What did your doctor give you to make you lose all this way to what the what is your celebrity doctor giving you?
Tell the truth. Do you get people people on twitter like your your twitter account sending a lot more like jacon? I'm like, I think we're the same diet. I think that .
is going on here in three, two.
The fans and. Hey everybody, hey everybody. Welcome to another episode of the all in pod with us today of course, the queen of and from his castle in ital, the cackling a dictator from off polio pitt and nice gardenias and back from his big, big .
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you read the comment just another sign of your obsession with out don't even i'd never read to the OK ahead you .
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alright so freeburg is busy uh writing tweet storms now um about the drought in california, which seems to be a just gonna a really bad year basically so freeburg walk us through at how bad is california draw going to be this year so the .
drought is already very bad. Um I put out a lot of tweet at two in the morning last night. I think I drink, wait too much cafe yesterday I mean the mountains and like the only way I can avoid having headaches is like drinking cafe all day and was a mistake. Get me up all night.
You sure it's not there.
Maybe you are .
so excited about .
this that you're just needs .
make you could be make you no.
no, keep that, keep that. So you know the .
big tweet store I put out at two in the morning last night kind of highlighted that there was a paper published in twenty eighteen and twenty and twenty that showed how you know north america, particularly the western half of north amErica and this you know mega drought that we haven't seen in know five hundred plus years and since that paper was published you know um in twenty nineteen conditions have only worsened. We talk about this a few POS ago, but like the snowpack level in california reached zero percent the realy entire state by june first. That has never happened before.
Temperatures in bridge colombia, you guys know, reached over one hundred and twenty degrees for several days in a row last week which has never been seen in history in british columbia um you know there was a paper publish today that estimates that over a billion um animals and life forms were wiped out in the coastal region of british colombia because of this heat wave um and the temperatures in in california, obviously excessive as well, not as bad as they where last year. But what matters most is that the moisture conditions in our forest land is lower than we've ever seen at this time of year in history and so this all sets us up. And and and the other kind of big consequence, the high temperatures is causing an increased demand for air conditioners.
That's the big variable and power demand on all grades. And the low snowpack means that we're not getting hydrox electric power. Hydro electric power is down by seventy percent in the state of california over where we were in two thousand and nineteen um because there's no snow is melting causing the rivers to flow and about eleven to fifteen percent of our state electricity comes from hydro elected d power.
So we're going to have more power demand. We have less power available. We have extremely dry forest. Um and so this is setting us up for A A number of possible disasters this year.
And so rather than just trying to sound the alarm bells when i'm pointing out, is that there maybe some things that we should be thinking about doing to try and get ahead of some of the consequences of these are these big risks like, you know, having enough mask for people to breathe outsides. So we don't have to shut down schools and shut down outdoor or work and all the things that might happen having community centers that have power available. The state is scrambling to find access power on the grid right now.
But um you know I just highlights like there is a moment here that is almost like where we were going into COVID. IT may not happen, but the probability is high enough that something bad may happen that we should probably start to get prepared for IT. You know we should probably be talking about the things we're doing to get prepared for and we're talking about and we should be talking about the things we're going to do to make sure that communities are safe and people are safe.
And business I can keep Operating because if the state, california, has one hundred and fifty AQI, which is the air quality index, workers can't work outside. And all the outdoor work which employed three million californians have to shut down. And you know you kind of start to add these things up. It's like what are we going to do as this happens, not if this happens and and we should kind of be planning for um and I don't see much happening in terms of planning and and and preparation and talking about the opportunity history.
rimes because if you remember um and this is all going into a recall election in the fall. Uh, this was a different but kind of equivalent and set up where you guys remember we were having all these black out and Brown outs when, uh, grey Davis was recalled and then shorts and agree just wopped up out of nowhere. And you know, people thought out that there's no chance and people are just frustrated because the quality of life took a measurable step backwards in the intervening six or nine months before the recall election. And so IT will be really interesting to see how gave a newser manages all of this because if he can't get uh the states act together and you have all of these issues hand and incredible candidate emerges um you could have some really interesting political fireworks in september.
A big part of treatment from wrong freeburg is that we live in essentially like a lot of desert area here in california, and we just haven't invested in the desalinization plants. We have one that's come on this two thousand and five and and make there's another one in so cow that was mothballed and the during the last out wanted to open IT up again.
But we now have won in carls bad the uh claud bud Lewis carls bad desalinization plant that is now think I cost us a billion box. But israel, correct with i'm wrong, is now they charge three times as much for water than we do. So people take water seriously and they actually monitor their water usage. And they have desalinization and they have more water than they need per capital.
L doesn't really solve a number of these problems that i'm highlighting. You know the probability of the the forest land on the west coast, not just in california, but all open on the west coast, catching on fires very high. No number of these sale plants is to put out those fires.
When that happens, the air quality is going to get a really bad. You like we saw all last year, I don't know. You just remember I escape to like michigan last summer when .
remember the threads here?
Yeah and I was I was insane. You know, IT doesn't d sale plants don't solve the air quality problem where people can work outside. Your kids can go to school at A D C L. Plants don't solve the problem of hydrox electric plants, which require snowpack ked to melt, to get rivers to run, to turn those turbines to generate extrication for the state.
Nuclear would solve that though.
Nuclear would solve that certainly. And so you know the point is we're kind of reaching the apex of are we're gone to do climate change adaptation, are we gonna um you know kind of long term systemic solutions that we're going to started to put in place for these risks that we face. And more importantly, from an acute perspective in the near term, what are the actions we should be taking to protect communities and get ahead this problem. So it's not a scramble after the crisis, which is what we typically do.
what these arts, we're not investing in infrastructure. If we put in some nuclear power planes, if we did more d and we did more forest management or put more fie breaks into, you know, all this.
I think I know a simple solutions.
like have a two, three things would be massive one day.
although there are long term solutions I talked for this summer. With summer is communities. No, but we need to prepare for what is going to happen the summer.
So when communities get run out, what are we gonna do? You know, do we have community centers set up where people can get a water and power? Do we have masks available so that outdoor workers can keep working in the state? You know, all of these things that we could be doing to get in front of the inevitable consequences of these risks, I think, are things that we should be actively.
You're in calias. You should order your air purifiers. Now we ordered six more of convey ones that we use last year that we're amazing. Get to five, and we have the and ninety five mess we order to them already. And we're going to put in a power generation, which I know not everybody is able to do, but you can buy a lable, one for as little as three or four hundred box, I think now. So a portable generator, casual power stock up on everything else.
We need those solutions like I think there's going to be a big kind of power generator post, right? Like distributed power is always been something that's the whole point of solar. You get the solar on your roof, you get your own power um but how are you gonna ep your A C running when it's one hundred twenty degrees outside if you have no power, you know that kind of a very scary um circumstance of heat waves. Uh and it's um it's something that we should have a real plan around. And if I were the governor reviewer, kind of california leadership or leadership up and down the west coast, you know the western governors, um I probably be running a daily press conference starting now saying let's just get in front of this problem and talk about what are the risks we're seeing, what are the problems are seeing, what we're doing about IT, just so people feel reassured because, you know, scrambling after a crisis doesn't make anyone feel Better. You know, showing that we're prepared and we're taking action to get in front of this crisis, which is not one hundred percent certain but it's a greater than zero percent probability, is something that could hopefully kind of reassure and sir, to put the pieces in place um for the near term.
By the way, just just for those that don't really appreciate how interconnected everything is, the basics, the science basics on drought, as I learned about them, we're really, really incredible. So you think, okay, well, how how is all this stuff connected? IT turns out that, you know, as we have warmer and warmer temperatures, yeah, I didn't know this feeder.
You probably do this, but IT accelerates soil evaporation. And then there's this really terrible feedback loop that starts, which is you have dryer soil, which means you have less vegetation, and then as a result, you have less what's called evaporation inspiration, which means there's less regional precipitation. And then this whole thing just starts to spin in spin, in spin.
You have warmer temperatures that results in less snowpack. The snowpack, the snowpack melts earlier. And we have a situation now in the united states, which is an incredible I saw graph, which is, uh, one of soil moisture and IT shows basically the western half of the united states isn't the first percent tile of soil moisture looking back over many, many decades.
So what then? All of that vegetation dries up when the world, this father, for more fires, no.
Jason vert p will even worse than this, worn a position where, you know, we are threatening our own food supply. And just just just to put a, uh, a final point on, this is not just the western half of the united states that's now suffering from this. It's brazil.
It's the medtronic, an in southern europe and its large parts of africa. You add up all those number of people. There are many countries there that are actually self sufficient, which will then no longer be will have to import food. That food quality is you questionable at best in some cases. So we're in a really tough position here and saw.
isn't this all solvable with technology? Mean, if we just tax people a little more for the war usage, if we really invested in the decel plants, if we really invest in nuclear, we could actually foot this, holding the same way, spiraling in the world direction. You could spiral in the right direction.
Two things on the water side. I've been looking at water investing for a while. There's there's a real problem, which is, you know, when I when I looked at this, uh my team found some incredibly interesting opportunities largely IT IT evolves, run owning water rights, right and then basically selling them back to the state.
And when states get in difficult situations, the problem is I think it's politically intolerable for like to say, somebody like me um to own those kinds of water and I think I think it's nobody the the idea then that I had was like, well, maybe what we should be doing is buying these things and sticking them in the foundation so that we can guarantee water for people in certain states. Maybe that flies. I'm not so sure that .
that's the government's .
job and but then they're not doing their job. They are peent. They're unfortunately not a not a skilled as you'd want them .
to be on the sex. How would you spend this um out of this death spiral and into abundance?
Is there way? Well, I mean the first thing to realize here is that this is not a black swan event. I mean this is entirely foreseeable. Um drought conditions have existed in california for a long time.
in fact two hundred years. Well.
and even maybe going back millions years, I mean, geologists have found evidence that, you know, millions years ago, you would have millions of actors of california burning every year. And so drought conditions have existed for a long time. Has climate change amplified that? I made IT worse? Yes, but this is entirely foreseeable. We know we're dealing with these conditions. And in fact, back on his first day in office in two thousand nineteen, newsome held his very first press conference about this issue on emergency prepared ness for fires.
But the problem is there has been no follow through and so um new to go back to your mos point about the political branches here, you could have a great Davis like situation with the recall where all of the sudden newson goes from being the favorite to potentially losing because of fire season. Um but by the way, I mean the whole reason why the recall elections happening in september now in the october, november is because newspapers precisely worried about the great David scenario in there. This recall is what to happen in the october, november time frame.
They've moved at up to september because knew some things there's a higher chance of fading the worst of fire season by doing the election sooner. The prompt for him is that fire season now starts in August, and so we could be in the middle of fire season when this recall election happens and this in ka boom ring on him. But back to the point about, you know, new some health, this press conference back in, in january of two thousand and nineteen.
And the problem is there hasn't been any real fall through on forest management. So you know, newsman was recently caught in a line saying that they had basically treated ninety thousand acres. Is what this article are put in the chat in reality, that only really treated about eleven thousand acres, even ninety thousand, would be inadequate, right? They're not doing enough.
And the way you I talk to a very prominent person who knows careful in politics well and knows all the players, and what he said is looked, the funding problem is that governor is not Operational, right? He's fantastic at fund raising. He says all the right things are press conferences, but but not everything is about running for reelection.
And the problem is he has not managed to this outcome. And and so now where in the situation where to free test point, where can be scrambling after the fact? Now what is news's excuse going to be? It's going to be, you know, climate change to be global warming.
It's kind of the all purpose dogged my homework excuse for anything that goes wrong as you can, as blame on climate change. But the reality is we knew about climate change. Climate change, someone you have to live with. Even if we stop IT in its tracks from this point forward, we're not capability to reverse effect is already had. And so we need leaders who will step up and and get much more aggressive about preventing this problem.
I think and by the way, my tweet, I didn't mention climate change at all. I you know I don't think that that's even the point. The point is we are facing acute conditions on the in the western and half the united states right now that lead to a number of significant and severe consequences. Those acute conditions, you know, you can blame them on climate change and say that there are part of climate change that doesn't change the reality they are here today and we have to deal with them um .
and I think yeah we have a we have a couple of things that are that are uh gonna happen here in short order that I think you can make this thing accelerated a little. So there's uh an organization department in the united states government that's not very well known called the us. Bureau recalled mac U S B R.
And they are the ones that will make formal assessments of water levels. And there's a really important assessment that's gonna en in lake me um at the end of this year. And the reason why it's critical is that if the U S.
Bureau recognition measures lake meat under um a certain threshold, they can declare a tear one shortage and what that means, just practically speaking, cutting through all the jargon, is that initially the state of arizona will be denied around six hundred thousand acre feet of water next year. What does that mean? It's about fifteen percent of the demand for that state.
And so you're gonna start you know to deal with these sort of like rolling, I don't know what receiving to call these water out scenarios where, uh, it's not just about watering your lawn. That's not going to be possible. It's going to be a whole bit of other things.
Now there is a solution, and this is where california can come to the rescue for most of the western united states if they really want to, or at least for the rest of california, which is there is an enormous untapped groundwater, uh actually fire in southern california, which is the size of lake meat. Um it's an incredibly unique thing, is actually your own by a public company. And the whole goal was okay.
Well, let's is build a pipeline right from the acquire to deliver drinking water to folks that you know are lacking water. Um and this has been a multi year you know bordering on multi decade slog because of california politicians, because water pik has become highly politicized. No one wants to pay the full cast for commodity that they Frankly view is right, but then they don't want to step in to do the work to actually make IT reasonable and viable.
So this whole thing is just, again, as David, as you said, the dog ate my homework. And now we're really playing with some very complicated things that are really out of the control and intellectual capacity of the of, Frankly, state governments, which is the interconnections veness of weather, temperature, water or soil or food supply. It's so frustrating .
this this is so easily suitable and we are not doing the blocking and tackling the free throws, the basic things. If you look at um just monitoring our water usage. Um I invested in two companies.
One of them um didn't work out um but both of them were to monitor war usage. And what we learned was at a campus like ford, they have like four water meters, like they're not going down to the building level in some cases. And we like four buildings on one water meter, and you can very easily add each sink at each, you know, shower head.
You can put a device that cost twenty five bucks, installed IT just wraps around the, the, the, the water, the, the, the pipe. And IT can tell you how it's flowing. And we d lose twenty thirty percent of our water to leaks.
Nobody is monitoring their usage because there is no cost to a to trouts point. And then you look at these crazy, insane omand and other uh, agriculture in the the middle of california. They are using flood irrigation, which i'm sure freeburg gives an education, advises what, you know, the trip irrigation that they use, and other recent laming methods in israel and other places.
So we look at water as like to to mute point, some crazy god given right, that we can just splash IT everywhere. We can take twenty minute showers. And then we allow, how crazy is this? We allow the bottling of water in california.
We allow these companies to bottle water and then sell IT. And we don't even monitor our usage. We have, well, we are titled IT is .
gross biggest donors who's a family that grows all the almonds .
or whatever who have they .
are the x the rex single bike them in .
the teachers union and those palm people with .
the palm stuff. It's tal poco corruption, right?
It's chinatown is literally the movie chinatown.
You well, I think it's so to this point about why renate politicians solving the problems. I mean, to make a meta point, there is a great tweet from Thomas l. Or the person who manages the Thomas account, where he said, no one will really understand politics until they understand that politicians are not trying to solve our problems, they trying to solve their own problems, which are getting elected .
and reelected.
That's number one is that go three is far behind. That's basically the situation we have is I think newson actually is a little bit like trump, not in his personal style, but in that he thinks he can talk his way out of problems and he's not gonna focus on solving a problem when he can just spin his way out of IT.
By the way, I just think you guys should know the you know because a lot of people talk about residential water use that is also kind of an acute and local problem where depending on your water supply, how much water you have available to your community. Um but in terms of aggregate water used, the vast majority of water in california is used in agriculture. Um it's about uh ten x uh what is used for residential um application.
So ah california agriculture, by the way it's not a bad thing, is a huge part of our economy ah that water has generally been fully available in occupiers. People bought that land with rights. They paid a premium for those rights to those occurs.
This is a very complicated problem. H in california, and you know supports a large part of the california economy. So you know, you can't just kind of blow them away, but ninety percent of water use in california is associated with G.
And it's not just a generally we need to save water problem. It's very specific to a region in the community and in their particular water source on whether and how much you need to save or so do you have abundant supplies and so on. Um and so it's it's a little bit more complicated.
but we should be focused on abundant freeburg. If if you look at the new nuclear power plants that you, bill gates, is investing in and then you look at desalinization, which is an energy issue, we can desalinization roughly two or three times the cost that we've getting your for now. So just put a nuclear plant next to a desolate ization plant and you're done great.
That's a twenty project.
And why? Why is IT twenty your project? China does IT in two. You need to be more bolt in this country.
IT is completely ridiculous that we accept that everything has to take twenty years. We need this. Now where's the leadership that says fucked? Let's do IT immediately. Let's set a goal of two years to build ten of these. And let's stand the fucker money.
sure. IT solves our acute problems. IT solves long term problems associated with climate change. And we can do both.
We can do both. Let's do both.
Sure, we should do everything. But right now, the, you know, the the conditions indicate that there are some specific things that we can should be doing the kind of support the state in terms of what's onna happen in the next year to, and yes, we should also be funding long term projects that create water security and energy security for everyone in the united states. But fact, tear point.
And by the way, if you guys never want to read an interesting book about how the grid Operates, um IT is a book called the grid uh and IT talks about how the electrical a power grade system was built in united states and how inefficient there is and all the problems there. There are a lot of structural problems I need to be solved, not if you know, dropping and cheap power sex. Who is the good Operational candidate that you've see the running for governor california? This recall is someone that stands out in your mind because I, I I don't seem to hear anyone talking about hey, does a good alternative to gather .
some at this point yeah I mean, we don't a clear alternatives has not emerged yet. Um you know I guess the in part of the problem is that because there was no republican primary, you haven't sort of consolidated the opposition to a leading candidate. There are a couple of, I guess, interesting candidates on the republican side. I need to spend more time going to you know know them.
I mean, I have never met them or talk to them, but the two her I think mentioned quite a bit or this this guy faker whose the mayor and tiago who is sort of a socially liberal republican and then there's a um state assembly man named Kevin Kelly who who I think says about interesting things and he just announced he's running there's another guy as well a john cox but he got transpired newsom in the last election I think is time to let somebody else take a shot against stem. And then of course, you've got kate in gender, but I think people are still trying to figure out of her campaign is real or how real IT is. So yeah, look, we the opposition has not consolidated against newsome the way IT did with shorts maker, you know, back in two thousand and voting.
voting republican just to create a counterbaLance. I don't care who IT is and i'm not a republican. I'm an independent, but i'm voting across the board. I'm just going to go to republican for every position in gallivant a and i'm going to just run my finger down the world.
everything just how's they feel to be a radical .
trust supporter I listen. I have not for truth, but chmagh talk to us about nuclear and what we can do to get to reverse with these hippy dippy, well intention, no nukes concert set us back fifty years. And let's be honest, a lot of the climate change problems we have today, we would not have .
if we had invested in nuclear. Yeah, I said center on an image. Uh, neck, maybe you can stick IT in the show. No something.
So if people can see, but if you if you look at if you graph the construction of nuclear reactors from like the nineteen sixties, one hundred and sixty, to today, essentially, what can you color code them by country? What essentially you see is, uh, a transition from the able, from the, Frankly, from countries that basically were just right at the at leading the pack. And IT was really the united states building, building, building.
And then two things really happened. There was three mile island, and then there was torn ble. And there is an incredible overreaction to not really understanding either the cause and or the remediation to two.
Now could you imagine if there were two airlines that crashed and we stop flying, how, basically we would have, you know, retarded the progress of the world. And now you impose IT on something like nuclear energy, which is consistently proven to provide an enormous, the abundant, cheap and clean form of sustainable energy. And IT actually solves a bunch of the problems we talked to him before.
So for example, if you look at the power consumption for desAlination, it's off the charts quite honestly. Okay, that's why people say that I can be done incredibly if you look at even just like the amount energy that's required to clean water and to, you know, santis water and make IT drinkable, the the the standards that are defined by the government are incredibly string. But the the implication of the Operational is an enormous amount of power that goes into a but Jason, you are right, which is that if we have small forms of sustainable, abundant energy that can be basically hyper localize and located where we can do these jobs, the jobs to be done, its transformational.
Now why doesn't IT happen? IT doesn't happen because the same folks who really want to sound the alarm dots on climate change, which is the progressive left, are not really willing. They're intellectual, lazy.
When IT comes to nuclear. They don't do the work. They make a blend for the broad based prognostication about how we need to do something about climate.
Then they will point to solar and wind without really understanding the contamination ation of the earth that we do in order to mind the rare earth and the actual metal and mineral inputs that are required for solar. It's yes, not. But IT sounds Better, right? IT sounds Better.
It's Better. We're using there in the sun and .
it's a and it's like if I could show you what what tAilings are and like the dirty after effects of mining copper and nick out of the ground, which is what we need for Better, and how countries like indonesia are literally dumping IT into the ocean, dumping IT faster that they can get their hands on IT so that they can sell copper and nico and coal um to us so that we can make batteries. You would actually say to yourself, if you knew all these facts, you'd actually say to yourself, you know what, maybe nuclear and so bad.
and maybe I overreacted to do you want to understand this? You just have to look at the lazy group of individuals and society. The french.
They want to take the lazy route into the least amount of work and have the most amount of leasure. Sorry to our french listeners, seventy percent of the energy in france is from nuclear. Figured this out, they said, how do we take more time off and not work and have unlimited electro seventy percent nuclear? T .
rench. Mark, after, because after fu khmers, what happened is if you had, you know, sort of like woke politicians, germany, a bunch of germany, completely unwilling.
their entire nuclear agenda.
which was which, which was insanity, insanity. And so now here they are. They are writing laws faster than they can make them up.
They're basically pivoting entire industries to try to now adopt batteries and storage without any real understanding about the downstream implications to the earth that they are going to create sequence. If they had just stay the course on nuclear, they would be in a much Better place. And and to france is credit.
They were like, what the fucker, you people overreacting about. Again, just think about this guys. If that is stopped flying after two airline crashes, where would the world be? Where would the world be?
I mean, be pragmatic. What do we want to deal with high energy Prices and Brown outs and all kinds of problems and rolling blackouts? Or do we want to put this issue behind us? If we just go on a manhattan project, literally to make new nuclear, we would be this issue would be behind us. We can focus on something else like education. It's so dumb.
the very scared thing about nuclear. Despite all of the progress, you will get bogged down in litigation and bureaucracy. These are the last two things that should be in front of science and physics, especially when IT comes to energy independence. I just think .
it's it's creeper anyway.
out any way we can get people to what's the best way to convince the american public to embrace nuclear and force our politicians to do and .
open your mind and think for yourself, right, please?
Well, ad market in recent a good term, he said. We're living in a vetoed racy as in the word veto um I think IT was interesting interview with interior Garcia Martinez on his blog anyway. Yeah they were talking about the inability of the U. S. To build anything anymore, especially when you compare us to some place like china and you whether you want to call a nyah ism or veto gracy, there are just too many people in groups who have the right to say no to anything and block anything important from happening um but we we got to stop letting our politicians off the hook um by making excuses. You know just because there's climate change doesn't mean that the politicians can't do anything about IT.
I mean welcome to the dow screen consequences of a successful democracy, right? Like a democracy over time doesn't reduce the number of laws that has every year. Politicians need to do their job, and they create new laws as new laws accumulate, like the things get claud ed up right, like whenever seen the law that gets passed by a local government, a state government or federal government, that makes IT easier to do something.
I get that. But where where does that say in the constitution of the united states, that being part of a democracy also means shutting your brain off and becoming a dumb cyc? Yeah, that's that's not part of what being part of a democracy is.
I, by the way, I want, I want to talk about that for one second. There was a thing that I sent you guys in the chat, and nick, hopefully you to post that in the shower notes as well. But there is a study that was done about cynicism.
And IT went back, and I did like a quality of assessment of more than two hundred thousand people and their attitudes and their measured I Q, their measured literacy, their measured numeracy and their measured earnings. And here's what they found, cynical. M is associated with lower IQ, lower literacy, lower numeracy and lower earnings. The idea of cynical individuals being more competent appears to be a widespread, yet largely illusory lie.
So I think that I think this makes sense. I mean, I I was shocked .
by that study because I actually generally think cynical people must be smarter because they're thinking more rationally. And maybe i'm being emotional IT turns out their fuck and stupid.
Well, here's to think their cynics. And then there's people who are contact us and not content. And I think people sometimes conflict those two things. If you look at the constant.
pervasive, cynical m is not a feature of democracy. IT means that you just stop thinking for yourself .
as a protective mechanism, right? But but the people we know are who have changed the world, and they seem to be, they're not cynical. They are not cynical. They're actually delusional and optimistic.
Or they wouldn't started a company to make electric cars or you whatever piece of software or climate 点 com or synthetic biology。 You have to be a radical optimist. I mean, we're literally trying to attack our incredible capital alist, who are actually solve in these problems. Wow, our politicians can get their ship together and make decel plants and nuclear plants. The private market seems like the .
only solution that there's an old saying that peace get to be right and optimists get to be rich. And yeah, you think about IT, if you think about IT, know, pessimists don't create companies right .
now for a rocks. They become journalists. They become shares on twitter. They betony .
ago to sex. What do you think about this idea that a, you know, if we get into the throws of IT, uh, for water, the folks at on water rights, I think that this is going to be like an eminent domain. SHE were the government is at some point just onna say, sorry, me IT back.
it's mine. Yeah, during an emergency for sure.
for sure.
But I mean, I hate the, I hate to use the words um I agree with J K L. But but you know look there's not a shorge of water in the world, right I mean the world is mostly water. So IT is a function of building desAlination plants if that's what we need. Um there has be a solution for that problem and freebooters right that maybe IT does take a decade or two to put in place all that infrastructure. But then why didn't we start ten years ago?
Is that we should be starting a programme where we convince the the american public that abundance would lead to them having more freedom and our country being stronger. Electrical abundance with nuclear, water abundance with desalinization and agricultural abundance with those previous two. Because if you had unlimited nuclear energy and had a limited clean water, the Price of agriculture will go down and we'd have more free food for everybody or lower costs. food.
I'll tell you i'll tell you a theory I have on this um and and it's basically an anti science theory which is that um you know culturally we've kind of developed its anti innovation, anti science mentality broadly speaking across uh kind of modern culture in the united states if you remember coming out of world war two and I think IT has its roots in the cold war um you know out of when world war two ended, you know we were all in IT together ah you know this country everyone bought the same stuff.
We all had rick crispy every day. We all kind of you know we're excited about our our our homes that look like everyone else is home on the block and technology was empowering all of this right there was a space race on um there were plastics that were suddenly allowing us to make all sorts of amazing things. There were chemicals that we're creating new drugs for humans and new applications for agriculture that was making an abundance of food and increasing life spans and so on.
But then what happened in the late sixties and seventies as we realized we got ahead of ourselves and um you know there was uh uh cancer from D D T. There was uh you know three mile island. There was uh a number of um pollutants that got into the environment that permanently damage the environment from chemical companies. And we started to wake up and say, like way to second all of this technology that we thought was so great and was giving us this extraordinary abundance. IT turns out is really risky and can cause massive unknown consequences.
And if you watch A, I think I talk about this on our podcast once, but one of my favorite videos to watch video on youtube from the disney channel history institute, and they show the history of tomorrow land and disney when tomorrow land opened one thousand nine hundred and fifty five, every ride was all about adventuring into space and like traveling into the human body, and they even had a ride from, you will go into the micro world and look at plastics and stuff. And he was all about the amazing abundance in technology. And the guy, the narrator on the video says beginning in the late sixties, early seventies, we changed all the rights and the riots all became about the fear of technology.
IT was all about aliens attacking earth. IT was all about um capt. In E O was like, know the world became robotic and got taken over by unnatural things.
Even star tours was about a robot that went a right, and the robot doesn't know what it's doing. So drove us, of course, and we had to survive the robot. And so everything became a subconscious.
So much, a little bit this negative technology sentiment. And I think that, that still persist. You know there is an a cemetery take for grand, the abundance over time, because because you get used to IT, but you feel the acute pain of the loss when technology goes a right.
And then that becomes the social conscience. And I think we're still grappling with that. And I don't know how you reverse IT. We know what free people are.
We not experiencing this right now, everybody with covet where there's one group of people who are like, oh my god, the science we were able to deploy and cover and get through this so quickly is so promising that the world's going to be Better net net after the pandemic, even with all the suffering. You could make an argument that that suffering is going to lead to more prosperity. And there's another group of people who are like the delt variant, let's get our masks back on uh and and people wanted take the cynical .
around as an individual, I don't want harm done to me or my kids or my environment. That's that's the I think the general kind of conscience, right? And I don't care about the abundance because i've basically taken IT for grated.
And so now I find myself, as an individual, say, you know what, we shouldn't do nuclear because look at what happened at the kai ma for getting the fact that you've been living off a free electricity practically for decades, or whatever, free water and free water, all these things. And I think that the abundance of the technology delivers to humans, because humans are only programmed to recognize change that not programmed to recognize absolutes. H, there's a lot of good. So eo.
psychological and evolution, give examples. Give example.
if you know, if you go to the store every day and you're used to just getting a one dollar canoa ke, you don't say, oh my god, I feel it's an amazing world I live and I get a one dollar canacee. You never praise ed, that one dollar canacee. Now if you went to the store and the canal coke went up to two dollars, you'd be like, what the heck White is coat costs so much and so um we .
the great thing the Price .
of coke drop to fifty cents, you're like, okay, that feels good. And then you get used to the Price of coke being fifty cents. And a few weeks later, if IT goes up, you're upset, but you're not as happy on the other way. So human is kind of assisi ally, you know, defined by these negative consequences and I think over time you accumulate these negative consequences as your core psyche and you have an aversion to doing you know innovative things as a whole, not all people but as a whole that how we Operate um and it's White technology kind of gets land based over over .
time and this is the most frustrating thing to meet him off as that we have so many amazing things happening in technology and nobody will ten x or one hundred x on them from the uh government perspective of the public. I had a company called zero mass on my podcast, which I think is now called source. And you're aware of this company. Maybe you could talk a little bit about the impact hydro panels would make if we just embrace this technology.
Well, I mean, sources, an incredible, incredible company. Basically, there's a there's a guy who runs a code reason who when he was at M I T basically um developed a uh essentially a material, a membership that can absorb the ambient um water that's in the atmosphere um and basically allow you to collect IT and to separate into its components and to basically create portable salon ized door portable drinkable water in a panel that looks like a solar panel.
So you put these solar rays everywhere and out of the back you put a little pipe and IT collects the humidity in the ambient air and and it's bits of water. It's it's an incredible thing. And he's able to go on rewire schools. And and the thing is, he can go anywhere because, again, he doesn't need anything, right? You literally put IT on your roof is incredible.
And IT makes you, if you, I think he told me at at the time when I interviewed two, three years ago, he said you could put tooths on your roof and get like four cases of bottle water a day no matter where you were on the planet.
And by the way, he's moving to a place which is really cool. He told me this are not sure for like to say, but i'll say, anyway.
are you saying this might be beat?
no. Where he's going be going now he'll have an eventual APP where you can kind of direct with the hydroponic to make the kind of water that you like. So if you love or if you love, uh, highty water, or if you love smart water.
or you're on the voice, right? Specifically because of .
the most special I ve smart water. I, I, I have a very cruel tous reason why I remember when I had jobs, he drank smart water and have a book is good enough for him, is good enough for me. Tell you, when I knew her mah, I just got ta copy people. I ve got to copy the good ones that I was just like.
This is a personal note. This is what I knew chmagh made IT. We used to play poker in his garage, in his little three thousand and warehouse, palo alto house.
whatever.
He had this little tiny house, and we're in the garage and he like.
look on putting up a flat panel.
then try not like, I got a new house and .
he's .
got his new house. We come over like jack a, he wants water. I love A S ja ass water and he goes, oh, and he walks over to a rack.
And in iraq, like, you know, those things you push wine on, there's iraq for water. And there is boss in the glass bottles. There is avion and glass bottles old.
And you not like the evon that you get at the regular supermarket, like somebody source the evon bottles that restaurants have and then he had the smart, I mean sixty and I like it's one of a glass of water, but OK, i'll take the avion in the glass bottle. IT was so lightly sex, I got three different bounds, passes. I can give you just where you want IT you cancel culture. Do you want chess a budden or call IT? What do you want or call IT?
I can give you any of these. I'm ready to. I'm talking any other good to me. I mean, IT might be time for a chase update because we have not done no while. The killer D A.
the killer D A. H, by the way, I just want to say I found the journalist, you know, the journalist acx don't say her name and SHE is setting up her L. L.
C. And the sixty thousand dollars we raised from the golf ym is gonna to her to cover the D. S. Office for the next six to trone months in a newsletter website, right?
And this is a clear because I think people kind of misinterpreted what you're trying to do. There they go. Funding check out.
Yes, this is not for opposition research. This this is not digging up dirt. This is reporting on on public policy, on what should be public facts with respect to what the D.
S. Office is doing. How chasa is performing in his job is IT IT.
Interesting, though, how the left journalist, when I hired investigative journalist to cover criminal justice, accused me of hero gan, apple researcher. And these are investigative journalists, and I told them explicit, i'm just hiring an investigative jnb st to cover crime and separate disco. There's no apple research here and they insisted on saying I wanted to get IT to chess his personal life. And I explicit said, that's not what this is for.
Well, let's face that there aren't too many journalists anymore who are investigative, who are actually in the business of turning up new facts about elected officials. They're too busy pushing and narrative engaging agenda journalism. And actually we saw a really good example is to time to to what's happened happened over the past week is you have the story in the same scope chronicle which is basically pure propaganda.
Up from you could see that the um the passing from chasa to the supporter of this this farcical les a claim that crime is falling in seven. Cisco, um I mean this claim is so proposals. This is the same week we saw viral videos of ten robbers burst out a neiman Marcus with .
with every .
time exactly. And so plus you had the viral .
scary yeah .
you have the viral video of the the guy going into cvs and IT wasn't even shop lifting was .
did you see bride sugars video of the person who broke into his house, stole his kids ipads and everything while they were .
in the house right? And who had another home invasion.
Home invasions are now um not prosecutable crimes in sanford. Isco know, what they're .
doing is what science reported about her case is, and by the way, her case is in the public. Ee, okay. So it's very brain for the day to be doing.
What they did is they dropped the home invasion charges and they're just treating IT as basically a fifth of, you know, a few hundred dollars, you know, that does not capture the violation of breaking into someone's house and how dangerous that is. But originally I thought, okay, why is the da s. Office doing this? Originally I thought, well, maybe it's just because chasta doesn't want to incarcerate anybody, but it's more than that.
You see, if they drop the charges down to petty larceny, then he can include IT in a different state. You see home burglary ies are up by some gargantuan amount, like fifty percent over year. They want to be able to claim crime is following is now they're joking, the stats by reducing the charges from the more serious crime to the less serious crime. And then what they do.
they're shaping the stats.
They're duking the stats ever watch the the show, the wire that's where this expression comes from is, you know, first the politicians get held held accountable, les, to the statistics, then they realize that, then they start manipulating the facts. And that was basically been dirty. It's so dirty. But but the next step in the process is they then feed these duke states to these compliant reporters.
I mean, the fact that they repeatedly statistics as going down when people are stopping reporting crimes because they would would prosecute them when they mischaracterized them. And then they never say eighty five percent of the commuters coming IT to sampras's, where are no longer coming IT to symphony, is go and target announced, like wall Greens, that they are either closing stores or reducing the hours because they can't do with the crime. And they're saying explicitly this is the highest crime we've ever seen in any of our stores. And then this crazy communist, are they communist on the left here?
C. B S. walGreen. And targeting all closing stores are reducing store hours because they understand to hit to their bottom line. But you have this montreal IT.
IT is communist, like where? It's like the commandments written on the barn in the animal farm where IT is propaganda that so at odds with reality, it's just absurd. Okay, article, it's farcical.
But then how do they enforce IT? What they say is anybody who questions this narrative is a bad person, is in fact a man, a racist and a client's ment. So, so this is the other thing that happened over the past week, is that you had, this is crazy. Basically, Michelle taller, who is a moderate and a nicer persons you could ever find, concern citizen. Concern citizen.
separate. Csco born and race.
yes. Who tweet that all of her friends are thinking about leaving the city and then in response to that you had this this senior policy advisor to chase a beauty who works for the da s office named uh kate chat field attacker, basically implying her views where you know were K K K values for for having the audacity to warn that people are worried about crime and in where csco so SHE gets attack.
By the way, this chatfield person, the top of a profile is the clench fist of the communist revolution. J. K, L.
So this is who's winning the dis office but but look, is not just trolling and it's not even just sander. It's I think an abuse of power for someone of the day is office to go after an attack. A concerned citizens like this. Okay, but this is how the enforce can .
you read the tweet that he did? You have that there because ah he basically is the people who have experiences, home invasions, are concerned for the safety of their families. And what this a woman did, Michelle, I believe, is her name.
He just said, like people are scared for their families. And then kate chat field references birth of a nation and compared her to, oh, our wives are not safe because of black people and that's A K, K, K. Everybody of everything, everybody underside .
original name of birthday nation, I think, was the client cement ah yeah it's like A K, K, K piece of propaganda. wow. But it's really outrageous.
SHE just blocked me. cake. Chapelle blocked me. wow.
This is a public policy adviser who is now hiding her account. Well, what I mean, a public official should not do that.
I mean, they should. And he .
worked, and I I thought I was out of bounds for a not just a public official, but someone, the das office. What did you do? Well.
you went into revenge. Mo, let's be honest, you ve got a little bit, you were a little bit tweet. I don't need another .
fifty thousand years to the recall.
Chase the campaign. And you dedicated IT to cape. Yeah, you said this is for you. Yeah.
because look, that this is threatening. Every american should have the right to criticize their government without having his law enforcement ARM come down on them. And so here you have a legitimate concern expressed by a private citizen, and the D.
S. Office is coming down on them. That's unacceptable.
I think I need to break some new year. I didn't want to talk about this publicly, but i'm so outrage now that I think I should let this out. So while I after the in the weeks after I started that campaign to hire investigative journalist for chess office, this is breaking news.
I haven't talked about this publicly, but i'm gonna break IT now. Do you know who contacted me? The da s office, do you know they contacted me about they were investigating a startup p that I had invested in. I won't say which one and they wanted to interview me about my involvement that started up because that start up, uh, had some complaint from a downstream investor who felt that they were committing some type of fraud or problem.
coincidence. I are you serious? I am serious. This is literally becoming chitor.
They literally try to intimidate me. And I I didn't want to bring that up. And I talk to the person on the fun, the, the, the, the person from the da s. Office who was, and if I was, like doing in attorney for this, why are you calling me because and he said, well, you know, which wants to talk about this and I was like, yeah, like we have a bunch of questions and I just say, you know, uh, so pini, i'm not, you know, file something and all coming with my alternator to talk you, but i'm not gonna talk with you on background no. So they basically try to intimate, you know and I kind of let them, because they don't want to make a public, but are making a public.
Now, you should make a public because.
well, this is two weeks after I said, let's hire the journalist. Intimidation text, I will not be inter. That's inm dating, I will not be intimidated.
Chess.
all right, you can see here is O I mean.
I was intimidated.
是 是。
Again, now that I think about IT, like I didn't do anything wrong here, I put fifty, I put fifty, one hundred k into a company that didn't work out. And now some other investors complaining and they're trying to tie back to me somehow.
But Jason, course you're going to be intimate. The chief law enforcement officer of sanford, cisco is basically trying to make you the target of an investigation because of what you said publicly. Of course, that is intimidation.
Guys isn't IT possible that they are just interviewing you about a frag? sorry. Good .
about the time in three .
week. House freeburg OK wait is .
the first .
and only time .
i've ever been contacted by a laender cement officer over an investment.
I'm sure to stop .
committing fraud. Three hundred fifty investments.
Listen, chasa has not had time, is almost two years in office now, and he has not had time to successful ly prosecute one murder trial, not one. But his office has time to run down whatever they are trying to run down with J, K, L. They don't have time to prosecute the the home invader who broke into sam banisters home .
or bryans or bryans.
They don't have time to do that. They somehow time to contact jacal he tweed.
The video makes me me what's going on here.
There's two things going on, I think one of which is becoming very well and understood. But the other one is not. The first one is the gothic ization of 3Francisco。 We understand that crime is out of control.
Cynical m and and people are just kind of given into IT. IT feels like syncs become gotham city. These viral videos of the robbers braining committing daylight theft.
feeding up U. P S. Drivers in the street.
they are feeding up ups. Vers in the is no consequence. okay? But there's a great thing happening, which is the orwell animation of sentences, scope governance center, scope politics.
You not really have the crime. You've got the brains and lies about the crime. You've got the insistence on this animal farm commandment that crime is falling.
And if you question IT, you are a dark, you are a client's ment. And then they get there, the your, the k, the kate chat fields to push this out. And then they get academics to back this up. Okay, there are now they get their friends in the media and in the academy to give these specious claims credence. And then the final step is that the rich virtue signals pay these people off.
They pay the the tecture money. Who's paying .
off the dogs? Is the mike freegard, the read hastings. And you know, even that actually is the biggest contributor to chase the right now is the guy who's under S. C, C entitled for the .
report scandal.
Oh no. yeah. Chris, Chris, yes, exactly. So people who need to curry favor either because they've got their own problems or they just .
like to virtue signal long, is just willing .
campaign.
Ow, that is star. Brian sugar released the video and that person is not going to be prosecuted. I mean, that is the crazy part.
You get somebody on camera and they won't prosecute them. And people forget, these are organized gangs that are doing this. This has been proven. This is not a poverty issue. These are not poor people who are stealing bread for their families, are trying to make their rent.
It's organized gangs realized .
the the driving, great, beautiful with this place off. This is like mob behavior. And if you give criminals, trust me, I grew up in a criminal environment in broke lin.
If you give criminals a window, they will figure IT out. You give them an opportunity. If you give them something to hack, they will hack IT period.
And you basically have Green light of the okay, I listen. It's enough of us complaining about this. Uh, I am good to stop complaining about this. And i'm moving either taxis are moving to texas or the floria. I'm making the .
announcement now check.
listen now i'm in a partnership and in my partner doesn't want to be here anymore and i'm half and half, so i'm not sure why i'm here anymore. I I think california is my position right now as california, you is going to be on a decade longer and i'm working for ten more years. I decided on fifty.
I decided i'm going to go to sixty and going to try to invest in one hundred to two hundred companies year for ten years, and then i'm done. So why would I spend ten years in a place that is on a debt spiral? Can this be reversed in our in the next decade?
Don't know. Feel to be completely rebuilt.
A purple pills. I want to live in A, I want to live in a reasonable place. And IT seems to me that Austin in miami are purple, you know, and they're not coming.
I don't want to live in a right wing place, all right, and I don't want to live in a communist place. I want to live in american place. I want to live a place where americans can talk about issues without being vini. Zed, period.
That's where people about this pot.
you're not being villamizar fast. Just give me a break. All right. Just be you people really want to know if you went to dinner with talker, can you just make .
that .
that joke?
Why .
can't five minute .
delta .
people are panic, but the numbers keep going straight down? Fazer says israel says maybe pfizer, sixty five percent that is ninety four percent. Sixty five percent seems pretty great. Um we had any risk.
Well okay, let me jump into this because i've been affected personally by IT. Um so yeah on the last pot I I give the stat which was that at at that point the the best data we had even a week ago was at the the five of accent was holding a pretty well against the um delta variant IT had reduced effective from about ninety five to eighty eight percent that sort of the numbers I think.
On monday, israel released a new study showing that the effectiveness of fier against delta had been reduce to sixty four percent. Now that's again st you know getting symptoms testing positive IT was still ninety three percent I can serious cases requiring hospitalization, but that ninety three percent is down from ninety nine percent plus. So there has been reduced effective by delta IT. IT is a little bit concerning. And as if to underscore this point, someone very close to me who was double of act with vizor just has a positive .
he did as possible. So he he woke .
up yesterday morning with with cold symptoms, he had sore throw, really knows he's fine and a slight fever, which then graduate into a headache, he went and got tested and he has a positive for IT. So I think he's fine.
What city was here when this happened?
Okay.
let me ask a question to freeburg. Is IT not the best possible situation? I know this sounds like a stupid question, but I am the lowest, like you guy on the pod. Is IT not the best situation to have the Fisher or whatever have this amazing then to get a mild case of coffee and then be doubly protected? Is that in some way an ideal situation if there is no long role coit.
it's not really clear if that's i'm going to make a difference. You know again, I remember um uh a acquired community is on a spectrum, right? So a virus can get in your nose, starts replicating.
And if you gotto tunny any bodies that immediately get to your nose, it'll shut down that virus before you experience anything. If that virus gets in your nose and starts replicating and you you ve got a kind of you know of your anti bodies to that specific virus, um you know aren't st concentrated. It's going to take your body uh, a little bit longer to fight off that virus. But you are still well ahead of the game is a way to think about IT.
And so you know to some extent what we're seeing most likely as the delta variant um having a greater escape velocity from people that have been vaccinated, then you know the alphabet or any the other variants we've seen um and so as a result, your people are getting to date luckily knock on wood, mostly mild and moderate symptoms and only A A minority of people uh Better exposed or are getting um you know that condition uh but it's being track really closely. I mean like like sax said in israel, they have now said that you know if you're a vaccinated with double exercise or you're now sixty four percent um you know effective and you know that that means that if you supposed to to cove IT, uh there's A A chance you can actually get these symptoms. But the hospitalization rate and the fertile rate is still way, way low because you have a built up enough unity, you ve built up enough antibodies to have a good strong defense to keep things from getting out of control and so not godward right now, we're still looking good in terms of fatality and hospitalization, but they're certainly you know, what do you think of this situation? I to our markets kind of worrying about this because i'm kind of work wondering like as as market participants see the stuff, they're trading IT in a way it's like fearful. And does this lead to some market conditions in the next couple days and weeks?
I mean, I think that there is a very good chance that um some politicians are going to try to use this uh, for another shutdown in the fall.
I don't see I think you're right. And I think the teachers unions, the na and the F T, are already putting all sorts of demands are going back to school. I don't think this dates.
So first for I think we have been intellection honest that this is a bad data point. This is really the first bad data point that we've gotten until now. All the data has been good.
The protection from the vaccine last longer that had been completely holding up against the variance. But this data point from israel is not a great data point. I want to see more of them, more data. I don't think that um this spite second.
didn't israel only get to like fifty five, sixty percent vaccinated?
Oh no way hard no there .
yeah half of the infections .
they're seeing in israeli children that we're not vacation ated. And then the other half the other half of adults um and so if you look at the adult infection rate IT looks like it's something around um fifteen percent uh of um you know these k or I have forget the number but there are some statistic that shows that it's not uh the majority being vaccinated. There are unvaccinated people that are a look, we're we're going to probable .
we're going to probably need a booster and we're probably going to be on a cocktail. But beyond that, I think we need to make a moral decision that we are all getting back to life as Normal.
Yeah, hundred percent. I'm done.
I'm not. There will be booster. There will be boosters this fall.
yes. Yeah, exactly. And I think the question about this, this data is doesn't warn a change in policy, and I would say not yet.
hundred percent yet. I mean, the whole policy idea was I C U being filled. And if you look at the stats in the united states at the deaths, we are now at a seven day average of under two hundred. That is one hundred fifty deads per day. Some is again, i'll ask you freeze er how many of those are with cove diverses from coffee?
Yeah clear. But like israel has not had a single death in two weeks from covey fight. Increase the.
It's still a right. It's it's not what the media likes to portray, which is various punching through, right? I am it's not like delta arian is a sweeping through israel, okay? There is a slight increasing cases, and we're definitely seeing elevated cases here in the us.
I mean, delta, very to become the main the dominant drain if IT isn't already look, is mostly sweeping through areas that have not been vaccinated. But there are now cases, I say, most of mild cases of people who have been vaccinated. I mean, I think it's all the more reason why if you're an adult, you should get vaccinated.
We really do need are all adults born ing some sort of um you highly specific immune condition that were you need to be beyond some sort of different treatment. But he almost all adults in the us. Really SHE giving vaccinated. Otherwise we going to have keep having these variants sweep through.
I'll tell you um I had a really good conversation with an infectious disease ve doctor yesterday who's a research special of and well known in the space. And he pointed out that um the evolutionary cycle of this virus is a function of how many people are not vaccinated because the more bodies the virus has to hop.
the faster more evolution ord .
evolves right yes. And so um you know certain ology and epidium logic will model this where they will highlight kind of the evolutionary rate of the virus as a function of unvaccinated getting infected every day um and so the more people that we get vaccinated, the longer the timeline IT takes for the virus to evolve and get to a breakthrough very and so we need to accelerate and continue to push people to evacuate the worldwide. To reduce the available pool for evolutionary .
um success of the virus is to put IT in maybe layman's terms. All these unvaccinated people are basically like a giant petry dish for the virus to keep to keep mutating. And we do need, I think, like a martial plan to help all these other countries get vaccine.
I mean, I think we have enough vaccines in the us. But what if we done to help all these other countries IT directly benefits us if we reduce size. That petry dish, this delta variant came from india.
Why there's like a billion plus people there who you know for the virus to mute on. I mean, obviously with a petry dish that bigger and to get a variant. Now there's a new variant coming out, a perou, which looks potentially scary. Now, these are not full breakthrough variance yet, but a free verse point is just a matter of time.
You guys want to guess the bottom two states in the country. I mean, it's cip.
an alama. exactly.
Can you imagine mississippi? An obama, thirty three percent. Come on. Get your act together. I mean, going to WIP through those places and you're all gna die. You're gona kill your grandparents.
Is that an evAngelical movement issue without.
well, we taught about this the last pop. There's two groups in amErica who are most vexed. No, this be more specific. It's evAngelicals in african americans. Those are the two .
groups are most you keep saying, you keep saying and then what .
is .
a happy pronounce even elles, it's actually mall .
republicans. Why you're not being specific enough?
Yeah guys, I have to run if you ve.
Rain man here.
We open sources to the fans and they .
just got crazy with.
We should all just get a room and just have one big, huge or because like like sexual attention. but.
好的, 我 一定 只 给我 东里。