to go after the cartels. And I bet we'll see that. Yeah, I think I know there's a lot more we could be doing. One thing that, I just been diving it because we didn't hear anything about Venezuela forever and then all of a sudden it popped and fucking yanked him out. I love it. And, but I've always, I've just been curious, like why are we going there instead of Mexico? I mean, you're talking about a three hour flight from Venezuela to the US, Mexico's right at our border. Have you heard about the, in the answer that I keep getting is voting fraud. The voting fraud, the smart maddox machines. I've heard a lot of rumors about that. And I believe that there was something they were involved with. I think the voting fraud could have been a part of it. But listen, these guys. Do you understand? I mean, I haven't met anybody that can articulate how the voting fraud has happened and through the smart maddox machines that are affiliated with Venezuela. I understand in theory how they could have done something illegal with them and been involved. And I think having a state actor helping makes it a lot easier to create a lot of false records and to do a lot of sketchy work. Whether that was true or not, I just, I have to be honest, I don't know enough to know. I could definitely see it being true. I guess the thing I'd say, Sean, is that there's enough other reasons why Venezuela's something where we could act right away, where we could stop them from doing more deals with the Chinese. Delegation was there when we did it. Like there was big deals going down with our adversaries right off our coast. And we had caught them sponsoring lots of horrible things around the Americas and working with a lot of other kind of bad forces. So I think the Venezuela Cuba access then helps us put pressure on Mexico to take more aggressive action there. It makes it easier for us to be successful because it turns off a lot of the funding for a lot of the worst elements. What's going on in Cuba? You familiar with that? Yeah, we had all those funny crazy far left idiots there the last few, last couple of weeks. I don't know if you saw that at all. It's like these people of us just hate America and hate the West so much. So like it's just crazy who go there and go there and try to pump it up. Such a failed country. It's been about a year of like real extreme problems and real extreme suffering there. It's not clear to me like what the exact trigger's going to be, but these people are, the regime is in a huge amount of trouble. I mean, there are infrastructures falling apart right now, correct? It has been for decades, but it's gotten really, really bad. I mean, they're just so desperately poor and everyone's like, oh, like the far left's like, oh, it's cause you blocked them off. They trade with the rest of the world, by the way. They just don't have property rights and they don't have the incentive for anyone to invest. And you know, I think a lot of smart people, of course, have fled. Cause why would you want to live in a place where people are making $20 a day and everyone's forced to prostitute themselves? And if you do work really hard, you just get the attention of the government guys who steal it from you, right? By the way, this is like human history for 10,000 years. Is anyone who works really hard and builds something, if he can't defend it, it just gets taken away by the thugs in charge. It sounds like California. But that's, I mean, that's why we were so miserably poor as a species for thousands, thousands of years. There were no property rights. Like the enlightenment in the West is this really important thing we forget to teach kids about. Like the enlightenment that led to understanding of these things, led to understanding of why natural rights was so important. And then the battles to get those natural rights and to put John Locke, like life, liberty and property in place, like that is core to everything. That's why we have all the nice things we have and that Cuba doesn't have that, right? So it's a miserable place. And if we can get it back in the right direction, that'd be so good for them and for the world. And I think Secretary Rubio really passionate about this. And he's pretty clear he has a plan. And I think after Venezuela, this is clearly, it's gotta be something that we would be working on. I don't know how we do it, but I think it's a great thing to do in the next year. Interesting, interesting. Iran. Yeah. I'm against this. You're against doing anything in Iran? I am. I wanna talk to you about this. So let's do the counterfactual. So you agree the US Navy was created to fight the back against Jihadis in the 1780s? Like they've been a problem for 200 years, right? First of all. Okay. First of all, you're like, so I mean, the reason we created the US Navy was because basically like you had, you had Islamic forces around the Mediterranean that had been kidnapping originally, tens of millions of Europeans basically. There were millions of European women who were sex slaves to these people over several hundred years. This had been a thing they'd always done since the foundation of Islam. It's in the Quran. You're allowed to do it to non-Muslim women. And when our ambassador goes and says, listen, we're a new independent country. We're not fighting with you. We have nothing to do with this. We're just having trading ships there. Why are you taking our sailors? Like we have nothing to do with you. By the way, there's no Israel. There's none of that fucking shit. And you know what they say? They say it's our right as a superior group, we're the Muslims, and we're gonna take them. That's our right. Cause you're not Muslim. And so we have a right to take you and to take what we want. And that is what our Holy book tells us. Like this is this conversation. So you look at any American founder the first 30, 40 years of this country, they're like, these guys are fucking crazy. It's a terrible thing. And then we actually literally created the Navy and we went and we fought back and we fucking bombed their cities. We attacked their cities. We went after the, we went after the Barbary pirates. We went after the core empires there that were doing this to us and be the shit out of them. And it was the right thing to do cause they were stealing thousands of our soldiers or thousands of our sailors. Like you would Kirtland get away with that, right? So first of all, it was right to do that. I'd assume you'd say based on what I said like 200 years ago, obviously, right? And so, so listen today, what it is. So you get this, you get, you get a relatively modern country like conquered or raped by this crazy theocracy same exact type of guys as 200 years ago. These are, these are, these are guys that are, that are taking what they want, raping, killing. I'm sure you, I'm sure you've seen. Joe, you don't have to tell me about how bad I'm. You're either, you're either evil. Okay. So they killed more of my fucking friends than probably anybody else. Okay. So, so, so, so give that. They fucking hung the dudes up bridges. They're doing it and they're spreading their, they're spreading their money to Venezuela. We caught them building things there. We caught them building things all around Africa. Obviously they destroyed the Christian country, Lebanon. They're doing all sorts of other bad stuff. Now we know, thanks to this war, by the way, we now know they're relying. They did have missiles they were building. They could go 4,000 kilometers. So they're going to have basically crazy jihadis. We know they're building nukes at this point. They had 11 bombs they were going to have. That was their starting point in their negotiations. We have materials for 11 bombs. So Jared and Wiccoff. So Jared and Wiccoff are sitting there. This is my trade just sitting there being told we have 11 bombs you can't get rid of. That that's our, that's where we are. And now we now know that they could hold all of your hostage and they're obviously working to make that go to the U.S. They obviously could go to the Oresia. So we now know they could hold. Did you really want these, so you do nothing for 10, 20 years? You do have like tons of nukes. You have missiles that can go to every Western city. And you have crazy jihadis who don't care if they die in battle as long as they could destroy their death to America pledge because they're so obsessed with it. It's not, this is death to America is just a long before any of this, any of this stuff for the modern age in Israel. So that's the counterfactual 20 years from now, our kids, our children are in a world where it's the nuclear armed guys with crazy missiles with whatever else AI and China stuff they have that they've now used. By the way, we're way ahead of them right now and they're way fucking ahead of them in AI. We are not necessarily gonna be way ahead of them in 20 years. I don't know where we're gonna be, but right now there's a giant gap. Like we are way ahead of them. So it's like, it's like we can move now when we're way ahead and they can hurt us this much or we could wait till God knows what happens when they're nuclear energy hotties that can threaten anywhere in the West. I mean, the thing is I 100% agree. It's like risky and dangerous and tough to act. It's very scary. I think it's much scarier just to let it go for 10, 20 years with these fuckers. That's my point of view. Yeah, I mean, it just, I haven't, I've not been presented with any proof that they have those type of weapons. And I haven't even seen proof that the, whatever the missile is that they launched is from them. You think there's a false flag launch from Iran? I have no fucking idea. I did not say that. No, I know. I just said there hasn't been any proof. And it's getting hard, I just getting hard to believe the administration. I mean, there's been a lot of bait and switches that have happened within a lot of different areas. I mean, for example, the interview I threw out yesterday was about glyphosate and all the cancer it's causing. And you know, you mean you're familiar with the Maha movement, it was, you know, make America healthy again. And we're gonna get rid of all this shit. And then they just fucking declared a national security concern for, if we don't give the pesticide companies immunity, glyphosate, and they called it, yet they called it a, what a national security concern. Well, for example, Iowa has the most, most cancer cases out of every state in the fucking USA. You know who uses the most glyphosate? Yeah, obviously the corn there in Iowa. 618,000 people died of cancer last year in the US. Why are we giving them immunity? Anyways, that's just one example. Yeah, no, listen, I think that's a particular one where I think there should be more open debate from the administration on it and discussion of it. I think, listen, I know Brooke Rollins for a long time in the policy world. I think she's a really smart lady. She did some really impressive things fighting the left in Texas when she ran TPPF. She's now the agricultural secretary. That's her call. You know, I think it'd be great to, you should get her on the show, I can invite her, I can text her if you want. I think what she says. No, I'm serious. I'm serious, why not? Like, I don't know, I feel like she'd have a lot of respect for a lot of things you do. And a lot of things you've done in your service. So I think that's a fair debate. I'm not an expert on that one, but I think we should be debating it openly. And I'd love to hear the smartest people on both sides. And I think if they're just ignoring it, and so many people believe as you do, that's not appropriate. So let's engage on it. That'd be what I'd say. That was, I didn't mean to dive into that. No, that's fair. But you're saying you don't trust, you're saying you don't trust some other trust. When I saw the release of the upstream files, and how that got butchered, and how it continues to get butchered, that shit really pissed me off, man. And then, you know, And by the way, I never met the guy, I agree. He was a slime ball who seemed to know everyone, because he was really good at networking and meeting people and tricking them to meet him. I don't think everyone involved was like messing with kids. I don't either. Yeah, right. So a lot of people just like... But I think it's pretty obvious that some people involved were messing with him. I think some people were very, at the very least, a lot of people were messing with 21 and 22 year old girls. And I think some of them might have been underage. And I don't know, because I never met the guy. And he was a bad guy. But these other people, I just don't know. But I mean, actually, I'm curious, like what should they do? Well, I don't have to rebuild trust there. Actually, that's a tough, that's when I don't really follow at all. What should they do to rebuild trust? Yeah, yeah, how do we... Be transparent. That's not, I think that's all anybody wants is just transparency. They wanna see, you know what I mean? We just, we heard it over and over again. We're gonna go after these people. We haven't seen, we've heard... That I agree with you, Rod. We haven't heard fuck all about... I agree. Why is the DOJ right now in the FBI are both really hurting the reputation of this administration because they're not going after and getting enough arrests right now and getting enough cases. I think that is 100% true. Listen, I was talking to our friends there who are focused on fraud. Where's a ton of fraud, we're helping them find. This is my, I'm obsessed with this issue. I think there's way more fraud this country than anyone realizes. We have to start making more charges and arrests. It's like way too slow. Like somebody, and I don't know, they can't find the right people to run it. It's embarrassing. That part pisses me off. Yeah. So anyways, it's just all these things that have happened that I've lost a lot of trust. You shouldn't trust the bad guys running Iran either. Though you also agree. I don't trust the bad guys running Iran. I don't necessarily think I would be against the war in Iran. If they presented to you a different way. If they presented to me in a different way. But all the stuff you're saying, yes, it's true. Yes, it's my fucking friends that died over there. I saw it. They're my friends. I don't want to send my fucking kid back over there to die. For any of this shit. I mean, we spent over 20 fucking years. Yeah, well, I think the way Afghanistan was run was just a travesty. We wasted trillions of dollars and everyone should be pissed off about it. And so I think that has created distrust that is fair to exist. There should be distrust after we wasted all his lives and all his money with not real clerics. So I 100% agree with that perspective. So I have some mentors who ran British Intelligence 20, 30 years ago. I know these guys still pretty well because they're always with Palantir. We got to know a bunch of them. They thought we were kind of like an Aboriginal species of service and still come out like versus like MI6. These guys are cool. And a couple of them have told me that they thought that a lot of the stuff that got us to go into Iraq because we kind of already wanted to go into Iraq, obviously, but they thought some of the stuff, some of the evidence, including from Chalabi, who is an Iranian spy, like purposely came from Iran even at that time. And what's interesting is even at that time, in my understanding, I went back and looked at it. Like a lot of the top voices out of our ally, Israel, were saying Iran's the big problem, not Iraq. So a lot of people are saying, oh, we thought Iraq for Israel. I don't think that's the case. I think in that particular instance, like Iran was very clever in getting us to focus more on Iraq. And even back then, I think they were the bad guys. So for what it's worth, I think they are clearly the worst. And I'm very happy a lot of them are dead. But 100% I understand where you're coming from, not wanting to trust and not wanting to put more people over there. Do you think we're fighting Iran for our own benefit or do you think we're fighting Iran for Israel's benefit? I think it's definitely our own benefit. I think this is, by the way, China is like freaking pissed. You know, China has sent several billion dollars of stuff with cargo planes to Iran. They were in the process of setting up to help defend them. This is their proxy ally. Like their allies are Russia and Iran. They want Iran to exist and be able to cause trouble, to like distract us and force us to split our forces if we ever have to deal with anything they might want to do. This is like a chess game where they're trying to build this ally and we just smashed their ally. And by the way, you know who the strongest military in the world is right now? It's us. And because we're basically deploying all this new technology and all this new AI in ways that no one else is, we're learning how to make interceptors way cheaper. We're learning how to just coordinate all these things. We never would have learned before. China has no idea to do this stuff. Like I'm not saying you want to fight wars to get better, but this makes us so much stronger to smash their proxy ally, to smash their stuff and to learn how to use all this technology. Like this makes them a lot harder to challenge us for the next 20 years. You want to talk about how AI is... Yeah, sure. We're using over there? Yeah, I mean, obviously from what I can say, and listen, I don't have my full clarence at this point anymore either, but I have a lot of friends on both sides. And we developed a lot of the targeting stuff at Palantir back in the day, combined with AI basically. I mean, just think about it, for sake of argument, we know Israel and America both have some of the best hackers. And so they're, let's say you hacked in to the street cameras, let's say you hacked into logistics in the country and who was sending what, where, like what payments are happening, what, you know, what, what, you know, just all sorts of things you basically can view, look at emails, look at where everyone is. It's just so much information. How would a person look at these millions of pieces of data and figure out what's going on? AI is really, really good at that. So for, so, so Palantir and a system like that will create what's called the ontology, like, okay, like the concepts, the frameworks, here's the things we care about, here's how they can possibly relate to each other. And then you take that ontology, you take that structure of how to think about things and you overlay like just sane amounts of information we're able to get in different ways through human intelligence, through signal intelligence, through hacking. And then all of a sudden it's able to optimize and say like, here's this base you didn't know about storing all these munitions, here's this key part of the command center, here's this thing over here, 300 miles outside Tehran you never would have thought about that's like a backup for the supply, for this key part of their missile launchers. You think it's like that? And all of a sudden like, so when, when, when, when, when, when Israel and the first start of the war like sends 200 planes as a surprise attack and hits, they hit 500 targets in the first 20 minutes, those targets were optimized between the two countries. And here's the things that we know we need to get rid of if we want to stop them from causing us more problems. So I mean, it's just really, really powerful how smart what we could do is, you know, that we couldn't do before. Interesting. What else should we talk about that's going on over there? Over there? Yeah. You know, it's, what's about you? What are you worried about with the straighter hermose? You worried about that at all? And this, you know, it's, it's, this is a tough one. I am worried. Listen, I think this is one of those things that could take a few weeks and it could take a few months. And it's really, really hard to stop asymmetric attacks. Right. Because I mean, I mean, so, so the Iranian, and listen, this is, this is, this is one step removed. I don't have the exact information, but you have these mountains that they're firing out of, right? Because as far as we could tell, so, so what'll happen is they have railroads underground that are way under the granite and they'll take, they have tons of missiles there. It's not about how many missiles they have. It's about how many launchers and they have, they have launchers and the launcher will come out and it'll go out the railroad to opening like a cave. It'll fire and then it'll hurry back in and we'll see where it fired from. And you could like destroy that. So they can never use that again for a long time without spending, you know, months digging out cause you respond the hell out of it. But then they just go out another cave and another cave and these guys have apparently built like hundreds of these caves is actually impressive. Wow. Right. It's like they've been preparing for 20, 30 years for this. And so they have these mountains that are firing out of and then you have all along the straight of her moves you can hide drones, right? You can hide all sorts of things in like hundreds of locations that each time it's a new attack, new location. So it could take a while to find all of it, right? Yeah. It's not easy and it's not, listen, it's especially bad for Europe who turned off there, who turned off their energy economy. You wanna talk about conspiracies, man. Like Europe let Gazprom and Russia fund the green movement and turn off all their goddamn energy. And that's why there are so much pain right now from this. You know? Yeah. That's a true conspiracy by the way, 100%. We've found that it was a ton of Russia money that created the strength of the green parties all around Europe. And their main thing was turning off all their energy. No shit. 100%. 100%. Like Russia's not dumb. This is great for them. Right? It's great for the Middle East too. The green parties are useful idiots, man. Does it bother you that we're low on munitions? There are some munitions we're not low on and there's some interceptor things that we could use a lot more of. Listen, I think America is gonna be in a lot better position after experiencing this. So one of our companies called Chaos has before the best radar that they're monetizing but the guy running it helped build Everest as well, the EMP company. He's figured out how to do $5,000 interceptors now. What? He just proved it. He just proved it. It had a bunch of things last month. We're gonna make thousands of them this year. Hopefully hundreds of thousands next year. I mean, America is gonna be so strong coming out of this because we're learning and we're iterating. We're getting better. And it definitely bothers me that we had to waste like millions of dollars per shot on some stupid interceptors. That was dumb, but that's because the primes are idiots. We're just gonna fix it for them. Totally honestly, you know. Right on. It's just let's just make it better. When you're trying to perform at a high level, you start optimizing everything like your training, your nutrition, your mindset. For a long time, I wasn't really dialing in my sleep. If your sleep is off, everything feels harder the next day. That's what got my attention when I tried Beam's Dream Powder. I didn't want something to just knock me out. I wanted something that actually improved my sleep and that's exactly what it does. Best of all, Beam is an American company that makes clean, science-backed products designed to help people perform at their best. Dream is their sleep formula and it's loaded with ingredients your body actually needs to recover. Rishi, magnesium, l-thanine, apigenin, and melatonin, but dosed intelligently. My favorite flavor is cocoa, but they've got plenty of options. I mix it up and drink it about 30 minutes before bed for optimal results. Like I said, it tastes great, it's smooth, and it actually feels like part of my nightly routine now. And for a limited time, I've got my listeners an exclusive discount of up to 50%. Go to ShopBeam.com slash SRS and use my code SRS to get up to 50% off. This is the best discount Beam gives out. So tell your friends too, even if they don't listen to the show, if they wanna fix their sleep, they've gotta try Beam. So remember to go to ShopBeam.com slash SRS, use code SRS. With my code SRS, you can grab Dream for 50% off. Try it today. Welcome to Hollywood versus reality. They do it, right? What does he do in the movies? Tell me if I'm doing this wrong because I don't watch any of this. Little flick like that, right? Seems pretty cool. It is pretty cool. Gotta silence it. In another lifetime, I did gun reviews for a living. Proprietary magazines, supposedly the best engineering in the world. When that breaks, you're f***ing... And now we're bringing them back. It does look pretty f***ing cool. I gotta admit that. What's China doing during all this? They're in shock. They're in shock. They're in shock. And there's things released internally. They said, you know what? It turns out America's a lot stronger than we realized, but they just have to want to use their strength. And their main objective with us is to make us not want to use our strength. And how do you make America not wanna use our strength? There's a few things. One, is you fund the far left. You may fund the people who hate America. That group that's down in Cuba right now saying how great Cuba is, how bad America is, the one hotel that has light in the whole goddamn country, those people are funded by China. It's the wife of the guy who's been one of the main funders of everything, the Nobel guy who's hiding out in Shanghai. So you have all sorts of Chinese money trying to make us hate ourselves. You have all sorts of... I'm sure they love it when we fight with ourselves in two extreme ways on the right. I think it's totally legit to push back on the war. I respect that, I admire that. But there's people who are actually pushing back on even America, like being a world leader and saying we have to share power with China, like Tucker said to that Chinese spy the other day, a few weeks ago on the podcast. I don't think we should be sharing any power with China. Exactly, I know, you're not, he's lost it, I think. He's lost it, he's too extreme against us. And so China wants, and you know what they have? They have this one called cognitive warfare. They're very smart about this. They have land, sea, air, cyber, cognitive as a fifth branch. And they use all sorts of tactics. They capture whatever data they can. Same way we're capturing data to attack Iran and figure out targets, they're capturing data on everything and everyone going on the country building profiles and trying to figure out what do they do, what do they try, what do they push to make people not love America, to make people not want America to be free and have property rights. Because they know that is how, because it's the only way they're gonna get us at the end of the day. They've beefed up presence off the coast of Taiwan. Oh, 100, but they've continued to do that for a long time, that's right. But it's more now since the Iran stuff kicked off, correct, am I off on this? I think even before the Iran stuff kicked off, I saw they were putting a bunch of ships and doing exercises all around the island. I shouldn't say I'm supposed to go visit briefly in a little bit, I guess a little scary flying on your plane over the Chinese warships. You're like, like, Sean, maybe don't hear the episode until after I land. Right on, we'll push it. Yeah, I'm just kidding. But I mean, how are these chip fabs going in Arizona? You know, I think some parts worked pretty well. I think there's some parts culturally where it's harder for some of the employees to ramp up in the US for some of the types of tasks. I mean, the reason I'm asking, because that's the big fear for us, right? Well, I think, yeah, and Elon announced Terra Fab, which is awesome, he's gonna try to massively, you see the size of that building, it's like this three or four miles long. Wait, what are you talking about? Elon announced this massive project to do a massive fab for chips in Texas. No shit, I didn't even fucking hear about this. Yeah, so this is, it's been recording a few days, it'll be a couple of weeks to go when it comes out. Yeah, I know it's a big project, worth talking to people about, it's really cool. And they're gonna try to do everything here at massive scale. Listen, I think these things take a while to get. I think China, sorry, I think, well, I call it China, I think Taiwan, which is actually China, right? It's the good China. I think Taiwan has a lot of advantages there from building it for decades. And I think they should be our ally and we should be working with them and we should be doing some things here and then some things in their ecosystem. I mean, there's stuff that's done by hand by people who have been doing it for 20 years whether it's in Taiwan or Vietnam or other places that you're not just gonna replace right away with robots and you're not gonna be able to pay people to do a lot of that stuff here. I think the high value stuff you could take, the low value stuff, I still think we can work for other countries. It's just really, really hard to do it at scale without it. But yet, but totally we gotta bring more here. But does that worry you? That's what worries me the most. They do take it, then what the fuck are we gonna do in the end? I'm the one who should be more worried about that because I'm building a lot of these goddamn AI companies. What do you think? No, listen, obviously it would slow things down and obviously it'd be bad for the world. A lot of the chips are things like, if you have a minivan for your kids or the chip opens and closes the door automatically, you'll have to do it by hand instead. There's a lot of the chip stuff, is we can swap things in and out, we could keep the key ones. You don't have to, a lot of the chips we use are convenient, but they're so cheap that we use a lot more than we need and there'd be ways to figure it out and to keep things going. And it wouldn't be as big of an economic impact right away, although it would obviously slow down the AI wave, which I don't want. Because that's something we should talk about. I think the AI wave is way better than people realize. It's like the coolest thing happening in the world right now. Matt, let's do it. I just had Brad Ancott in here with Figure AI. I love it. For a rollout in. Yeah. What the fuck, dude? It's a holder of the world already. There's so much happening, man. What is happening? These kids, I was sitting with one of my old CEOs from 20 years ago. We built something together that we sold. And it was like building back then, we were selling this called OpenGov. And it did great. It was a great company. But I was saying it was like being in a boat and rowing through the dirt with a paddle, because it was so freaking hard to build these things sometimes. It was so slow. And now, there's one of my AI CEOs was sitting next to us and he didn't hear my comment, but he came over and he's like, Joe, we're not just going to double revenue this quarter. We're going to triple revenue this quarter. And it's like, holy crap, these stuff is just, it's just growing and changing and fixing things so fast. And I think in terms of why people should care, because I think it's a great argument, whatever, Joe, it's nice, you're going to make a lot of money. Who cares? You're already rich. Like, why should the 300 million Americans care? I think there's a few really great ones. I think the number one is healthcare AI is going to make healthcare half the cost if we let it. This is really important. We can make healthcare so much better, so much cheaper. It is one of those things where it's going to be a big battle, because right now, every state has laws against it because of scope of practice. But I think we're going to be able to prove some sandboxes. And if we can, that's going to be great. Like, at the first of all, that's just like makes America way wealthier, right? That we don't have our healthcare debt. Man, I just saw, I think it's Mark Cuban's opening some pharmacy. He's doing great work on the pharmacy side. Listen, Mark and I don't have the same politics, but I really admire his work on that, because that is, that is, that's a great, I've worked on. This is going to take pharmaceuticals. You're going to be able to get them at cost if I've read it correctly. There's a ton of, well, there's a ton of, so what happens in the old days is the pharma companies are so corrupt that they had laws, they had agreements where you couldn't even tell a patient about a generic option that was way cheaper. And that this is like a PBM agreement. So in order to offer my drug over here, you're not even allowed to offer a payment. And so my friends and I went to the Senate and we fought really hard. And we won one battle and lost one battle. The battle we won is you made it, so it's now legal for doctors to tell you about any generic, which is really important by the way, because obviously, but the other one is they're still not able to share pricing. So they're still able to gag you on pricing. And so, and it's really crazy. So they just hide pricing on all this stuff until anyone shares it. So there's no market for a lot of these things. And it's just, they just take advantage. And so Mark's getting around that by building his own, a thing in the middle, which is great. And Trump launched the site too, by the way, which is doing really well. We're just saving people a ton of money. I don't know if you're- Trump launched what? You've launched the pharma site. There's like a pharma site you can go on, search Trump's pharma site, and it's a direct to consumer thing. And as you can get all this stuff way cheaper right now, it's a big deal. He launched it a month ago. Joe Jebya, who's running design for the government, they are B and B founder. He designed it all. It works great. So you can go on and do that. So the pharma stuff, Mark Cuban stuff's great. I have a company called Blink Health. It's a cheaper PBM. Like a bunch of us are trying to solve the drug side, because that's a big, big thing to make cheaper. Just gonna be some drugs that always cost money, by the way, because you want to have innovation, but you want to make the generics and everything cheaper. But then the bigger side of this, man, is the health systems and is primary care. And like there's not enough doctors for rural areas. You have to wait weeks sometimes. It's really expensive to go in. There's so many standard things. There's hundreds of chronic conditions. You should just be able to check on the fricking phone and be able to enter the things. And they've already checked you once. And they can, you know, Utah is doing a thing where AI can reperscribe it once you've been prescribed, because it's safe. If it's done correctly, it has to be done safely in a deterministic way. But by the way, this is not like a, oh, AI might mess up type of situation. Like you can quantify it. You can test the system a million times. You can show that it's safer than doctors. And you should have to show that. It should be regulated in some form, right? There should be some way it's safe. Once you prove it's safe, if keeping it out, that's just keeping prices high for the sake of the medical companies, that's bullshit. What are you getting involved in? Well, so we're building some things there, right? We're building a bunch of things in medical AI healthcare and there's a bunch of great entrepreneurs doing that. That's like a big wave coming. A bunch of our friends are working on that. We gotta make it legal. You know, I'll tell you another crazy AI I think it's coming is have you followed Joby Aviation? They stem in Archer or the two EV tall companies. So these guys have been, so Joby we'd be back to 11 years ago to start and they just got approved for 12 cities where they're gonna be doing 12 states they're gonna be doing takeoff and landing. So you basically can do me in flying cars in 12 states is coming this next year. Wow, which is amazing. Next year? It's coming in the next year. It's like prove now. So we can buy these cars or- It's like Uber, it's like Uber. You're gonna be like, but you could use it. I gotta check if it's Tennessee. I think it might be, but it's Texas for sure and Utah on a few other ones. I should have checked if it's Tennessee or not, but you can have it come pick you up and take you down town or something, which would be great. Yeah, we gotta push government. I bet it would be here, I'll check. But here's the thing. So these guys are like the best airplane guys and they started with the insertion point of Joby at the flying cars, right? They're like these winged things. You get with five rotors. They're building new airplanes too. And their best aerodynamicists in the world when you had a new idea and you wanted to iterate it used to take three months, six months, right? Cause that's just how long it takes to do these things and do the work and program it and test it out. Thanks to AI, you could do all that in an afternoon now. So every afternoon, the best guys in the world are doing like three to six months of work. And so here's the thing that people don't realize about AI. It's like we're living like multiple, multiple years in one in terms of progress. So we're taking like the 2020s and the 2030s and the 2040s and we're condensing it into the next few years. And as I mean, the breakthroughs we have just on the airplane side, you know, airplanes were basically stuck for 60 years, right? No one believed anything would happen. You're going to start having like way more efficient, way better airplanes coming out in the next few years thanks to AI. And it's going to be like this shocker where everyone's like, what the heck? These guys actually have hydrogen fuel cells working now. No one's ever got them working on planes. So hydrogen fuel cells three times more efficient per weight, two times more efficient per conversion energy. So it's six times more efficient for flying as a fuel in the air, which is pretty amazing. And then you have the new shapes of airplanes and designs of airplanes that we've thought about for years, never really been able to test. And the new designs are multiple times more efficient too. You do the multiplication six times, even if it's only three, it's 18 times, all of a sudden your travels super cheap, way better for everyone in the 2030s, right? So this is like the world's in a really good place thanks to this AI. Like this stuff really matters. Yeah, I mean, everybody's really concerned, but I mean, it does, I mean, I've been concerned too. I've been worried, but- It's just a lot of change. Yeah, but I mean, I just, I think we're going to be better off when we get on the other end of this. I think we already are better off. I think it's already getting better, but it's going to be a huge leap to the next five or 10 years. And listen, I think it's fair to be scared. I'll tell you, if I had to make the other argument, what am I most scared of? I think it's really good that Elon's doing XAI, because I think it shifts the overtaking window because you don't want just a bunch of woke companies in charge. Listen, I think there's people I respect in the tropic, despite the fight they've had with the department and stuff, and there's some, but there's some leftists there too. I think open AI kind of let themselves be conquered by the left. I think Elon, with what he's done, is kind of pushing everything else to be more rational, basically. And then, because it would be scary, let's say you only had woke authoritarian AI things that are all of a sudden ruling against everything you and I believe, that'd be bad. So listen, I think there are things we got to watch for and be careful with, but this stuff is going to make so much wealth for everyone. I mean, how do we, I think the big question of my mind is how do we regulate it, but remain competitive on the world stage? I think there's certain... In your next governor here, she's kind of more on the regulation side, right? Blackburn, Senator Blackburn, she's one of the ones who kind of pushes that. And listen, I respect where she's coming from in certain areas. I think you want to protect children for sure. I think that's right. I think there could be certain rules on privacy we all agree on that we want to put in place. I think that's fair without breaking everything, right? I think there's probably should be some rules about what kind of images you can create about people who shouldn't just be able to like take a picture of our wives and do whatever they want with it in a video. That's not fair. I don't know, that's kind of messed up, right? It's like, there's probably things like that that we should be protecting for civilized society. So I think the best way to do this is to do it nationally. I mean, Congress is so dysfunctional on both sides. Right now they're so dysfunctional. Like really what you do is you have moderates work together nationally, but some basic, basic things in that we all agree on. And then just like let it be free and then come back and revisit it if something else is broken. Like that would be my take, you know? So you pretty much on the, you don't want much regulation at all. I want to protect kids and I want to protect creators. I think Mark, you know, Senator Blackburn is big on protecting creators. There's probably some rules there that's fair too. So I think there's basic things you could do for sure. And there's some compromise. But I think right now the vast majority of regulations in this country, like there's 9 million words per state Sean of regulations, 9 million words per state. The vast majority is big companies stopping small companies and stopping new innovative companies from disrupting their business more efficiently. Like that is what regulation mostly does. Let's be honest, right? And here's the crazy thing. Like one time of regulation is licenses. You need licenses to do things, right? So there's a thousand different types of things you might need a license to do. There's only 50 of them that you need a license in every state to do. So right away from the start, 95% of the things that they force licenses for are just clearly just protecting their guild because it's perfectly safe to do without a license in another state, right? So most of this stuff is guilds and big companies creating regulations to stop others. And healthcare by the way, that's exactly what it is. Health care costs so much money because we put so many rules that you can't compete. It's literally crazy amount of rules. You have to spend tens of millions of dollars just to get going and you can't even do a new thing because they've blocked all the new stuff you could do. So like our country areas where we have high costs where everyone suffers, where the middle class, where the working class suffers is the areas where these guys have put in thousands and tens of thousands of rules. And by the way, that's like good for guys like me. If I just wanted to make tens of billions of dollars, I could put in all sorts of rules and I could afford the fucking lawyers to go follow those rules, right? Like guys in my situation who've built multiple big companies, like we could deal with regulation. We can afford it. We could figure it out, but it crushes any new thing trying to compete. It says bullshit. We shouldn't be crushing all these new things. What about EGI? So this is like, did we create a new God question, right? Cause that's like obviously a fair question. And it's like- Cause I think it didn't Jen some languages come out and say we're there. There's AGI, there's ASI, which is like general intelligence versus like systemic intelligence. There's, I think law people are defining when do we create something that has more intelligence than all of human. You combine and you can do things that none of us combined can do. The question is like, what's the level? I'm not even sure it's the right way to think about it cause it's really more of a tool right now for lots of things. But sure, let's just, let's just, you know, I think it's a fair question. Like do at some point you create something that has like so much more intelligence that just so far ahead of you all, that somehow it takes over. And that, listen, I think right now I'm much more afraid of what people are gonna do with AI. I'm not saying you couldn't somehow create something that would do that. I think you have to be smart. I think that's more of like a 10, 20 year from now question. But it's definitely a question to watch for. And I think, I think as you're building AI, one of the things it does as a tool is helps us analyze and understand what's coming next. And we have to have, it's actually really good. There's lots of these companies cause we all need to be using these different ways to understand and analyze and make sure we're aware of what we're building. It's like, you know, it's true. Yeah, yeah. I mean, you guys are getting in a Palantir that's getting into corruption, waste, fraud, all that kind of shit, right? I mean, this is, this is that core of the DNA since we started Palantir. You saw a PayPal back in the day before Palantir existed, the Chinese and Russian mafia were stealing all our money, right? That was the big thing. And if you hear Elon talk about fraud, he knows it cause he was part of that battle. He was part of that battle, he stopped that. And he said, like, you know, whoever squeals the loudest, that's because you're turning off their fraud. Like I remember Peter was at chess club with some Russian guy who was pissed and it was screaming, yelling and it was, it was complaining. And it's because Peter was like turning off all of his fraud at work. You're like, cause he was tied to these mafia guys. So it's like, it's like, yes, this is like core, like Palantir when it was first built, it came out of that experience of understanding how I do data investigations based on fraud. And yeah, Palantir is working right now with the SBA, with Kelly Leffler, who's doing administrative, Leffler is doing an amazing job there, tons of stuff. And HUD, I mean, HUD is just like, good level one ground level for fraud, right? Just like paying off NGOs for get out the vote purposes, paying off people in the community, basically in the inner cities. There's just a lot of nonsense that you're finding the question is, there's a shit tons of fraud. I mean, I hadn't actually come on, talk about all the fraud going on. I think he's done a great job exposing a lot of stuff. You know, with the Somalis, the, what the, I mean, these tribes are so good. The Leering centers. These, the Leering centers, I love it. Look, these tribes are so good at, cause they coordinate, cause like you couldn't get, and unfortunately in Europe, you get like a tribe of these, you know, Islamists from wherever, like 15 of them to go rape the teacher together and not telling them, well, like if you asked 15 of my cousins to go rape a teacher, they'd all like punch you in the face. And like, there's no way they'd all go do something like that. But these, man, these tribes from these places are sick. And we brought them into this country. There's a lot of broken tribes here, unfortunately. We, and the, yeah, there's tons of fraud tied in. There's tons of fraud tied to subcultures around LA that we're finding. It's, it's really, it's really unfortunate. We got to turn all this stuff off. So I mean, my question, I mean, I got, you guys are going over, we keep saying you guys, Palantir, COVID era, PPP fraud. Palantir is now helping small business administration investigate fraud. You mentioned the HUD, minority contracting abuse, Biden nearly tripled the size of the program. Most contracts were no bid awarded. So anyways, I mean, this, this kind of sounds, didn't we kind of do this with Doge and it didn't, Well, Doge turned off $160 billion of stuff. It's not nothing. That's a pretty good start. No, no, no, no, no, I'm not saying it's not nothing. I'm saying, we all wanted it a lot to go. There's a lot more to find. There's a little distance. Yeah. But there was so much fucking pushback. Yeah. And it was like complicated. I think listen, I think when Doge first started, I mean, I was there at Mar-a-Lago briefly and with Elon and Vivek and others and they were interviewing people to become the secretaries, right? Because Trump had them helping with transition. And so Doge right from the start was kind of like tied to the boss and tied to the president. And I think there had to be a cultural change with how it worked with the agencies and worked with the leadership in ways they'd be okay with it. But a lot of the best people did go into these agencies and keep working. It's not like it went away fully, right? There are all the cultures there are still in a lot of these places and going. And I love that, listen, the president's put the vice president in charge of this, right? And he's in a psalm recently. He says this is a big objective of his. He's working hard on it. And a lot of the grift that comes from fraud, Sean, is how the Democratic Party funds its allies. This is just the truth. Oh, what? This is how the Democratic Party funds its friends and allies. It's very good at it, right? We caught huge amounts of money going to these things that go to get out the vote for the left. There's hundreds of nonprofits in New York State recently came out that are funding, get out the vote, they're funding candidates, right? And so these people will have political power, they'll get money for the NGOs, they get money for their businesses with Medicaid or whatever else, and they'll give it right back. It's like political largesse. They give it right back to people benefiting them and they get more. And there's huge amounts of money. So this is why unfortunately, a lot of the left is not on our team for getting rid of fraud because it's funding so many of the people who vote for them and who support them. And this is a huge issue for us to go after much harder. We gotta turn it off. Shhh, APD, do you think this, is this started? Oh yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah, listen, they're finding a bunch of stuff with administrator left floor on the SBA. They just announced a bunch of stuff in HUD a few weeks ago that they're finding there's just all stuff and we're turning it off. And you said the right thing that's also really getting me really annoyed is we should be doing more prosecutions. We should be putting more people in jail because you're finding stuff, it's very clearly fraud and you're turning it off and we are not prosecuting. And I think the people running the DOJ are not nearly as competent as they need to be. I'll just put it out there. How the fuck is this gonna change? We gotta get more competent people whose job is to actually initiate and put people in jail for breaking the law. How do we do that? You put out the word to hire really competent lawyers? I don't know, like I've built orgs, you've built orgs. It's like, I mean, I know what I would do but nobody's doing it. What would you do? I would fucking fire everybody and break it. You could place some new leadership. That seems reasonable to me at this point. By the way, some leadership's really good in some of these places and they are working well with us. Like Leffler's doing great work. Like there's people in the Department of War doing, I think great work. But they're not agree with the war. These are competent people, right? And so there's like places where we have very competent leaders that Trump has brought in and there's places where for whatever reason, I can't tell, they're not getting it done. So let's fix it. Yeah, yeah. Well, I hope it sticks. I really hope that sticks. We gotta turn this stuff off. We gotta prosecute it. We gotta make it sure it can't happen again. This drives me crazy, Sean, because we have, first of all, like the government shouldn't be able to give hundreds of billions of NGOs. Like what the heck, right? That's wrong. But the problem is if you go to the Senate and try to get the votes for that, you need 60 votes, you can't get it because the Democrats won't vote against funding this stuff. You know what I think we should do here to fix that? We should use the NGOs for our objectives at scale. We should say, okay, we're gonna be funding NGOs to help free speech in Europe. We're gonna be funding NGOs to root out the communists from all the universities around the country. We're gonna be funding NGOs to go do anti-voter fraud in the cities. We're gonna be funding NGOs to look at any other NGOs to make sure they're not doing anything political. Like these are all things we could do, and the left would hate it. And you know what? We might get the votes to turn off NGO funding if we actually use them for something on our team. I don't know, just to throw it out there, you know? Like why not be a little more aggressive? You're in the generation that wants to fight. These old Republicans, man, they don't know how to fight. Yeah, I think we've all figured that out. We all figured it out. Like come on, guys. Like we need to actually fight and win. Like, because there's stuff, there's stuff we're totally aligned on here, but we gotta be fighting. Why don't we have fighters? It's like there's this genteel class of like patricians presiding over some kind of decline. I don't get it. Like come on, guys. Yeah. Let's fix it. So what would we do? We start new NGOs or Republicans? I mean, I'm in favor of just turning it all off, but because we can't turn it all off, I would probably start new ones a bit for the money and use it for things on our side while we're on power. But I'd want to design them in a way where they're gonna wind down no matter what, because you don't want to create a whole new class of leeches, right? That's always the problem. Because I'm not for having tons of leeches on our side. Like they have on there, they have so many leeches. Just make money off this nonsense. There's like whole agencies that we turned off that were basically doing nothing and it's other than fraud and corruption. And so we don't want that. I don't want, that's not our side, but we should be fighting back and we should be doing whatever we can together and be forced to turn these off. That's my view. Makes, it does make sense. Does make sense. What's going on in Ukraine Russia these days? We've been in a lot of shit. I really hope that this war has a good impact there. If we're honest, like the three militaries that are probably the best in the world right now, just from all their practice recently, is probably US, Israel, Ukraine. Obviously US is the very best, but Israel and Ukraine have both gotten so much better because they've been forced to fight. I've been very impressed with the Ukrainians. There's some really, really clever innovation that they've created by necessity to say themselves. I mean, it's amazing stuff they're doing. Give me some examples. Like stuff that's impressing you over there. Like figuring out, like there's this company sign engineering that we're involved with, just like doing all of the maps of the battlefields for the drones and how to control them and how to counter them and knowing what's going on and knowing how to hide, knowing how to attack. There's all sorts of new things. There's electronic warfare that they and others are doing to create like bubbles the enemy can't see and then sneak through to turn their stuff off during an attack into different ways, jamming them in different ways, creating shadows of things that don't actually exist. There's all sorts of ways they're producing lots of small things at scale that they can use to kind of halt the enemy's advance and harass them in ways that no one's ever done before. I mean, there's literally millions on both sides of these drones back and forth. And there's controls where one person, like I've played video games where you control a bunch of troops, it's very different in the real world, controlling hundreds of these things at once and getting really fricking good at it with AI plus the person. It's kind of cool. It's terrifying, but it's kind of cool. But listen, I think we're turning off all this heated production right now. Another benefit of the Iranian thing is hopefully that turns off a lot of more stuff to Russia. Russia's already, by all accounts, from everything I've heard, they're in huge budget troubles. They're actually unwilling to project the next year of budget in Russia as of the last kind of four months. No shit. Because they can't do it at this rate, so they have to just do it month-to-month planning. And so they're under a lot of pressure right now. So I think turning off the Iranian stuff, I think the budget pressure they're under, hopefully we come to a good resolution in both. I mean, I think, listen, this is a risky thing, but hopefully Trump looks really fricking good six months from now. And both of those things are in the right place. I think there's a chance, a good chance of that. I hope so. Right on, right on. Joe, let's take a quick break. When we come back, I want to get into some of the new companies that ATC has invested in. Love it. We track our sleep, fine-tune our macros, and try every biohack under the sun. But the truth is, your peak performance starts at the cellular level. Armora colostrum is nature's original superfood. Colostrum is packed with over 400 bioactive nutrients that fortify gut health, strength and immune health, fuel performance, and more. Whether you're training for a race, working to balance your health or simply striving to feel your best, Armora helps you operate at your highest level because your body deserves the same level of optimization as the rest of your life. For me, Armora has become a staple in my daily routine and I'm impressed by the results. So we've worked out a special offer for my audience. Receive 30% off your first subscription order. Go to armora.com slash srs, or enter srs to get 30% off your first subscription order. That's armora.com slash srs. Hi, I'm Sarah Adams, the host of Vigilant's elites, the watch floor, where we highlight what matters. It became a permissive state. Explain to you why it matters and then aim to leave you feeling better informed than you were before you hit play. Terrace, hostile intelligence agencies, organized crime, not everything is urgent, but this show will focus on what is need to know, not just what is nice to know. All right, Joe, we're back from the break. We were talking about AGI and ASI, I've not even heard of ASI, but could you, I just wanna dive in a little bit more on what that means. Can you explain that to me? I think there's a lot of different levels you can define of what constitutes the computers being way, way ahead of us. And I think there's artificial systemic intelligence, there's general intelligence is lower, systemic is like, one of the questions is, like at what point do people not even help the AI improve itself? Which is kind of a scary question, right? So if you wanna compare, if chess is the right analogy, if you go back to chess, it used to be that people were better than the machines, but the machine could help you with tactics, right? So there's two types of chess. There's the tactics, which is like the next three, five, 10 moves, the computers are really good at that, even from 1960s, because you can see the next 10 moves, but people will be much better knowing what's happening way farther ahead, right? Position, place, there's things the human mind's better at and there's things the computer is better at. And as the computer got better at chess, it got to the point where the computer, the best computer was better than the best person. But for a long time, if you combine the computer and a person, it still made it a lot better, because there were still some things that people were better at, right? So the people were so much better at position play that there would be a chimera, right? Combined, it was better. And then it got to a point where the computer was so freaking good, doesn't even get any better if you had a person, doesn't need to help anymore. It's just like so far ahead. And that's where it is obviously today for a long time at this point. And so the question is like with coding right now, for a long time only people did it. And now we're just starting to use the computer to do a little bit of things. And the computer's gotten so much better in the last couple of years, that now you're using a computer for a lot. Like you're not even writing most code anymore. You have like six agents or 10 agents, if you're really good. Each of them like coding for you and you're telling it what to do and you're coming back and testing it and telling it to build its own tests. But there's still like a person involved coordinating all of this stuff, right? The question, I think at what point does like the coding thing be the thing that coordinates itself, right? At some high level. And at what point even higher level than that is the whole company basically being coordinated, for all the tech side by a computer. And at what point does all the work on whatever important project just get iterated on by a computer instead? Which is kind of a scary proposition, right? This is, I don't love this. Like at what point are they just replacing yours in my job? And it's silly that obviously computers don't want to listen to each other. But it's kind of creepy, right? Like they go higher and higher, higher up the conceptual abstract stack. And so I think there's different ways of like saying how you measure it. But like a lot of my smartest friends who run the AI labs still, when I talked to them the last few months, it's like, oh yeah, I won't be until the mid 2030s that like we're not having people actually help on some of these things. But what does that even mean at that point? So it's, and at what point is like his like scientific discovery pushed ahead by the computers? I think we're just starting to get what looked like scientific breakthroughs from computers. Like, but they're working really closely with people. Like at what point is there a point where the breakthroughs are happening with the people not even involved? Holy shit. And then none of us know the answer. I'd say like when you talk to the smartest guys, like Dario who runs Anthropic, like guys of a few months ago, he thought that like the next few years of this really fast advancement is kind of locked in. Like we used to have something called Moore's Law with chips, right? Where the chips get better double every year and a half. And since this is like a lot of predict how the chips kept getting faster and faster. And the guys running the chips companies, Intel, all the other ones, they'd have all sorts of new tactics and new technologies they're building. They would like let you make it twice as, you know, twice as small, twice as fast over the next couple of years. And they kind of always be able to see ahead, maybe two years, maybe three years. And it's always like, wow, how are you gonna make it smaller? Like, well, we have to solve this and this and this problem. And they keep going and they did it for a very long time. And so what similarly with Dario with this advanced pace where keeps getting better with new data, new techniques, new tactics, he could see like very confidently the next couple of years and probably a third year of how it keeps getting better, which is a pretty amazing because the pace right now is like doubling every few months, right, in terms of what the agent is, it's crazy. So he could see that going on for at least another couple of years and he's right. That's gonna be very, very impressive in three years, but it's still not, it would still probably take until sometime in the next decade or two to do some of these other things replacing people. The question is, is it gonna keep getting better or not? And it's a fascinating situation. It's looking likely. You know, I tend to think the universe works in asymptotes and non-exponentials. Like the idea of a singularity, Sean is that the thing like starts getting better and better and then improves itself faster and faster and then just infinitely shoots upward and like the whole everything changes and you basically have a God that you've created. Like that's like a secular person's, you know, religious view for the tech world that we're just gonna change everything with a singularity. And I think you have these explosions that like hit natural limits and then go over. And so my view for everything, every other phenomenon I've ever studied is that these things don't just go exponential forever. There's limits to the universe and how these things work. So maybe it doesn't go exponential. I don't know. I think it probably doesn't, but some people think it probably does. That's a really big question for us for 10, 20 years from now. Right on, right on. Let's talk about some of these companies that ADVC is investing in. Yeah, what do you wanna hear about? I picked a handful here. First one I wanna talk about is Overland AI. I love it. I've been kind of following that company for a couple of weeks. I just saw it and then when I was getting ready for the interview today, I was like, oh shit. Byron is an impressive man. He's a professor out West and he's won the National DARPA Contest a bunch of times of how you navigate over kind of random terrain. So this is very different than a self-driving car. The problem Elon and Google and those guys were solving is driving on roads with people and bikes and it's a hard problem, right? There's a really hard problem obviously. The problem he's solving is over kind of like random 3D terrain like in a forest. Like if you're gonna launch an attack, if you're gonna defend this, if someone had to drive something out back over behind here where you're shooting, it's like that's a different sort of self-driving problem. You need LiDAR for sure because you're like measuring ahead where it dips down. You might have ditches, you get stuck in the middle of the road as you're going around mountains or climbing over. So he's the best in the world at that. And his vehicles can go without humans interfering for days and this is obviously very, very useful for a military to be able to go over complex terrain. And originally he was powering all the other primes and all the other vehicles out there but now he's building a bunch of his own. Right on. What do these vehicles look like? The one that tanks them. He's doing both. Actually it's interesting, his, I think the main one that we're gonna make a lot of are smaller rugged all terrain vehicles. They can have a bunch of different kind of sensors and weapons on them, but they're not for carrying people in this particular case there. So I think, and they're much, much, much cheaper. So a tank is very useful for certain things, but these guys you probably could have several hundred of them for the cost of a full equipped tank. No shit. With different sensors, with different weapons, coordinating, I'd be a hell of a lot more scared if I was a hundred miles away and there are 300 of these smart things coming at me than just a single tank. So there's two different types of weapons. So is this similar to Saronic? It is kind of analogous in the sense that you have autonomous, Saronic's building at scale autonomous warships and Saronic's first product was a 25 footer. Saronic last year also built, as you know, the fastest built big ships since World War II. So Saronic is now building at scale 180 footers, 150 footers, 100 footers, which is pretty awesome, right? Yeah, man. I mean, a 180 foot autonomous boat can be more powerful than a 400 foot destroyer if it's autonomous because the destroyer has a freaking hotel on it. But it's 180 foot all weapons. So you actually have more weapons on the 180 footer than the destroyer. Damn. Which is pretty cool, right? And by the way, in a battle, what's a destroyer doing in a battle? It runs, it has to run away, it's 500 lives. It's gonna get wiped out. These guys don't have to run, I think, in freaking charge, right, and you have a lot more of them for the same costs. So Saronic, what they're doing makes sense, but yeah, it's similar where over the lay edge, you're also gonna want a lot of these things that are autonomous, that are much cheaper at scale, go into a territory. If we ever have to fight in a jungle, or if we ever have to fight in Ukraine, or if we have to fight anywhere on the ground, you're gonna want this stuff. Is Saronic deployed anywhere yet? Saronic has, but it's not, because the war is going on, we're not able to talk about any of that right now, unfortunately. Rob, damn it. I can't wait till we can. Yeah, you gotta get Dino back. He's a big fan of yours. And he's a Sea-O, also, of course. Yeah, we had him on. Yeah, he loved it. How about TAP, Training All-Painting? Yeah, that's really cool. Jason Inspires, he's a really good guy. Actually, he had an interesting background. He wouldn't mind me saying, because he overcame this thing where he was, he grew up really poor, and he was dealing marijuana, they threw him in jail for a long time, for being good at it. And he got out of prison in his 20s, and he was in Stanford, and then he went to Palantir for a little bit, and I ended up meeting up with him, and we helped him as he got this thing going. And you're kind of a root for guys like that, who had a tough upbringing, and he didn't hurt anyone. He was just really good at selling this stuff, so they locked him up. But he's someone I really admire, and he's obviously turned his life fully around, and he's a great entrepreneur. And this is one of the most important areas for our country right now, it's called Trading All People, is how do you get people to get great jobs, and get them exposed to more higher-end vocational training, working with machines that cost millions of dollars. It's too expensive to build a school to train someone on a semiconductor machine that they might have to work with that costs tons of money. He's built instead with his co-founder some amazing VR technology, so the students are actually partnered with a bunch of these companies, where they'll train people in VR, make sure they can get to the point where they're actually pretty proficient and learn a bunch of different stuff, and then, and they'll have trainers who've done this forever in their company, helping them do it at scale, and then once they're good enough, they get to train on the real stuff. And so it makes it so much more affordable to take huge numbers of Americans and get them ready for high-paying jobs, and he's helping tens of thousands of people. I hope he'll be helping hundreds of thousands of people soon. Right on, man. Yeah, it's a good thing to do. About Esper, that caught my attention. Plow policy-making software. I love it. Maulka is an impressive founder. Her parents were from Afghanistan, actually. She grew up here, very pro-liberty lady. She's like, I love, I think you can be American from any background. If you love liberty and you love our country and love our values. And she and my wife became friends, actually, because they're both interested in policy, and they're both obsessed with the regulatory state being really broken and really hurting a lot of things in America. It's kind of a core conservative value of how you make government less stupid. And so what she realized when she started this company is that technology and AI can actually make the regulatory state work a hell of a lot better. So it's a nonpartisan thing, right? You just, like, no one wants government to be dumb, because it's pretty dumb sometimes. And so if you're gonna make, for example, if you're gonna make a regulation, what's the process to make it? To check other states to learn what's going on, to see what the code is. What's the process to review it? What's the process to see how it's working? How could you, what's the process so people in the field know what the regulations are so they can intelligently kind of use them and not just like, not just for ask people unnecessarily. So there's a lot of interesting tech to make it all that transparent. And she has a bunch of states using it to basically like make the regulations smarter to get rid of bad regulations and just run that process. It's a profitable company growing really well, working both blue states and red states and just making government less stupid. So I love stuff like that. Yeah, and that's awesome. And then the other one that really caught my attention was Bedrock. Yeah, this is cool. This is cool. Boris, he's also a great lover of liberal arts. Get all these people in trouble with their other people and he is, his father was like a genius from the Soviet Union who fled here basically. Like one of those like physicists, I think. And Boris was a great entrepreneur. I met him through a mentor of mine a long time ago. He's working on stuff in AI and he ended up selling a company to Google and he helped run part of their Waymo division. You know, Waymo is a self-driving cars. So these are a bunch of really, really talented guys. I mean, it's amazing what Waymo is done. I'm rooting for Elon against Waymo with Tesla, but they're obviously both comes from like great DNA. And his new company, it's autonomous construction, autonomous excavation. And this is really, really cool because first of all, 25% of all the costs right now to build something in the US in construction is tied to excavation. And second of all, there's tons of things. Like there's quarries or 6,000 quarries where you can never basically get enough stuff out of them, cheaply enough, everything's really expensive because you never get to hire tons of people right away, then you have to fire your mocks, you can't use it for a while and you can never get enough people for the right jobs. It's sloppy and it's like messy and a lot of it's boring. And so he actually has, it's working. And he's raised a few hundred million more dollars recently since we invested from all sorts of top investors and they're partnered, they're using caterpillar machines, they're using, you know, people love it and they're actually deployed and it's working. They're doing it in Texas, doing it in Alabama. Here's the funny thing, the tech of course, unfortunately AI people are in California, but when they do stuff in the real world, they always come to the center of the country where the states are run well. I mean, that's gonna change, that's gonna change a lot. Yeah. I mean, so, it's not just excavators, right? It's construction. It's gonna be all sorts of construction stuff. You started with excavators, that's a really hard problem with multiple dimensions. Like you're digging on a hill and you're having different kind of dirt coming up and it's really interesting. You know, one of the crazy things is they train on like tons and tons of data, which is part of their advantage is they partner now with lots of different companies getting all the data and the computer learns what to do. And so one of the things to learn how to do is when there's done digging and there's been waiting, it'll go around and use the scuba to clean things up nearby and like smooth things out and like make everything nice. Are you serious? Because it'll learn what the guy's doing, isn't that crazy? That's a bother. I mean, I feel like shit's gonna get done at least three times. I mean, if typical eight hours, what eight hours construction shift? Well, you think- To operate that machinery. Think about it like we have 24 hours a day, that's three times faster. I'm always jealous of Japan because like they'll have their roads, just like the guys will come at night because they respect their other people so much in their society and they don't have the weird unions that the break things. So they just like work really hard at night, well paid and get it done fast, right? So you can be on the road again. Now you can do it again without having to keep the union guy up at night. You know? Damn, man. No, but and by the way, here's the thing, this is like a classic Jevons paradox thing, which is really important for economics because a lot of people might see this and their first instinct might be, well, FU, you're just getting rid of people's jobs, right? That might be the thing they think. And here's what it is. It's that when something goes down in cost, you can do a lot more demand for a lot more of it, right? So the original Jevons paradox, and it's important to people understand, this is a key economics concept, is they figured out how to make coal plants twice as efficient in the 19th century. This is a big deal because coal was like the big energy. And so if you own a bunch of coal mines, a lot of people did, that was a big thing back then. And a coal plant is twice as efficient. All of a sudden, everyone's like, oh my God, they're not gonna need our coal anymore. And you know what happened instead? It's a man for coal went way up because all of a sudden, because energy was so much cheaper, it was now in much more demand and there's much more uses of it. And it's the same thing here. If you can build buildings in America for much cheaper, suddenly a manufacturing project that you were forced to do in Mexico, were forced to do in the Philippines or Vietnam or where else the hell the number is said to do it, suddenly it makes a lot more sense to do it here because you're building it for much cheaper. And so suddenly you're cut. So the amount of economic activity you're gonna create if we can make these things cheaper, it's gonna go so up. There's gonna be so much more stuff that just right now there's all this stuff, Sean, that I really wanna do here as a patriot. And I do, I produce a lot of things here. I build things with the ships and everything else. But there's a lot of stuff that doesn't pencil. Like Joe, I'm sorry, it doesn't pencil. And you can't just be a crazy person. It has to pencil, right? But this makes a lot of stuff get a pencil a hell of a lot better the next few years. So it's gonna lead to a massive boom in economic activity here. It's a very good thing for America. Yeah, man. I mean, what do these machines look like? Are they just repurposing? The repurposing caterpillar machines for now. Caterpillar by the way is crushing at the last few years. You can imagine because of all the construction and data centers and demand for their machines around the world. So they're a very profitable, massive company. And they love this. They know they can't build it themselves. And so they're working really well and partnering and figuring out and we're equipping their machines. And you know who else is gonna be going into this sector as well as our friend Travis just announced it. Have you followed that at all Travis Kalanick? No. So he's the one who built Uber, right? Very famously, amazing entrepreneur, super hardcore guy in terms of builder. And his latest company, he's renaming Adams and he's going into the world of Adams. You can go, he did a whole manifesto online. So Bedrock's my favorite big company exists in this space. But in other parts of the space like mining, et cetera, Travis wants to figure out how to make the world Adams work with AI. So this is gonna be a hopefully huge growth area for everyone in the next several years. Man, that is wild. What are you excited about? You know, America is back, man. Like I said, I think our country went through something very weird for 50 years. All of a sudden we had way too many lawyers from the early 70s. We had this fiat currency, we got the gold standard. We had all these bureaucracy sprout up. I mean, it was almost like the Soviet Union somehow it infiltrated us. I don't know, something really bad happened where our culture went off the rails, workers weren't paid as much, finance got to be too big relative to workers. I think that's a major problem. I still think we got to fix that with, you know, there's all these things that were broken for 50 years. And suddenly in the airplanes didn't get better, healthcare got more expensive, everything got broken. Suddenly as all reversed, suddenly healthcare is gonna get cheaper, airplanes are gonna get better and faster. Like government's gonna get less stupid with his AI stuff. All this manufacturing is coming back. All of a sudden we're building ships again with Dino. Like trying to build 230 times the amount of ships as we can. We're gonna 100 exit in America the next several years. Like all this stuff, like he just, you know, he's he'll now to himself, but he just raised billions more. There's all this stuff that's getting funded, all the stuff that's working, all the stuff that's growing. Like America is going to be by far number one again. And we just got to make sure we don't rip ourselves apart. We don't let the left get in charge because they'll break it. I love to hear that. I love to hear that. I got a hot question for you. All right. You ready? Joe, drone swarms just flew over Barksdale Air Force Base for a week straight. This is where we keep nuclear B-52s. They resisted jamming, they were custom built and the military couldn't stop them. Your company, Epirus, literally builds the weapons designed to solve this problem. So what's actually going on here? Is this a real foreign adversary probing our nuclear infrastructure? Or is there any chance this is a PSYOP? A distraction from what's happening with Iran and everything else right now? You know, it's a great question. And I almost texted my friends in the Pentagon asking about this, because I was wondering it too. I probably should, huh? Although the reason they might not tell me is that they know I'd probably tell everyone when I talk to you. So I don't have inside information. I wish I did. Your listeners 100% right, Epirus, because shoot these things down. I actually just posted something right before I went on the show a couple of hours ago. Epirus has a new autonomous thing where the truck drives autonomously, opens up and fires autonomously at the drones. You put a couple of these. Oh, shit. You put a couple of these at the base. They take the drones down right away. So anti-jamming is one thing. Epirus is not just jamming. Epirus is frying the circuits. Epirus is literally applying like an insane amount of energy all splished into a 10 thousands of a second and like using AI and everything to get the power to hit the guy and I tried all at once. And the burst just like as a cone of energy, just it fries these things. So yes, Epirus 100% could fry these and turn them off. And you know, so if we really need to, maybe they're gonna adopt it. So let's see. That's, I think that's the obvious solution. Andy Lowry's coming here on Monday. He is. Yeah. He's bringing one. Oh, good. Really? He's bringing one. We're gonna get a walk around. Let's get a walk. And we'll fry the neighbors. And he's the CEO of Epirus, man. Don't fry the neighbors or get us in trouble. The neighbors cars. The problem is, is once you fry some of these things, you can't turn them back on. They wouldn't be very happy with you. There's a follow up. If China takes Taiwan tomorrow and controls TSMC and those chip factories, can we even continue to build drones and AI weapons systems? So first of all, That's kind of what I was alluding to earlier about, you know, if they do take Taiwan, what does that mean? And you were talking about repurposing chips. Yeah. So first of all, TSMC is part of like a massive ecosystem. So a lot of the design, a lot of the work, a lot of other things happen in America, happen around the world, happen in the ASML in Europe. Like you couldn't just like take TSMC and just like own it for yourself. Like it would stop working because you'd stop sending the designs, you'd stop doing the work, you're not better at it, right? Okay. I thought it was all centralized. No, it's actually really interesting. I think America actually does capture more of the profits from the chip ecosystem than Taiwan does. This is what people have missed. Like they definitely, they definitely capture more of the revenue because of like the cost. But if you look at the actual profits, we're still capturing more than they are because we do so much of the work. It's a very distributed industry where a lot of that's happening at LAM research and applied materials and all these companies that maybe you haven't heard of that are in the Silicon Valley that are part of the US still. And so they couldn't just take it all away. Now that said, they can massively slow down everything in global chip production. They could definitely cut off all the newest stuff. It would take a long time to redo it, which is why we're trying to obviously build what we can here. But listen, it would set back AI by five or 10 years. Would it stop us from building drones? No. Like we have another separate problem right now, which is that we don't do enough rare earth refining, which is something that the Department of War has done a really good job trying to change. It's been at least a couple of companies that they're putting a lot of money into. To, you know, they're gonna mine rare earth, they're gonna refine rare earths, and you need those things to be able to build the magnets and the drones motors. Like most of the Ukrainian drones on both sides involve China and their supply chain, which is not good for us. That's like, it's a shame right now. That's how it works. So we've got to fix that, but it's not necessarily just a TSMC problem. That's a separate problem we got to fix that we're working on. I mean, you were talking about Elon, you know, getting dive into this. Seraphab, yeah. You got to bring someone on who knows more about it because it's a new thing. Yeah, I'm just curious, what is the timeline? Is there one? I have nothing but respect for Elon as a number one builder in the world. I think when you're a great entrepreneur, at least if I speak for others as well, and for my own things where I've built Fire 6, pretty big companies, like I think you almost have to trick yourself, at least for me, and thinking it's gonna be faster than it is, because otherwise you can't get yourself to do it. You know what I'm saying? Like when you start one of these companies, at least in my experience, maybe I'm just slower, but they always take longer, they're always harder. I think Elon has done the most amazing things, but he's also made predictions where things take longer, and I think that's just normal for a great entrepreneur. So I think it's just really hard to know how long things are gonna take, and I think whatever someone guesses is a great entrepreneur, you could sometimes maybe add a few more years. And so I think this thing takes a while. That said, they're going really fast. They have the best people in the world, and it's really good for America that they're doing it. So I'm rooting for them. Is that an Austin duke? Yeah, it actually is. Damn, that is wild, man, that place. It's so cool. We're just finishing our STEM building for a new university right next to SpaceX and Boring Company right there, next to all this stuff. We're gonna have a 30 acres, and have this awesome building we're gonna be doing. They're actually helping us. They're gonna be doing robotics and electrical engineering and all sorts of stuff there. It's a really fun area right now. Damn, that's cool, man. University of Austin, we're crushing it. That's cool. What are you guys doing over there at University of Austin? We talked about it last time we were here. Yeah, it's great. The third class is joining right now. These are about, Peter Teal has already hired away a few of our people from the first two classes and a bunch of them online. You can go look, they're doing all sorts of cool companies, all sorts of cool internships with Boring Company and Palantir and all sorts of different groups we partner with. Listen, these are amazing young people. To have a really top score, Sean, and then to turn down an Ivy League or another top school and go to a new university, you have to be an entrepreneur. You have to have an opinion. You have to want to be part of the, frankly, it's the country elite. It's the new elite. It's the people who don't want to be part of the old kind of broken Harvard deal kind of loser mess. Like CFR guys who predict everything wrong about what's going to happen in the Middle East and are just part of the old corrupt old guard. They want to be part of the builders. They want to be part of the actual competent people who think for themselves and don't just echo what you're supposed to say. I think it's going really well. That's awesome, man. Well, Joe, it's awesome. You catch it up, man. 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