The Joe Rogan Experience - September 22, 2020


Joe Rogan Experience #1539 - Jenny Kleeman


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 13 minutes

Words per Minute

183.00713

Word Count

24,343

Sentence Count

1,607

Misogynist Sentences

25


Summary

In this episode of the Joe Rogan Experience podcast, the comedian and writer Jenny Slate joins me to talk about her new book, Sex, Robots, and Vegan Meat. We talk about the dangers of sex robots and vegan meat, and what it means for the future of the relationship between humans and robots. We also talk about why we should be worried about the rise of artificial intelligence and artificial intelligence, and why it s a good idea to have sex with them. And we talk about what it s like to be a vegan meat eater and a sex robot, and how to deal with it. Thanks to Jenny for coming on the show, and for being kind enough to take the time to talk to me about it. I appreciate it, and I hope you do too! Thank you so much Jenny for being on the pod, and thank you for being brave enough to write a book about sex robots, vegan meat and sex robots. I hope it s not just about sex and meat, it s about other things. I think you ll like it, I know I do too. -Joe Rogan Podcast by day, by night, all day. Check it out! -Jenny's Book: Sex Robots by Night, Vegan Meat by Day, All Day, by Night -The Joe Rogans Experience by Night by Night podcast by Day - by Jenny Slate by and by Night's Podcast by Day's Pod by Day - by Night - by By Night's Pod, by By Day, By Night, by Day and Day by Day All Day Podcast by Night All Day and All Day by Day by Night all Day, all Day and Night, All Night, By Day and Evening, by Evening, By Morning, by Morning, All By Night by Day & Day, Day, and Day, by Night and Evening by Day... , by Night & Night, Day & Evening, and All By Day by Evening by Night (By Night, all by Night! , All Day By Day... by Day And Day, Too Late, by Any Day, Then By Day By Night By Day & All By Evening, , By Night... by Night... By Day And Then, By Any Day By Anyday, by All Day And By Night by Anyday By Day , By Any Night, Then All Day... By By Night , By By Any Given Day, And Then By Evening... - By Day


Transcript

00:00:01.000 Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out!
00:00:04.000 The Joe Rogan Experience.
00:00:06.000 Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day!
00:00:11.000 Hello Jenny.
00:00:13.000 Hello Joe.
00:00:14.000 Thanks for doing this, I appreciate it.
00:00:16.000 I'm totally psyched to be here.
00:00:18.000 Thank you so much for having me on.
00:00:19.000 My pleasure.
00:00:20.000 So your book, Sex, Robots, and Vegan Meat, did you have alternative titles?
00:00:25.000 I'm really, really shit at titles.
00:00:28.000 I just can't believe it.
00:00:28.000 It's a good title.
00:00:29.000 I thought it was an excellent one.
00:00:31.000 It's a brilliant title.
00:00:31.000 Yeah, it works well.
00:00:32.000 It's my editor Chris's title.
00:00:34.000 It's not my title.
00:00:36.000 Did you have ideas?
00:00:38.000 I had really bad ones.
00:00:39.000 I think when I wrote the proposal, it was called Future Humans or something.
00:00:43.000 And he just said, no, no, no, no, no.
00:00:45.000 I can't do titles.
00:00:47.000 I write things that are very, very long.
00:00:49.000 I can't do nice little short things.
00:00:51.000 So anyway, my editor at the publishing house, Picador, came up with the title and I loved it.
00:00:57.000 Yeah, he nailed it.
00:00:58.000 Excellent job, Chris.
00:01:01.000 Yes.
00:01:01.000 Way to go.
00:01:01.000 He's a smart guy.
00:01:03.000 Well, it really covers the subject matter so well and so succinctly.
00:01:09.000 So I'm concerned with all the things you appear to be concerned with.
00:01:14.000 So I'm really excited about this conversation.
00:01:17.000 Good.
00:01:18.000 Let's start with Sex Robots.
00:01:19.000 This is the first part.
00:01:23.000 I'm sure you've seen Ex Machina.
00:01:26.000 Yes, I have.
00:01:27.000 Fantastic movie, right?
00:01:29.000 Brilliant.
00:01:30.000 Yes, totally.
00:01:31.000 And confusing, because I think there will be a time, whether it's in our grandchildren's life or when, where that's a real concern, where we do have artificial humans that don't have any empathy.
00:01:46.000 They're programmed whatever way we decide to program them, and they're insanely similar to us.
00:01:53.000 Yes.
00:01:53.000 And people are going to have sex with them.
00:01:56.000 Yes.
00:01:57.000 It's this idea that, I mean, there are people who are working on this stuff now.
00:02:00.000 That's what my book is about.
00:02:01.000 It's about, like, I went and met the people who are doing this stuff now.
00:02:04.000 We have this idea that comes from science fiction of, like, Ex Machina or Pris from Blade Runner, of these, like, totally perfect beings who are really dangerous.
00:02:13.000 And that doesn't exist at the moment, but it is going to exist.
00:02:17.000 It is going to exist at some point.
00:02:19.000 There will be something extremely realistic that gives a very good illusion of being human, even though it's not.
00:02:26.000 And there are lots of reasons to be concerned about this and there are some really solid kind of feminist reasons to be concerned about this because the vast majority of the robots being made at the moment are in the female form.
00:02:39.000 But for me, the thing that I was worried about is what What happens in a future where it's possible to have a relationship where only one half of the partnership matters, where you don't have to have empathy for your other half, you don't have to care about what their ambitions are,
00:02:55.000 what their desires are, they'll always laugh at your jokes, they never get a period, you never have to meet their family.
00:03:00.000 And what is that going to do to us as human beings when empathy is no longer a requirement of the relationship?
00:03:07.000 Jenny, the way you're wearing your microphone, it's rubbing against your clothes because you're trying to look cooler.
00:03:14.000 Because I move about too much.
00:03:16.000 Is that better?
00:03:17.000 Perfect.
00:03:18.000 Excellent.
00:03:18.000 Yeah, that is a real concern.
00:03:20.000 And I've thought about this a lot.
00:03:24.000 Because I'm very concerned with...
00:03:26.000 There's two ways of looking at it.
00:03:29.000 One way of looking at it like we, at one point in time, there were single-celled organisms.
00:03:34.000 And then millions and millions of years later, you have human beings.
00:03:38.000 Why would we assume that this is the end?
00:03:41.000 It's clearly not.
00:03:42.000 There will be better iterations.
00:03:45.000 And I have a feeling that one of the ways we're going to bring that about is through technology.
00:03:52.000 And my real fear is that there will be no more biological life.
00:03:56.000 My real fear is that we will slowly integrate, we'll be symbiotic with some sort of technological creation, and then eventually we'll realize all the things that are holding us back They're biologically based, whether it's sex or gender or emotions or all these different things that seem to cause conflicts.
00:04:15.000 And then if we figure out a way to convince this future version of human beings to just give in to the matrix, that's our future.
00:04:26.000 You know what?
00:04:26.000 I would have kind of agreed with you on that take about a year ago, except for what's happened over the past year, which has just smacked us in the face, reminding us that biology always wins and that we're much more likely to be wiped out by some biological thing that we have no control over whatsoever.
00:04:42.000 Because ultimately that kind of reading of the future It depends on this idea that we will be able to control things really well, that there will be nothing that comes out of left field that can destroy us.
00:04:55.000 I'm sorry, but wouldn't that be a great argument that biology is the issue?
00:05:01.000 Because if we did have something that we could put our consciousness in that doesn't have problems with viruses, wouldn't that be an excellent solution to the problem that we're in?
00:05:14.000 We have a problem with our immune systems because we're essentially symbiotic organisms already.
00:05:20.000 We have all these bacteria and all these different life forms that live within us.
00:05:26.000 If the balance is off or your immune system is bad, then a virus gets in there.
00:05:30.000 You're basically being attacked by another life force.
00:05:34.000 Well, yes, but I'd say that's the difference between a perfect world and a real world.
00:05:39.000 And I think it would be almost impossible for us to be able to develop technological solutions that were perfect, that didn't have glitches in them, where you could upload yourself faithfully and exist in this sort of realm of consciousness where you were separate from your body.
00:05:54.000 There would be problems with that, and you'd be relying on this technology to embody you in many ways.
00:06:00.000 And I just basically think that technology can't It can't solve everything.
00:06:05.000 Technology can do fantastic things, but the most important human problems have to be solved by changing human behaviour rather than relying on technology.
00:06:14.000 Maybe.
00:06:16.000 Maybe.
00:06:17.000 I see what you're saying, but most technology, although it's not totally reliable, is more reliable than human beings.
00:06:25.000 Like your phone works and it's much more consistent than most humans.
00:06:31.000 Occasionally your phone will screw up if you drop it a lot, but so will people.
00:06:35.000 If you drop them on their heads, they'll screw up as well.
00:06:38.000 But you're relying, you're giving the person who creates that technology a lot of your trust and you're giving them a lot of power.
00:06:45.000 And so essentially that phone is only as good as the person who made it and as much as they're fulfilling their pledge to give you what they say they're giving you.
00:06:53.000 And actually you're disempowering yourself if you're relying on a piece of technology that's created by a corporation to do something that you could do yourself basically.
00:07:03.000 And so that's what my book is about.
00:07:05.000 What I've been looking at is these fundamental parts of human nature and how we're relying on technology to solve problems for us because it's a bit of a shortcut to say, okay, I'm going to get a machine to do that.
00:07:17.000 I'm going to get a machine to be my girlfriend or machine to do any of these other things.
00:07:21.000 But in fact, there's lots of unintended consequences of doing that.
00:07:24.000 And in fact, you take away some of your agency if you're relying on a machine.
00:07:29.000 Well, you certainly do.
00:07:30.000 My general concern is that we won't be necessary.
00:07:37.000 I think this idea of human beings and agency and all these things are wonderful if we decide to stay human.
00:07:45.000 But what I'm concerned with is when I talked to Elon Musk and he was telling me about Neuralink.
00:07:50.000 And Neuralink is going to radically increase the bandwidth between human beings and information.
00:07:54.000 When you start stuffing wires into people's brains and you make some sort of weird Bluetooth connection to an app or some other piece of technology that allows you to interface with it and have access to information at a much more rapid pace.
00:08:10.000 That seems the beginning of the end of what we call the biological human.
00:08:16.000 I'm really worried about this.
00:08:17.000 I'm not worried in a sense, but I see the writing on the wall.
00:08:22.000 And I see people as having a short lifespan in terms of this version of a human being that we're enjoying right now.
00:08:32.000 I don't think this is going to last.
00:08:37.000 Well, it's certainly not going to last because something's going to come and wipe us out.
00:08:40.000 But whether or not we're superseded by technology depends on a whole lot of things.
00:08:44.000 It depends on everybody having this technology all over the world.
00:08:47.000 And it depends on this technology working properly.
00:08:51.000 And I think there will always be people who can't get their hands on it, who will be living in a different way and maybe a better way.
00:08:57.000 And while we all get wiped out because we're all...
00:08:59.000 Connecting to Bluetooth and telepathically, you know, being inside each other's consciousnesses and getting messed up because of it.
00:09:07.000 There'll be people who can't afford this technology who will be just quietly forging ahead.
00:09:11.000 I mean, I guess this is the whole thing.
00:09:13.000 It's like the difference between You never know where technology is going to take you until you put it in practice.
00:09:19.000 Like even the iPhone, like when Steve Jobs invented the iPhone, his projections, his kind of most ambitious hope was that it would take 1% of the market in the first year.
00:09:28.000 Like he had no idea we would all become completely addicted to these things and that we can't put them down.
00:09:33.000 And this is the thing, nobody knows where it's all going to go.
00:09:36.000 It might wipe us out, but, you know, there'll always be people who don't have it who survive that apocalypse.
00:09:42.000 Yeah, well, there are some people in remote parts of the world that don't have phones now, but that's what's fascinating.
00:09:47.000 If you go back to the movie Wall Street, when Michael Douglas is on the beach and he has that big brick phone and he's a baller.
00:09:54.000 He's a big player.
00:09:55.000 He's got this crazy phone.
00:09:56.000 He doesn't even have to have a wire there.
00:09:58.000 Remember that?
00:09:58.000 That was the big deal, that this guy was so cool and so rich that he could have a phone and talk to people that are nowhere near him.
00:10:07.000 With no wires.
00:10:08.000 And that was unusual.
00:10:10.000 Now, you could go to remote parts of the world and you'll see folks with cell phones.
00:10:16.000 Very poor people in third world countries.
00:10:18.000 They all have cell phones.
00:10:19.000 I feel like that is probably going to be what's happening with all future tech.
00:10:26.000 The rich people have it originally, initially, and then it'll trickle down to other folks as well.
00:10:33.000 But the real worry, when we're talking about haves and have-nots now, that's a big issue today, is income inequality.
00:10:40.000 Well, when you have people that can afford Neuralink, or whatever the next version of that is, or future iterations, if it really is that effective, Yeah.
00:11:07.000 Yeah.
00:11:08.000 And also with things like, for example, like artificial wounds, if you can be pregnant without anyone – well, if you can have a baby without anyone being pregnant, then there will be a great inequality between women who can kind of carry on working and not have to deal with all of this stuff happening to their bodies.
00:11:24.000 And, you know, companies might pay for your – You to grow your baby in a lab or in a bag instead of inside your body and you can carry on working and then there's a future where like being visibly pregnant might be a sign of having an unplanned pregnancy or of low status or of being like a pretty bad mother because you hadn't really thought about it.
00:11:44.000 Like this technology has the ability to create enormous not just like advantage and disadvantage but also Reinforcing class problems in a really huge way because we will end up looking down on people who don't have the ability to participate in this new world where there are opportunities provided by this technology.
00:12:05.000 Yeah, now we're getting really into the weirdness, right?
00:12:07.000 Because we're really talking about money more than we're talking about the development of a human being because you know you're a mother.
00:12:15.000 Strange things happen when you have a baby inside of you.
00:12:18.000 You have a connection with the baby.
00:12:20.000 The baby has a very bizarre connection with you and the outside world through you and your feelings and senses.
00:12:26.000 And to pawn all that off on some fucking robot just seems really weird.
00:12:30.000 I hope that never happens.
00:12:33.000 That freaks me out.
00:12:34.000 It's kind of already happening now, though, because, well, it is already happening now in one respect, in that they're doing experiments with animals where they're doing it, but it's already happening now with surrogacy.
00:12:44.000 I mean, all of the arguments that you make now about, you know, the connection, the bond and all of that, they apply to surrogates as well.
00:12:51.000 And surrogacy is a very, very, you know, difficult area ethically to get into, but it's the only way a lot of people have of having babies at the moment.
00:12:59.000 Yes, and that also is an issue with income inequality comes into play as well.
00:13:05.000 With people that really don't want to do it, and they do it because it's the only way they can earn a large sum of money, so they carry other people's babies inside of them.
00:13:14.000 Weird stuff.
00:13:15.000 You are renting out your body, even if you're doing it for the most noble reasons, to give the greatest joy to a couple, you are basically saying, okay, you can have this part of my body for nine months.
00:13:26.000 Yeah.
00:13:28.000 What we were talking about earlier, I'm with you.
00:13:31.000 I love human beings.
00:13:33.000 I love all our weirdness.
00:13:35.000 I love our flaws.
00:13:37.000 I love the conflict and the resolution of that conflict.
00:13:40.000 I think we're amazing.
00:13:42.000 I love talking to people.
00:13:44.000 That's why I started a podcast in the first place.
00:13:46.000 My concern is that we're going to be obsolete.
00:13:49.000 And I really think that if technology continues the way it's currently going, this exponential rate of improvement and with artificial intelligence and all the various things that people are working on, including artificial limbs, they're going to be superior.
00:14:06.000 They're talking about replacing eyes within our lifetime.
00:14:09.000 They're going to be superior to the eyes that we currently use.
00:14:13.000 All these things lead me down, if I sit and think for long, well, where's it going?
00:14:18.000 Well, it's going to artificial people.
00:14:20.000 It's going to something that's superior to us, just like we're superior, at least on paper, to single-celled organisms.
00:14:29.000 Well, yes, and there's the transhumanist argument that we're going to be augmenting ourselves and transcending our bodies.
00:14:35.000 But that depends on two things.
00:14:37.000 One is this idea that human bodies are kind of flawed and need to be rejected and improved.
00:14:44.000 But the other thing is that all of this stuff depends on whether or not we want to buy it.
00:14:47.000 This stuff is out there.
00:14:48.000 We can say, no, we don't want that.
00:14:50.000 We'd rather be inferior and flawed human beings because that's better than being perfect and rendering ourselves obsolete.
00:14:58.000 We don't have to go down that road.
00:14:59.000 Just because these things exist, it doesn't mean that we have to buy them.
00:15:02.000 We have to use them.
00:15:03.000 No, that's absolutely true.
00:15:05.000 You're absolutely right.
00:15:06.000 But I think people are going to do it, and I think more people are going to do it than not.
00:15:10.000 I believe in human beings.
00:15:13.000 I think that there's going to be a kind of backlash and a revolution against all of this stuff, and people will say, actually, there are certain areas where I want to be flawed and imperfect.
00:15:22.000 But maybe those people will become second-class citizens and be, you know...
00:15:26.000 Completely inadequate in this new economy of enhanced humanity.
00:15:30.000 You're depressing me now.
00:15:32.000 You can get depressed thinking about this, but I look back on chimps or our ancient hominid ancestors and I said, well, if you talk to them and say, hey, let me show your future.
00:15:45.000 Your future is filled with iPads and electric cars and you can fly in a Metal tube that gets you across the entire continent in five and a half hours.
00:15:53.000 What do you think?
00:15:54.000 They'd be like, fuck that.
00:15:55.000 I'm sticking with the trees, man.
00:15:57.000 This is where it's at.
00:15:58.000 It's bananas and eating bugs.
00:16:00.000 This is life.
00:16:01.000 What you guys are doing is nonsense.
00:16:03.000 Everyone's depressed, and you don't even have to worry about being eaten by a big cat.
00:16:08.000 No, you're doing it wrong.
00:16:12.000 Totally.
00:16:12.000 The idea of whether or not our life is better now that we have the capacity to do all of these things is really up for discussion.
00:16:20.000 Sure.
00:16:20.000 What is better, right?
00:16:21.000 What's better is, are you enjoying it more?
00:16:24.000 Do you feel more fulfilled and happy?
00:16:27.000 Arguably, more people are depressed and more people feel disconnected because of technology than ever.
00:16:34.000 You know Jonathan Haidt?
00:16:35.000 Have you read his book, The Coddling of the American Mind?
00:16:38.000 I haven't.
00:16:39.000 It's an excellent book, in particular when it discusses children and growing up with technology and social media in particular, how difficult it is.
00:16:50.000 And for girls especially, for whatever reason, they experience more bullying and more depression.
00:16:58.000 There's more cutting, more suicides, and there's a giant uptick that coincides directly with the advent of social media and cell phones.
00:17:07.000 It's really weird because there's this thing that we're adding into our life that causes all these complications and is incredibly addictive.
00:17:16.000 I have a 12-year-old daughter and it's hard to get her to put her phone down like, hey, put that down.
00:17:22.000 She has a time.
00:17:23.000 She can only use it for an hour and then it just won't let her use it anymore.
00:17:27.000 But during that hour, it's like a feast.
00:17:30.000 It's crazy.
00:17:32.000 It's weird to see and it's disturbing.
00:17:34.000 And part of it is I see her enjoying it.
00:17:38.000 I see her doing TikTok and laughing with her friends and taking pictures with weird filters.
00:17:43.000 But part of me thinks this is a little demon that works its way into your life and it makes you unsatisfied and unhappy.
00:17:50.000 For a lot of people, the weird comparison aspect, particularly when you're an adolescent...
00:17:56.000 It's very dangerous for kids.
00:17:58.000 That's what it is.
00:17:59.000 I mean, that is the kind of key to being unhappy is comparing yourself with other people.
00:18:03.000 I mean, the key to happiness is to not compare yourself to other people and just be happy with you a lot.
00:18:07.000 But, you know, it's not just teenagers.
00:18:09.000 I'm completely addicted to my phone.
00:18:10.000 I remember one time I put my phone in to be repaired.
00:18:13.000 The screen was cracked and I was just, I felt like I'd lost a limb.
00:18:16.000 I was constantly thinking, oh, it's my phone, and then having to remind myself, you know, it was in for repairs.
00:18:21.000 They are incredibly addictive things and, you know, have a very incredibly powerful I think we're now living in a world where the problems that we have are not huge existential problems.
00:18:43.000 We're not constantly living with death around us all the time, although maybe this year things are slightly different.
00:18:50.000 You know, in a world where we're not constantly under threat, we are kind of, our kind of sphere of what should concern us has got smaller and we're kind of cannibalizing ourselves and looking for problems, creating problems, whereas in the past we would have been too busy, you know, running away from tigers or wherever,
00:19:06.000 whatever you might think.
00:19:07.000 Yeah, for sure.
00:19:08.000 And there's other issues also where people are comparing themselves with things that aren't real, like filters and all this weird stuff.
00:19:17.000 I posted a picture on my Instagram that my 10 year old took of me.
00:19:21.000 We were at dinner and I made an ugly face and she put me through this filter and turned me into a beautiful girl.
00:19:28.000 It's really bizarre.
00:19:30.000 And I posted it up on my Instagram and said, this is me.
00:19:33.000 I want you to know how crazy this is.
00:19:35.000 I showed the original picture and then I showed the picture that my daughter created.
00:19:39.000 I'm like, this is how insane these filters have gotten.
00:19:42.000 It gave me hair.
00:19:44.000 It gave me beautiful lips and smooth skin.
00:19:46.000 And it's...
00:19:47.000 And people were stunned, because there's a lot of people...
00:19:51.000 I didn't know that it existed until my daughter did it to me, until she showed me.
00:19:55.000 I mean, I knew that it was pretty similar, that you could do some weird stuff with filters, but I had no idea you could turn an ugly man into a beautiful girl.
00:20:05.000 It's really weird.
00:20:07.000 So there's a lot of girls...
00:20:09.000 People are having, like, surgery so that they can look like filters as well.
00:20:13.000 They're so used to seeing themselves in this way.
00:20:15.000 And I don't know if you have this so much in the US, but we certainly have here this fashion for incredibly big lips and young girls having loads and loads of stuff put in their lips.
00:20:23.000 And so they begin to look more and more like, you know, cartoons because that's the kind of perfection that they're used to seeing in these images.
00:20:32.000 Yeah, we do have that, unfortunately.
00:20:34.000 It's a weird one.
00:20:35.000 I think people got so used to boobs being ridiculously big that they thought that, well, we just do that with lips too.
00:20:43.000 And butts.
00:20:44.000 Yeah, and butts.
00:20:44.000 The butt one is very strange.
00:20:46.000 But it's all weird, but it changes the geometry of your face and it makes people weird.
00:20:53.000 Like, they get odded out by you.
00:20:56.000 They see you with the lips and like, oh, those lips don't go with that face.
00:20:59.000 Like, why are those lips on that face?
00:21:01.000 Like, people who have thick lips, generally, if they naturally have thick lips, you know, there's the Fibonacci sequence with your face.
00:21:09.000 It works.
00:21:10.000 You see it.
00:21:10.000 You're like, oh, that's your face.
00:21:12.000 Those beautiful lips belong on your face.
00:21:15.000 But when someone has, like, thin skin and, like, angular, narrow features and these crazy, fucked-up lips...
00:21:23.000 It's your body, you gasp.
00:21:27.000 You tighten up when you see it.
00:21:28.000 Oh, what have you done?
00:21:30.000 What have you done to your face?
00:21:31.000 I think when people in the future look back on us, like when we look back on, I don't know, two or three centuries ago where people wore those tiny corsets and think, oh my god, I can't believe that was in fashion.
00:21:40.000 I think people in the future will either look back on us and just laugh that we did this to our lips, or they will all have lips like that and look back on you and me and think, uh, who knows?
00:21:50.000 Yeah, those regular looking people.
00:21:53.000 I'm worried about genetic engineering as much as I'm worried about artificial intelligence and symbiotic relationships with technology.
00:22:00.000 I'm really worried about things like CRISPR and how they're going to affect what the future shape of human beings is.
00:22:09.000 I think that if we really get to a point where we can edit genetics and every woman looks like Wonder Woman and every man looks like Thor, we're going to be in a really weird place.
00:22:21.000 Certainly.
00:22:21.000 And also because, you know, so much of this stuff is like being developed for really noble reasons, like we're going to stop people from being sick, we're going to stop people from having diseases, and it's hard to argue against that.
00:22:34.000 And also that the kind of The limits on people using this stuff are kind of voluntary things that countries sign up to.
00:22:42.000 China gets a bad rap for using this stuff, but at least Chinese scientists do sign up to lots of ethical codes.
00:22:48.000 There's nothing to stop scientists in North Korea or in Russia or countries like that that don't care about these ethical codes from doing whatever they like with this technology.
00:22:57.000 And that's the point, is that we need to be able to have these discussions before this technology is out there and be able to be critical about technologies that might be able to do incredible amounts of good so that we're ready for them, basically.
00:23:10.000 Right.
00:23:10.000 That is part of the issue.
00:23:11.000 It's like the people that create the technology, it's like they get to a point where they're editing genes and they're doing it for these good reasons.
00:23:21.000 But then that technology exists.
00:23:24.000 It's sort of like when Oppenheimer created the bomb.
00:23:29.000 They were trying to do it first because they knew that Germany was working on it.
00:23:34.000 And they knew that this was something that was very important to be first with.
00:23:40.000 But then once he detonated it and he realized what he had done, you know, that famous quote from the Bhagavad Gita that he said, like, as the bomb blew off, he said, now I am become death destroyer of worlds.
00:23:53.000 It dawned on him, like, what have I done?
00:23:57.000 And I think that's probably going to happen with genetic engineering.
00:24:01.000 When they're doing it initially and they're trying to help people with leukemia and all sorts of diseases, But then you see everyone looks like the Hulk, you know, and then you live a thousand years and then we have massive overpopulation problems because nobody dies and people have bulletproof skin.
00:24:20.000 This is not outside of the realm of possibility.
00:24:22.000 This is all in the wheelhouse of genetic engineering.
00:24:25.000 If they just keep doing what they're doing right now and you extrapolate, you go forward a hundred years, things can get really bizarre.
00:24:35.000 The point is that nobody can control where their inventions will eventually go and who will control them and what they'll be used for.
00:24:43.000 And like, you know, one of the things I've looked at is meat grown in laboratories.
00:24:47.000 So if you could eat meat without killing animals by cloning the cells of a live animal.
00:24:55.000 And the people doing that stuff, they're vegans and they're animal rights activists who are like, The animal rights argument, we haven't won that argument.
00:25:03.000 People are still eating meat, even though they know it's really cruel.
00:25:05.000 So we're going to give them what they want, but do it in a way that doesn't involve killing animals.
00:25:09.000 And we're going to try and make it cheaper and better for you.
00:25:13.000 And that is a noble intention in many ways.
00:25:16.000 But then, you know, they can't say that in 20, 30 years time, they're not going to be bought out by some giant meat company that doesn't care at all about animals or We're good to go.
00:25:35.000 We're good to go.
00:25:39.000 We're good to go.
00:25:43.000 We're good to go.
00:25:48.000 That we can, you know, there can be a critical mass of people who say we're not going to allow this to happen for it not to happen, I would say.
00:25:56.000 I love your optimism, but I feel the same way about you saying that as I do when the Green Party is running for president here in America.
00:26:03.000 We don't need the Republicans.
00:26:04.000 We don't need the Democrats.
00:26:06.000 We're going to start a third party.
00:26:08.000 And I'm like, good luck.
00:26:10.000 Most people are crazy.
00:26:13.000 Most people are going to jump right on board and get fake eyes.
00:26:16.000 They're going to do it.
00:26:18.000 They're going to want to be able to read minds.
00:26:19.000 They're like, come on, Elon Musk.
00:26:21.000 Drill into my brain.
00:26:22.000 Stuff those wires into my amygdala.
00:26:24.000 But it's not going to suddenly come out there and be there on the market.
00:26:27.000 As we said, the first people who are going to get it are going to be very rich people who have it.
00:26:31.000 And then there will be a backlash of other people saying, hey, it's not fair.
00:26:34.000 The rich people can read my mind.
00:26:35.000 Maybe nobody should be able to read anybody's mind.
00:26:37.000 It's not going to all of a sudden happen.
00:26:39.000 It's not going to be like a science fiction movie.
00:26:42.000 That's the thing.
00:26:42.000 No, I don't think it's going to happen quickly, but I think it's going to be one of those things that we just accept, just like we accept cell phones.
00:26:50.000 If you had a cell phone 50 years ago, people would think you were a warlock.
00:26:55.000 Now, all of a sudden, it's normal.
00:26:58.000 It's a normal part of our life, and I'm worried that that is going to be the same with whatever, whether it's Neuralink or whatever future inventions that we have that enhance brain activity.
00:27:11.000 It's already happening with things like IVF. When IVF first came, it was total science fiction.
00:27:16.000 So much backlash that these were Franken-babies.
00:27:19.000 And now it's just so normal, it's advertised on the tube here.
00:27:22.000 Yeah, and people talk about it in casual conversations.
00:27:25.000 No, we had our kid through IVF. Oh, cool.
00:27:27.000 It's normal, yeah.
00:27:29.000 The sex robot thing, I share the same concerns that you have about the...
00:27:35.000 There's a thing that people do when we get to know each other.
00:27:40.000 We want each other to like each other.
00:27:46.000 As boys grow up with girls, they learn what girls like and girls learn what boys like.
00:27:52.000 We learn to be better people because we want other people to like us.
00:27:56.000 It's part of the whole process of the development of a human being.
00:27:59.000 If all of a sudden you can have sex with this perfect woman that you can spit on and pee on and do everything and she's always going to be there for you, I mean, it's a gross image, I'm sorry, but this is the real worry that there's no consequence to any of your actions and you can do whatever you want.
00:28:18.000 It's like there's a video game mode called God Mode.
00:28:22.000 I don't know if you play video games.
00:28:24.000 Yeah.
00:28:46.000 But when there's no consequence...
00:28:49.000 I feel like there's got to be the same thing in dating, right?
00:28:54.000 If you're not nice to people, they don't call you back.
00:28:56.000 They don't like you.
00:28:57.000 And then you go, well, what have I done wrong?
00:28:59.000 And then you learn and you grow.
00:29:00.000 If there's no learning and growing...
00:29:03.000 You need feedback in your relationships.
00:29:06.000 This is the thing.
00:29:07.000 It's about having a domestic echo chamber, to have something in your house that is always laughing at your jokes and always likes the same music as you and the same movies as you, unless you program it to disagree with you.
00:29:16.000 But then again, all that matters is what you want.
00:29:18.000 I think that's going to be very damaging and corrosive.
00:29:21.000 And particularly because the people who are making this stuff at the moment justify it by saying, we are making this for people who otherwise wouldn't have a relationship.
00:29:30.000 Bereaved people, socially awkward people, people who are disabled.
00:29:35.000 We're giving them a chance to have some sort of companionship which they wouldn't be able to have otherwise.
00:29:41.000 But what those people need is they need some human contact.
00:29:44.000 They will be further isolated by having this kind of Perfect illusion of a partner because that's just not reality.
00:29:52.000 The whole point about human beings is they're unpredictable and they disagree with you and they have in-laws and menstrual cycles and ambitions and stuff.
00:30:02.000 It's incredibly important to grow as an individual to not always get everything you want.
00:30:08.000 I'm totally with you on that.
00:30:09.000 Yeah, it's like that scene in Ex Machina where you realize that the genius has this bizarre sexual relationship with these robots that he's created, and particularly the Asian robot where he can kind of tell her what to do, and you're like, oh,
00:30:25.000 wait a minute.
00:30:26.000 It's not a person, but why do I feel like it's a person?
00:30:28.000 Like, I feel like he's a fucking creep, but it's not a person he's doing this to.
00:30:33.000 Wow.
00:30:34.000 So it sort of highlights these strange dilemmas.
00:30:38.000 Like, you're going to create a nation of sociopaths with oddly perfect female companions.
00:30:46.000 Yes, and almost kind of worse than that is, I interviewed these sex robot manufacturers in China who make very, very realistic sex dolls that they're putting AI and animatronics into, but really, really realistic.
00:31:00.000 The AI isn't so great, but they look really realistic.
00:31:04.000 And I asked them, you know, how come you're doing this?
00:31:06.000 And they said that actually what this is really ultimately about is about having service robots in the home, that ultimately you can have robots that will cook and clean for you at the moment, but they look like movable trash cans and they're not appealing.
00:31:19.000 And so actually what we're doing is making them look nice so you want to have them in your house and if you want to have sex with them, you can.
00:31:25.000 And what that description is basically of is a slave.
00:31:28.000 This is what they're making is slaves.
00:31:31.000 They're making things that look human but will do all the things that human beings don't necessarily want to do.
00:31:37.000 And so my concern is there's a whole branch of ethics about should robots have rights and should they have legal protections?
00:31:45.000 I'm not so much interested in that.
00:31:47.000 I'm interested in what does it do to you, the robot owner, If you have this relationship with a being that looks very, very human but isn't human, and the mindset of being a slave owner where you can suspend your empathy for something that looks very human, how does it corrode you and affect you to be having that kind of relationship?
00:32:06.000 I mean, I see a Black Mirror episode ready to happen, right?
00:32:10.000 Totally.
00:32:11.000 And then I see someone pretending that they have robots, that they really have human slaves.
00:32:17.000 That's a really good idea.
00:32:18.000 You should make that.
00:32:19.000 It seems like that could really happen.
00:32:22.000 I think there's going to be a branch of ethics that gets developed to deal with artificial life if we get to the point where we have control over artificial life and that artificial life has been programmed to actually mimic our emotions.
00:32:35.000 Because if you have something that cowers when you hit it, and when you scream at it, it hides in the corner and cries and weeps, and you get off on that, and you think that's fun, like, what is that?
00:32:52.000 If you have a basketball and you like to punch that basketball and scream at it and call it a bitch and throw it in the corner, everybody's like, okay, it's just a basketball.
00:33:02.000 You're fucking weird.
00:33:03.000 I don't know why you're doing that, but if that's what makes you feel better, fine.
00:33:07.000 If you want to scream at your basketball and not at a human being, that's fine.
00:33:10.000 But what if that basketball looks like a human being, talks like a human being, It has emotions that are programmed into it.
00:33:17.000 How realistic does it have to get before we rebel against this idea?
00:33:22.000 No, totally.
00:33:23.000 Part of the question about child sex dolls and child sex robots is part of all of this.
00:33:30.000 Some people say that you should give pedophiles child sex dolls and child sex robots like it's a kind of methadone.
00:33:38.000 That it will wean them off offending.
00:33:39.000 But we all know instinctively that that's wrong because it's more likely to feed that desire than to satisfy it.
00:33:46.000 We all know that.
00:33:47.000 But then how is that any different from saying, you know, you can give people who are sex offenders female dolls and robots or even men who are a bit aggressive or even, you know, whatever it is.
00:33:59.000 It's like if it's wrong to have a child sex doll because You'll relate to it like a child.
00:34:05.000 Then that same kind of thought process has to carry over when you're talking about adult dolls as well.
00:34:09.000 We will relate to them like they're human.
00:34:11.000 That's the whole point.
00:34:12.000 Yeah, it's a very messy situation.
00:34:15.000 Once they're created and once they actually do mimic real human beings, it's going to be very strange.
00:34:22.000 And I completely agree with you when it comes to pedophiles and a child robot doll.
00:34:29.000 That's not going to fix anything.
00:34:32.000 No.
00:34:33.000 But we know that.
00:34:34.000 And that's the interesting thing.
00:34:35.000 We have a kind of instinctive reaction.
00:34:36.000 No, that's wrong.
00:34:37.000 But then if you think, okay, well then why is it okay to have, I guess because adults can consent and kids can't consent, but we know that with a child doll or a child robot, it's wrong because you, the person owning it, are going to be treating them like a human and relating them like a human.
00:34:54.000 It's going to encourage you in the real world to go off and behave in a bad way.
00:34:58.000 It's the same sort of argument.
00:35:00.000 Yeah, even in an inanimate one, Like, if you went over a guy's house and he had a real doll, you know, one that doesn't move, but, you know, he's like, well, I just prefer that to masturbation.
00:35:11.000 You're like, oh, I don't know.
00:35:14.000 Like, masturbation's normal, but that's one step removed.
00:35:20.000 Like, that's weird.
00:35:21.000 That thing looks really real.
00:35:23.000 Well, the thing about real dolls is that they, because they don't move, I mean, obviously I went to the real doll factory, and because they don't move and speak, they're still like a fetish, and it's a very niche thing.
00:35:32.000 You have to be turned on by dolls, or you have to have an incredible imagination where you can imagine them coming to life.
00:35:38.000 The thing about robots with artificial intelligence and AI is that they're not so much of a niche and a fetish.
00:35:44.000 They are a versimilitude of a human being.
00:35:48.000 They are trying to To be a replacement relationship, really.
00:35:54.000 And with a robot, it's much more about the relationship than about the sex, because you can have sex with a doll.
00:35:59.000 The whole point of a robot is that you can have a relationship with it.
00:36:02.000 Yeah, it's the Joaquin Phoenix movie, She.
00:36:06.000 Yeah.
00:36:07.000 Is that She or Her?
00:36:08.000 Her.
00:36:09.000 Her.
00:36:09.000 Yeah, where he has a love relationship with this voice, essentially.
00:36:17.000 I mean, that's what we're talking about.
00:36:19.000 We're just talking about it in the physical form.
00:36:21.000 Yeah.
00:36:22.000 I'm worried that this is inevitable.
00:36:25.000 It seems inevitable.
00:36:27.000 It seems like if these companies are already developing ones with wonky AI, it's going to be like the difference between that brick that Michael Douglas had on the beach and a Galaxy S20 Ultra, the newest,
00:36:42.000 latest, greatest cell phones.
00:36:44.000 They're just going to get better.
00:36:46.000 They are.
00:36:46.000 It is totally inevitable.
00:36:48.000 They'll always be quite expensive.
00:36:51.000 But it is totally inevitable.
00:36:52.000 And there's a guy called Dr. David Levy, a British guy who wrote a book in 2007 called Love and Sex with Robots, where he predicted by 2050 human-robot marriages would both be legal and acceptable around the world.
00:37:06.000 And I think he thinks that's going to happen sooner now.
00:37:09.000 But yeah, I think this technology is inevitable.
00:37:12.000 It doesn't exist so much at the moment because at the moment you've got these robots that look very realistic because they're like real dolls.
00:37:18.000 And the AI isn't bad, but they can't walk.
00:37:21.000 Walking is really, really expensive to develop and it drains a lot of power.
00:37:25.000 So they haven't worked out how to do that.
00:37:26.000 That's the kind of next frontier.
00:37:28.000 So you haven't got this science fiction fantasy of like a robot that will come and knock on your door and deliver herself and say, hello, I'm your new girlfriend or whatever it is.
00:37:35.000 We're quite a way off that.
00:37:36.000 But it is going to happen.
00:37:38.000 Whether or not it'll be cheap enough for everyone to have one is another matter, but it's definitely going to happen.
00:37:44.000 Do you think that people will propose laws to prevent this?
00:37:48.000 Once it starts seeming like it's inevitable, once the general public goes, hey, wait a minute, this is not good, and then people realize that their romantic relationships, they're going to be replaced.
00:38:00.000 Men and women.
00:38:01.000 And women too.
00:38:02.000 Women are going to be tired of men's bullshit.
00:38:05.000 I think that's probably true, but then, I mean, I can't speak for all women here, but I think, certainly, my experience, and I don't think this is a minority view, is that women find the idea of having sex with something that you don't know genuinely wants you to be very unsexy indeed,
00:38:23.000 and it's much harder.
00:38:24.000 Like, all of those real dolls, they make male real dolls.
00:38:27.000 They're bought by gay men.
00:38:30.000 It's very, very difficult.
00:38:32.000 It's not sexy to have sex with something that isn't really into you, basically.
00:38:37.000 Isn't that kind of the same thing with Playgirl?
00:38:40.000 Like, Playgirl, the idea was, well, women should have a magazine like Playboy 2. Like, okay, you know who buys it?
00:38:45.000 Gay men.
00:38:46.000 Exactly.
00:38:47.000 Male sexuality is a very, very different thing.
00:38:51.000 But I do think there'll be women who want companions.
00:38:54.000 Forget about the sex.
00:38:55.000 There'll be women having relationships, certainly, with very realistic male robots, too.
00:39:01.000 Definitely.
00:39:02.000 But in terms of whether or not there are going to be laws against this, there's a campaign against sex robots in the UK that at first was trying to get laws done.
00:39:10.000 Banning sex robots or the development of sex robots in the UK, and now has kind of softened their stance and says they just want proper discussion ahead of maybe making some laws.
00:39:19.000 But the point is, the cat is out of the bag.
00:39:21.000 We could ban it in the UK, people will be making them in Korea or somewhere, unless there's a kind of global decision not to do this.
00:39:28.000 And there are too many rogue states for this not to happen.
00:39:32.000 So it is going to happen.
00:39:34.000 And always, you know, the law is really out of step with technology.
00:39:37.000 You know, if you look at things like revenge porn, something that we know instinctively is so wrong, it's been really hard to criminalize because of the way that we all live now.
00:39:45.000 Everybody's taking pictures.
00:39:46.000 Everybody's sending them all the time.
00:39:47.000 People can upload them and ruin someone's life in a moment.
00:39:50.000 And, you know, the law is kind of grinding on slowly, trying to keep up with all of this.
00:39:54.000 And so, for example, in the UK, what's illegal in terms of sex dolls is if you're not allowed to import a child's sex doll.
00:40:03.000 So it's the importation of it that's illegal, not having one, but trying to get it into the country just because the laws are kind of so old and creaky.
00:40:09.000 So I don't think actually it's something that we can stop with laws.
00:40:13.000 We can stop it by saying, actually, I don't want this and I'm prepared to accept compromise in my relationships and I'm prepared to accept that in order for me to grow as a person, I need to be challenged and not constantly in a relationship where all that matters is what I want.
00:40:28.000 Yeah, I mean, all those things sound right.
00:40:31.000 I agree with you.
00:40:34.000 It's not that I'm saying, no, no, no, you're wrong.
00:40:37.000 It would be better if these sex robots took over.
00:40:40.000 My real worry is that it doesn't matter what we think is right.
00:40:45.000 That technology always goes towards innovation.
00:40:49.000 It always goes towards improvements.
00:40:52.000 It always goes towards technology advancing where it's more effective, more available, easier, better, cheaper, faster.
00:41:00.000 This is what we always do.
00:41:02.000 This is what we've done with every single thing we've ever invented.
00:41:04.000 And it's got to happen with that as well.
00:41:08.000 But I think the difference between our position is that you think the march of technology is completely inevitable and there's nothing we can do to kind of shape it or stop it.
00:41:17.000 It's just gonna happen.
00:41:19.000 Whereas I think none of this is inevitable.
00:41:22.000 And I think human beings are capable of adapting and changing without technology.
00:41:28.000 And this year is a really good example of this, that we're all waiting for a vaccine.
00:41:32.000 The vaccine has not arrived.
00:41:34.000 And so we've kind of saved ourselves by changing our behaviour and changing our behaviour in a kind of altruistic way by staying at home even though, like, we might not get sick with coronavirus or wearing masks for other people's benefit.
00:41:46.000 I think human beings are really adaptable and we can adapt by changing our behaviour rather than We're relying on technology.
00:41:54.000 And this march of technology only exists if we continue to always think that technology is the solution.
00:41:59.000 People have to make this stuff.
00:42:00.000 And people have to buy this stuff in order for it to march on.
00:42:03.000 And we always have the power to say, you know what, I don't want it.
00:42:07.000 I think reasonable people like yourself, yes, that's going to happen.
00:42:12.000 But clearly you've seen videos of spring break in Fort Lauderdale where kids are making out, half naked, on the beach.
00:42:20.000 Nobody gives a fuck about coronavirus.
00:42:21.000 And then there's maps that show the spread of them leaving Florida and going all through the rest of the country.
00:42:29.000 And then all these infections that show up there.
00:42:32.000 Totally, but there's enough people that are being reasonable that when those things happen, it's really shit and people get ill, but it's not the end of the world.
00:42:41.000 That's the point.
00:42:41.000 I think most people are reasonable and are able to behave in a kind of way where The good kind of wins out.
00:42:49.000 I think I agree with you on a lot of these things.
00:42:52.000 However, when I look at human beings, I try to look at human beings as if I was from another planet, if I was an alien.
00:42:58.000 And I looked at them without any connection to the way they think or behave or their culture.
00:43:02.000 And I said, well, what do these things do?
00:43:04.000 Well, this is what they do.
00:43:05.000 They make technology.
00:43:06.000 All they do is make technology.
00:43:08.000 They're obsessed with materialism, which plays into technology.
00:43:11.000 It plays into this want and need for the bigger, better, faster, greater thing that comes around every year, and that's what fuels them to work every day.
00:43:20.000 They go to work and they toil, and one of the things they reward themselves with is the newest, greatest thing.
00:43:27.000 And this is the fuel for this technological growth.
00:43:31.000 And this technological growth appears unstoppable because it seems like that's all the human animal does.
00:43:38.000 If you looked at it from afar, objectively, all I'm seeing is a constant wave of technology.
00:43:46.000 But I don't think that's true because we don't just make technology.
00:43:49.000 We also talk to each other and we communicate like you and I are now and we have discussions and we are capable of incredible change and that we could live in a world where it was okay to keep slaves and impregnate your wife every year and keep her in the kitchen.
00:44:04.000 But through having these discussions, we can really, really change the way we live very drastically from one generation to the next.
00:44:10.000 It's not just technology.
00:44:12.000 What defines a human being is that we use technology and that we're social animals.
00:44:17.000 And those are two different things.
00:44:18.000 And the idea that the technological advancement is always going to win out isn't necessarily one I buy.
00:44:24.000 I'm not saying that it's going to win out.
00:44:26.000 I don't think it's going to win out.
00:44:27.000 I think it's inevitable.
00:44:30.000 But they're both inevitable.
00:44:31.000 And as a society, we can make change just as much as we can make change by using technology.
00:44:36.000 Yeah, that is the fascinating balance, right?
00:44:39.000 I mean, most people today are aware that they're addicted to their cell phones, yet most people still use their cell phones.
00:44:45.000 We're aware that it's harming us, but yet we still use them because we just, oh, it's just a phone.
00:44:51.000 No big deal.
00:44:52.000 But you know it's a big deal.
00:44:53.000 Everybody, I know it's a big deal.
00:44:54.000 I know I check my messages too much, but yet I still check my messages too much.
00:44:59.000 And I'm aware of it, and I've read a lot of books about it.
00:45:01.000 But I think if you thought it was harming you enough, if you thought it was destroying your brain cells, you wouldn't.
00:45:07.000 The point is, it's about how you weigh up harm and you think, yeah, I should probably be doing other things, or I shouldn't be constantly checking the Twitter feed of that person I hate that's bad for my soul.
00:45:18.000 But you still do it.
00:45:19.000 Because it's bad for your soul, but only a little bit.
00:45:22.000 And if it was really, really corrosive and bad, then you would stop.
00:45:26.000 Yeah, maybe if you're a healthy person, or maybe you're one of those people that likes to pick scabs, and you just keep scratching.
00:45:34.000 That's possible too.
00:45:36.000 I'm worried for people.
00:45:38.000 I really genuinely am.
00:45:40.000 This is as a person who enjoys people.
00:45:42.000 I don't know how much time we have left in this form.
00:45:46.000 When I look at the archetypal alien, when you see those little grey men with the big heads I'm worried that what that is, is like we instinctively know that that's our future.
00:45:58.000 That we're going to be these genderless, weird things that reproduce through some sort of technology instead of these...
00:46:09.000 Bizarre, imperfect biological creatures with emotions that you and I both enjoy so much because of all the weirdness.
00:46:18.000 I mean, my whole business, everything I do is about the weirdness of people, whether it's stand-up comedy, whether it's podcasts, or even fighting.
00:46:26.000 When I do commentary on fighting, that's all the weirdness and imperfect nature of the human animal.
00:46:32.000 And I think it's awesome.
00:46:33.000 I mean, I love people.
00:46:34.000 Don't get me wrong.
00:46:35.000 I'm not rooting for technology to do this.
00:46:37.000 But I see the writing on the wall.
00:46:39.000 It's not pretty.
00:46:41.000 Well, the thing is, it's all about the richness of the human experience, what makes it interesting to be human, which isn't just the basic functions of our life or basic logic.
00:46:49.000 You know, the fact that we have art galleries everywhere and music, you know, music, which is completely, completely illogical.
00:46:55.000 Yes.
00:46:55.000 It's because there's more to being human than those basic functions.
00:46:59.000 And when you talk about, you know, Sexless aliens reproducing without sex.
00:47:04.000 That kind of stuff is gonna happen quite soon.
00:47:06.000 I looked into quite a lot of this.
00:47:08.000 We can make gametes, we can make cells.
00:47:11.000 They can do this in mice.
00:47:12.000 You can make sperm and eggs out of cheek cells.
00:47:15.000 So you could make an egg out of your cheek cell and sperm.
00:47:18.000 There'll be a future where people can make sperm and egg Whichever one they need for whichever relationship they're in and that you can grow a baby outside the human body and we will become less and less gendered.
00:47:28.000 That is gonna happen.
00:47:29.000 The end of sex for reproduction is quite possible that we will just have sex for fun and then we'll do babies in this kind of very controlled way.
00:47:39.000 But we're always going to be weird, human beings.
00:47:41.000 We're always going to like strange things, like dancing around to music, all the stuff that can't be explained.
00:47:45.000 And the drive to be weird and the drive to be illogical is very, very powerful.
00:47:54.000 I'm not so deterministic about stuff.
00:47:56.000 And when I was doing all the work for my book, I was quite worried it was going to be really depressing because in a book like mine, you come to a conclusion where it's like, well, there's a future where women might be obsolete, where we can be replaced by robots and artificial uteruses and misogynist men can live without us.
00:48:15.000 All of these things that are really dark and worrying, but that's to buy a particular view of human nature as being a kind of slave to whatever comes next.
00:48:24.000 And we're too kind of weird and idiosyncratic, I think, to be done away with that easily.
00:48:31.000 Well, I think the weird and idiosyncratic nature of people is something that you and I both enjoy.
00:48:37.000 But I mean, I think if you can replace men with cheek cells, I mean, if you really can do that, if you really get to the point where you can create sperm from your nose hairs or whatever, and you don't need a man anymore...
00:48:50.000 Or a woman.
00:48:51.000 Or a woman.
00:48:52.000 It's called in vitro gametogenesis.
00:48:55.000 In vitro gametogenesis.
00:48:56.000 You can make gametes in vitro out of anything.
00:48:58.000 And they've done it in mice and they're going to try and do it in humans.
00:49:00.000 So it is going to happen.
00:49:01.000 But it means, you know, gay couples can have babies without anyone donating anything.
00:49:05.000 That's the good part.
00:49:06.000 That's the good point.
00:49:07.000 The bad part is no more people having sex to make people and then we're going to realize as a society all of our problems are caused by emotions if we were just logical.
00:49:18.000 So we figured out a way to remove emotions.
00:49:20.000 And here's the thing.
00:49:21.000 Emotions, the good part about emotions are dopamine and serotonin.
00:49:25.000 Right?
00:49:25.000 We all agree.
00:49:26.000 And dopamine and serotonin, we can actually reproduce that in your own brain.
00:49:30.000 So we can have the same feelings of love and the same feelings of happiness, but without all the illogical behavior that ruins lives.
00:49:40.000 So there'll be no more jealous boyfriends burning your house down.
00:49:43.000 There'll be no more chaos, no more murder, no more violence, no more any of this.
00:49:47.000 Everybody needs to sign up.
00:49:49.000 Or, you know, or you're a barbarian, or you're some terrible person who doesn't want progress.
00:49:56.000 Emotions are holding us back.
00:49:57.000 That's what I'm worried about.
00:49:58.000 It's like a slippery slide into us becoming something different and more predictable.
00:50:07.000 Man, this is really dark.
00:50:09.000 But you're right, I mean...
00:50:10.000 Well, I mean, it is quite possible.
00:50:13.000 It's dark for us.
00:50:14.000 As a thing.
00:50:16.000 As a species.
00:50:17.000 It is dark for us as a species.
00:50:19.000 I mean, I think the idea, you're right, that those emotions, they can be artificially induced anyway, and it's the natural emotions that are...
00:50:27.000 But all of this is depending on a world where there's a system where everybody has access to all that technology or all those drugs or all those whatever.
00:50:35.000 And, you know, there will be accidents.
00:50:36.000 There will be babies born naturally.
00:50:38.000 There will be, you know...
00:50:40.000 Yeah, and then maybe those people will have, you know, because they will be naturally selected in a different way, maybe they will have a completely different take on things that will save us all.
00:50:52.000 The thing that's really scary about the whole being able to make sperm and eggs from cheek cells It means you can make an infinite number of eggs.
00:51:00.000 So at the moment, the number of babies a couple can have is limited by the number of eggs a woman can produce.
00:51:06.000 And if you can make eggs from cheek cells, then you could have a billion eggs, which means that you could conceive a million fetuses and you could artificially select the best ones.
00:51:17.000 So you don't need CRISPR for that in terms of Genetic engineering, when you can make unlimited numbers of foetuses between a couple and choose which is the best one.
00:51:27.000 If this thing can happen that you can make eggs, that's not a difficult thing to do and we're not that far away off all of that.
00:51:37.000 Yeah.
00:51:38.000 There's so many things to worry about.
00:51:39.000 I had a conversation with Ray Kurzweil where he was talking to me about the ability in the future that we'll have the ability to download consciousness into a computer.
00:51:49.000 You'll be able to take your consciousness and put it into a computer because Essentially, consciousness is something that we're going to be able to replicate it.
00:51:58.000 It's going to be something that we can just recreate with computer programs and software.
00:52:04.000 And my thought was, what if someone's crazy?
00:52:09.000 What if some Kim Jong-un guy decides to make a billion of him?
00:52:13.000 If you have this world, this artificial world that you're going to live in, if you're going to live inside this computer, I'm assuming there's some sort of an environment that's compatible with the human consciousness.
00:52:24.000 So you're going to create some real-world multiplayer game where people live inside of it.
00:52:31.000 What's to stop someone like Donald Trump from making a billion Donald Trumps?
00:52:35.000 Right?
00:52:36.000 What's to stop you from doing that, from populating the world?
00:52:38.000 This is like a big philosophical experiment then, because the question is, why would it matter?
00:52:43.000 If this is all virtual and none of it's real, this is basically a computer simulation.
00:52:46.000 Why does it matter if in that computer game there's a billion Donald Trumps and a Kim Jong-il?
00:52:51.000 Right, or why does it matter if you want to piss on your sex robot and punch it?
00:52:56.000 It's not even a person.
00:52:57.000 Well, I guess the difference with that is because it's going to change you as a person when you get used to behaving like that.
00:53:02.000 Whereas this uploaded consciousness world, no human being is around to see it.
00:53:06.000 You've uploaded your consciousness.
00:53:07.000 It's doing its own thing in that world.
00:53:09.000 That world is a parallel universe where nothing matters.
00:53:11.000 But I think the idea of uploading your consciousness is very interesting because there's an incredible narcissism in that.
00:53:17.000 There's this idea that People will want to know you after you're gone and your consciousness deserves to be preserved.
00:53:24.000 There isn't enough space in anybody's kind of, you know, how could you deal with a world where the consciousness of every human being who's ever lived is in there?
00:53:32.000 There'd just be too much going on.
00:53:34.000 Do you know what I mean?
00:53:34.000 Oh, yeah.
00:53:35.000 I mean, imagine.
00:53:36.000 If you could remember all of your ancestors, you know, how would that affect you if you constantly had the judgment of your great, [...
00:53:46.000 I don't think that would be very good.
00:53:47.000 Well, not only that, who's to say that once they do upload your consciousness into some computer that they won't have some infinitely better version of this software and hardware down the line?
00:53:58.000 Are they going to transfer you again?
00:54:01.000 And who's going to do that at some point in time?
00:54:04.000 Exactly.
00:54:05.000 Are we going to be able to take your consciousness and continually upgrade it?
00:54:09.000 Are you going to have to sign on to some gold group?
00:54:13.000 Like, well, if you sign up to this plan, we upgrade you every two years to the newest, latest, greatest software, and you get a wonderful place in heaven.
00:54:24.000 What are we doing?
00:54:26.000 I know.
00:54:26.000 And who's to say that we're not going to be doing CRISPR for people's consciousnesses and editing out.
00:54:31.000 We'll say, we'll take out your mental illnesses and then eventually we'll take out your irrationality and your bad moods and your antisocial habits and then, you know.
00:54:41.000 The point is nobody who develops technology can ever control where it goes.
00:54:47.000 And the problem is we're really uncritical about technology because we're so used to science fiction where technology is either really bad or it's wonderful.
00:54:54.000 There's never this grey area in between where it sometimes really could be used for real good but has a potentially really dark application if it's used in a society that isn't fair or that has certain ideas about certain individuals.
00:55:06.000 And that's the reality in which we live.
00:55:08.000 Whereas, you know, at the moment we're stuck between, I don't know, The Terminator and, I don't know, some sunny future, you know.
00:55:16.000 Is there ever a sunny future, though?
00:55:18.000 I don't know of any science fiction movie where it looks awesome in the future.
00:55:23.000 It's always, like, really distraught, dystopian.
00:55:29.000 Yeah, I can't think of any positive ones at the moment.
00:55:33.000 I'm sure there are.
00:55:34.000 There must be.
00:55:36.000 There's quite often in science fiction, there's technology that's being used for incredible good.
00:55:40.000 There's just, you know, we've solved that problem or, you know, we no longer, you know, we can grow meat without killing animals and that's all fine and everything's fine and that's sorted.
00:55:49.000 It's no longer a debate.
00:55:52.000 And even things like, you know, like in Blade Runner, yes, the robots there are bad, but they're also perfect and flawless and don't have any problems with them.
00:56:04.000 Do you know what I mean?
00:56:05.000 But yes, most science fiction is dystopian because it's about our inner fears, about how we can't really control anything.
00:56:12.000 It also seems like one of the things that people enjoy is we enjoy enduring and recovering and overcoming obstacles.
00:56:25.000 And if we get to a point where we've removed that...
00:56:30.000 Where will the joy come from?
00:56:32.000 There will be more obstacles.
00:56:34.000 We'll always invent more obstacles.
00:56:35.000 This is the whole thing.
00:56:36.000 When you live in a country where there is no longer the threat of nuclear war, starvation, death, there'll be another obstacle with body dysmorphia or whatever.
00:56:44.000 We'll invent something else.
00:56:45.000 Do you know what I mean?
00:56:46.000 Yeah.
00:56:47.000 I mean, I think that human beings are, we are constantly trying to control everything around us, and we're constantly in fear of the chaos around us, and that's why we use technology to try and give us this illusion of control over the world.
00:57:03.000 And there are some things that we really can control, and technology has been great at doing that.
00:57:06.000 You know, I'm very grateful for technological advancements in birth control that mean that I haven't been, like, perpetually pregnant for the past 20 years.
00:57:14.000 It's a great thing.
00:57:15.000 That I can control that part of my body.
00:57:18.000 But ultimately, there are many things that we just can't control and that technology doesn't solve problems.
00:57:26.000 It just circumvents them.
00:57:27.000 It gives us a kind of easy way out of them.
00:57:29.000 Instead of forcing us to confront the cause of the problem, it's just like plastering over them.
00:57:35.000 And so, yeah, I think a lot of the human condition is this struggle between Wanting to control everything and having to deal with the fact that ultimately we have no control over anything.
00:57:47.000 And also implementing our ideas.
00:57:51.000 And that's part of the problem, is that people are constantly trying to come up with new, better ways to do things.
00:57:57.000 And then we implement these new, better ways to do things, and then we deal with the repercussions and the consequences of these new changes.
00:58:04.000 Totally.
00:58:05.000 Of the way that we've implemented them.
00:58:06.000 Yes.
00:58:08.000 And I've got the perfect example of this, which is when I was in Las Vegas doing part of the reporting, I went and interviewed a man who'd made a sex robot, a very bad sex robot in Las Vegas.
00:58:19.000 And then I went back to my hotel and they were playing really, really loud music outside the entrance to the hotel to try and get people to come into the casino.
00:58:28.000 And I went up to my room and there was like a dish next to my bed of different kinds of earplugs of like silicon earplugs, foam earplugs, wax earplugs, all these solutions to the problem caused by the management there.
00:58:43.000 And they could just turn the music off, but instead they've given you this profusion of solutions.
00:58:48.000 Which hotel were you at?
00:58:50.000 It was in downtown in LA, not in LA, in Las Vegas.
00:58:54.000 I can't remember the name.
00:58:56.000 It was a while ago.
00:58:57.000 It wasn't even a grimy hotel.
00:59:01.000 A good example of this is also with our phones.
00:59:04.000 We're all addicted to our phones so we can't sleep properly.
00:59:06.000 So people are taking melatonin so that they feel sleepy.
00:59:09.000 But you could just put your phone down.
00:59:12.000 Do you know what I mean?
00:59:12.000 So we've become addicted to different orders of magnitude of technology.
00:59:17.000 To solve problems caused by technology Do you ever go camping?
00:59:21.000 I'm not a big camper, but I have been camping, yes, many times.
00:59:25.000 The interesting thing about camping is if you do it for enough days, you realize that your brain, when it gets dark out, you start preparing to go to sleep.
00:59:35.000 And normally, like 8 o'clock at night, I'm wide awake.
00:59:39.000 I'm wide awake for several hours at 8 p.m.
00:59:42.000 But when I'm camping, at 8 o'clock, it's like, well, let's eat and crash.
00:59:47.000 You sit around the campfire, talk a little bit, and you get ready to go to sleep.
00:59:51.000 But that's your natural cycle.
00:59:54.000 We've circumvented that with lights.
00:59:56.000 Absolutely.
00:59:57.000 I mean, if you look at the effect of technology on human beings, it doesn't have to be something as fancy as a perfect sex robot.
01:00:03.000 Lights, like artificial lighting has changed human society, human brain chemistry.
01:00:09.000 If you look at 150 years ago when everybody went to bed, and it's just simple things that We don't have to go to sleep as soon as it gets dark anymore.
01:00:17.000 How much we have changed because of that, it's incredible.
01:00:20.000 So that's the other thing, is the things that really have potential for radical change on human society and human behavior and human biology, they don't have to be very fancy and high-tech.
01:00:32.000 You don't have to have Elon Musk's Bluetooth brain chip.
01:00:35.000 There's one even more insidious aspect for lights, and that's it's disconnected us from the universe.
01:00:43.000 One of the things that you realize when you do go camping, when there's no lights is, oh my god, we're in space.
01:00:49.000 Like, you see all the stars, and it's extraordinary.
01:00:53.000 When you go, like, I went to the Keck Observatory once in Hawaii.
01:00:59.000 Well, I've been a few times, but one time I nailed it.
01:01:01.000 Where I went, where there was no moon, and the sky was clear, and it was stunning.
01:01:06.000 And to this day, I still close my eyes sometimes and try to remember that, remember what it was like, because you could see the whole Milky Way.
01:01:14.000 The Keck Observatory is very high on the Big Island, and it's above the clouds.
01:01:20.000 And in fact, when we were driving there, it was cloudy, and I was like, damn, this is going to suck.
01:01:24.000 We're going to get all the way up there, and we can't see anything because of these clouds.
01:01:27.000 But then you pop through the clouds, and then you get to the observatory, and it is Amazing.
01:01:33.000 Without looking through a telescope, just the amount of stars that you see, it changes your relationship to life and to this experience that we're having here on Earth.
01:01:46.000 We're so delusional.
01:01:48.000 When we don't see any stars...
01:01:50.000 We have streetlights and we're looking at our phone and we're watching TV. We have this bizarre idea of what life is.
01:01:57.000 But then when you're there and there's nothing but the stars in the sky, you go, oh no, this is an organic spaceship.
01:02:05.000 We're hurling through space on this ball.
01:02:09.000 And I thought this was everything, but it's nothing.
01:02:12.000 When you see all those stars, it just, it humbles you in a way that our ancestors were humbled, and why they were so obsessed with the constellations, why they were so obsessed with the zodiac signs, and all the different ways that these would study all the lights in the sky and try to figure out what kind of relationship we had with those lights.
01:02:35.000 We've lost all that.
01:02:37.000 We've lost the context and the perspective on our existence that we need, really.
01:02:43.000 But then again, also, could we really function if we were constantly aware of how I guess it would liberate us from being so obsessed with gazing at our own navels.
01:02:57.000 I think it would probably be humbling in a way that would eliminate a lot of unnecessary hubris.
01:03:03.000 I think there's a lot of dumb shit that we do that is connected to this sort of dulled perception of our place in the universe.
01:03:11.000 And I think if we could see it and it could humble us the way it humbled the Mayans and all these other civilizations that were constantly fixated on the celestial gods and all the different lights in the skies, I think it would be better for us.
01:03:26.000 But I think my fear is that all of this is like...
01:03:31.000 And again, this is looking at it outside of a human being.
01:03:36.000 All of this is leaning us towards this complete, total immersion in technology.
01:03:42.000 And one of the best ways to get us to not think about our position in this vast, infinite universe is that we don't see it.
01:03:51.000 What's the best way to not see it?
01:03:53.000 Technology.
01:03:54.000 Blind you.
01:03:55.000 Literally blind you to the most spectacular vision the world has ever known.
01:03:59.000 The most spectacular vision is the heavens, is the sky, the stars, the Milky Way, all the galaxies that are visible to the naked eye.
01:04:07.000 That's what gave people so much wonder and created so many myths of what's going on up there.
01:04:13.000 Well, if the best way to eliminate that and have us fixated totally on ourselves and become self-centered is to blind us to it.
01:04:21.000 And that's what we've done.
01:04:22.000 We've done that with lights.
01:04:24.000 But I think it's also all of this is also to do with capitalism and that capitalism depends on us all feeling incomplete and like we need the next big thing in order to be complete so we need this bit of technology will solve this problem or I will be fine I will be happy if I have bought this thing or if I bought into this solution and there's no money to be made saying hey what you really need to do is get a proper night's sleep go and do some exercise but you don't need you don't need anything fancy to do some exercise Eat a little less if you're trying to lose
01:04:55.000 weight, but all you need to do is eat a little less.
01:04:57.000 There's no money to be made in that way.
01:04:58.000 So we are robbed of our context because capitalism depends on us thinking that we can control everything and be a kind of self-determined beings if we just buy the next thing and are always focused on our own project and what we're going to do next to achieve the goal we want.
01:05:16.000 There's no money to be made in telling people Everything as it is right now is fine and good and you should just appreciate it.
01:05:23.000 We don't do that.
01:05:25.000 You're absolutely right.
01:05:26.000 But that's what we were talking about earlier when I was saying that I feel like materialism, which is one of the great plagues of humanity, this desire for shiny things that are supposedly going to make us happy, is also fueling technology.
01:05:40.000 Because in order to keep up with the human desire for these things, we're constantly creating newer and better things.
01:05:47.000 So all of our ridiculous instincts to acquire these things are literally fueling the innovation of technology.
01:05:56.000 But again, I would say, I agree with you, but again, I would say we have the power to say, you know, I don't need these earplugs, I'm just going to turn the music down.
01:06:04.000 Or, you know, I don't want this sex robot, I'm just going to deal with...
01:06:08.000 Ultimately, we have the power of being consumers, and the consumer has the power to not want something.
01:06:15.000 And that's where real power lies, in being in control of your desires and not just being led along by someone saying, you need this, you need this.
01:06:23.000 You know, having the power to say, I don't think that I do need this, and I'm fine just as I am.
01:06:27.000 I agree with you, but I don't think people are going to say that.
01:06:30.000 I think they're going to give right in.
01:06:31.000 I don't think anybody's moving to a log cabin in the woods either.
01:06:34.000 I think you're like one out of a million.
01:06:36.000 One out of a million, and we look at those people like they figured it out.
01:06:40.000 You don't have to move to a log cabin, though.
01:06:41.000 You just need to say, you know, I've got a house that suits my purposes and it's fine.
01:06:47.000 And I'm happy with it.
01:06:48.000 And my life is good.
01:06:50.000 I don't, you know, I don't care if people look at what car I've got and judge me on it.
01:06:55.000 Those people aren't worthwhile.
01:06:57.000 I mean, I'm not saying that you give up all your possessions and become a hippie.
01:07:00.000 I quite like having stuff.
01:07:01.000 But I've reached a point in my life where, you know, I've got a job that I love and I have...
01:07:07.000 I have two kids, I have a lovely family, and I am very, very aware of feeling like I'm there and I have everything that I want.
01:07:14.000 And other possessions, they might be nice, but actually, I feel fulfilled.
01:07:20.000 But then when you feel fulfilled, you're aware of how much the world is constantly trying to tell us that you'll only be fulfilled when you've got this or when you've done this.
01:07:29.000 But I would submit...
01:07:30.000 I would submit that you are a very intelligent, introspective person, and I think that's rare.
01:07:36.000 I don't think a lot of people feel very fulfilled.
01:07:39.000 See, we have a different view of human nature.
01:07:41.000 I think most human beings are really good people who just want to get along.
01:07:46.000 Oh, I agree with that.
01:07:48.000 I agree with that.
01:07:50.000 But what don't you agree with?
01:07:51.000 Well, I agree most human beings are really good people that want to get along, but I think they will give in to the siren song of materialism and technology and all these different things because I don't think they're as introspective as you are.
01:08:03.000 You're looking at it and you're like, this is perfect.
01:08:05.000 I've got this.
01:08:06.000 I don't need any more.
01:08:07.000 This is fine.
01:08:08.000 I realize all the things that are fucking up my life and fucking up society, and I'm not going to give in to that.
01:08:13.000 But you're an author.
01:08:14.000 You're someone who thinks all the time.
01:08:16.000 You literally spend...
01:08:17.000 Hours every day thinking.
01:08:19.000 We need to encourage critical thinking.
01:08:21.000 There isn't really enough of that.
01:08:23.000 And at the moment, particularly in the way that we communicate now, which is about people being angry and then other people being angry and then other people enjoying watching the two sides fight.
01:08:34.000 The skill of being able to think critically and to enjoy the grey area where both sides are kind of right here.
01:08:42.000 I think that we're going to move away from this era because it's I don't think we're going to get more and more polarized because it's only so far that we can all go without all killing each other, basically.
01:08:52.000 Yeah, we're pretty far polarized.
01:08:54.000 We're pretty far apart, and in the UK as well.
01:08:57.000 But eventually, I think, when we are no longer enjoying being spectators or participants in this sort of violent debate, We'll be able to look at the grey area and look at what's valuable in that.
01:09:11.000 We need to encourage critical thinking and not taking sides.
01:09:16.000 I agree with you 100%.
01:09:17.000 This is where it gets ironic because I feel like conversations like this are what help people because what you're saying resonates with people.
01:09:29.000 They hear your words and they go, she's right.
01:09:31.000 She's right.
01:09:32.000 I'm going to adjust.
01:09:33.000 I'm going to adjust the way I think.
01:09:35.000 But it's technology that's got us to this position in the first place.
01:09:39.000 We're more polarized now with more connection than we've ever had before.
01:09:43.000 We have more connection with each other than ever before.
01:09:45.000 But the problem is that connection is very crude.
01:09:48.000 It's very clunky.
01:09:50.000 It's the quality of the connection.
01:09:52.000 Yes.
01:09:52.000 It's through texting and this weird thing we're doing with Twitter and Instagram.
01:09:59.000 We're more connected, but we're more connected in a way that we don't feel it.
01:10:04.000 And so we're more polarized.
01:10:06.000 What really, the big difference now is that, you know, a friend of mine said to me, he's totally right, and it's something that I've discovered over the past five, ten years, that if you want a superpower, the superpower is to listen, to really listen to what people are actually saying,
01:10:22.000 and not what you want them to say, or how you, you know, to really, really properly listen.
01:10:26.000 Because people are just not listening to people anymore.
01:10:29.000 And I have, you know, in one respect, I write books and I write really long articles.
01:10:34.000 And when I do those interviews with people, I interview them for a long time and I transcribe it all myself.
01:10:39.000 I don't use a computer or pay anyone else to do it.
01:10:41.000 And it's so dull and I hate it.
01:10:43.000 But that's where I really understand what people are saying.
01:10:46.000 And that's where I get all the ideas for structure.
01:10:48.000 And then I have another part of work that I do is I present a radio show, which is completely a different thing where I'm interviewing people for like six or seven minutes and I'm learning the skill of that.
01:11:01.000 And part of the skill of, when you're doing really short interviews, You're meant to kind of ask questions that force people into saying things or trap people in a way.
01:11:10.000 And the performance is you asking the question rather than you listening to the answer and thinking, okay, what would be an interesting question to ask next?
01:11:19.000 And that is much more common.
01:11:21.000 I mean, I love my radio show.
01:11:22.000 I'm not saying my radio show is like that, but I'm saying I'm learning how to deal with a world where that's what's traditionally done is the style of interviewing is a kind of A dance that you do with people instead of asking a question where you think the answer might be interesting and then really listening to the answer.
01:11:36.000 People don't really do that anymore.
01:11:38.000 And if they did, you know this more than anyone else, the power of giving people proper time and really, really listening and responding.
01:11:45.000 Because in the world that we're living in now, people feel like they don't have time for that.
01:11:49.000 100%.
01:11:49.000 I think everything you're saying is why podcasts are so popular today.
01:11:54.000 Yes.
01:11:54.000 People are hungry for it.
01:11:56.000 Yes.
01:11:56.000 Particularly a podcast like this where there's very few people involved.
01:12:01.000 It's basically just you and me and my producer Jamie's over here working the controls.
01:12:06.000 That's it.
01:12:07.000 And because of that, we can explore these ideas in long form.
01:12:11.000 And what I've learned over the years is to listen and The whole concept of having a conversation with a person, trying to think the way they think.
01:12:27.000 Don't try to be right.
01:12:28.000 Don't try to get them in a gotcha.
01:12:30.000 I don't ever try to do that.
01:12:32.000 I just try to figure out what you're thinking, and then I'll present you maybe something that's contrary or controversial.
01:12:39.000 I just want to see how you react, and I want to feel the way your brain works.
01:12:46.000 I want to let you breathe.
01:12:48.000 I want to give you room to explore these ideas and thoughts.
01:12:53.000 Totally.
01:12:53.000 When people listen, they're essentially allowing you to think for them in a way.
01:12:59.000 You're talking and they're like, oh, Jenny's got some really good points.
01:13:02.000 It's working in their brain like, oh, okay.
01:13:07.000 You don't get that in a short form.
01:13:09.000 No, you don't.
01:13:10.000 And the popularity of your podcast shows that people really want that.
01:13:14.000 They want to be able to really explode ideas and hear the different paths that you can take through an idea.
01:13:19.000 Whereas most news journalism is about Forcing news lines out of people like getting this politician to say that they fucked up or Getting this celebrity to admit that they did whatever or you know managing to skewer someone into saying something or admitting something and And it's just the it's the opposite of what I do.
01:13:40.000 It's the opposite of what you do But most people assume that's what the public wants is these new lines or have you heard this has happened that's happened whereas actually I think People are really hungry to hear properly nuanced debates where different sides of things are weighed up and people are not kind of sparring.
01:14:00.000 Yeah, they want to hear people explore ideas.
01:14:02.000 That's what they really want to hear.
01:14:04.000 And they want to hear people explore ideas honestly, where they're not manipulating people's words or not playing weird games.
01:14:11.000 They're just trying to find out how each other views things.
01:14:16.000 And I hope there's an appetite for that.
01:14:17.000 As somebody who generally does, the articles I write are like 5,000 words.
01:14:23.000 They take a long time to write.
01:14:24.000 I write books.
01:14:25.000 I hope that people are always going to see the value of that because doing that kind of stuff takes time and it takes thought and energy.
01:14:34.000 And it's not as disposable as doing this quick interview where you're really clever and you've managed to get someone to say something or admit something that they haven't admitted to anyone else.
01:14:43.000 But that's where the real meal is.
01:14:45.000 It's been the really long stuff where people are actually listening to each other.
01:14:50.000 Have you thought about doing a podcast?
01:14:53.000 I'd love to do a podcast.
01:14:55.000 I did like a podcast documentary, a kind of true crime thing, where I kind of did a story as a podcast.
01:15:03.000 It was a story about this Dutch fertility doctor who was really successful in the 1980s, and then it transpired recently that the reason why he got such great results is that he was using his own sperm to inseminate all his patients, and there are now like 70 Dutch kids who all look like him who are trying to get justice.
01:15:23.000 It's a great story.
01:15:24.000 Yeah, I heard about that story.
01:15:25.000 That's insane.
01:15:26.000 I did that, but then I would love, I mean, a podcast like this where I'm sitting and interviewing people, I think I'd probably enjoy that too.
01:15:33.000 You'd be great at it.
01:15:35.000 You really should do it.
01:15:36.000 You'd be fantastic at it.
01:15:37.000 I really think that's, I mean, you're built for it.
01:15:41.000 Well, it's quite an endorsement.
01:15:41.000 I would love to do it.
01:15:43.000 I guess it's all about picking the right people, isn't it?
01:15:45.000 I mean, how do you choose who comes on your show?
01:15:47.000 Yeah.
01:15:47.000 It just has to be interesting.
01:15:49.000 That's all I do.
01:15:51.000 Luckily, there's no one telling me who to have on.
01:15:53.000 So I just find people's books interesting, or I find the subject matter interesting, or I'll watch a video interview with them with someone else.
01:16:02.000 I go, oh, I like the way they think, and I just want to talk to them.
01:16:05.000 That's it.
01:16:06.000 That's the only motivation.
01:16:08.000 And occasionally, some of them are famous.
01:16:11.000 There's some really interesting, famous people.
01:16:14.000 But that's it.
01:16:15.000 Or maybe an artist that I really enjoy, or whatever it is.
01:16:19.000 With an author, I really enjoy their work.
01:16:20.000 I just like to talk to people that I'm interested in, and that's my compass.
01:16:26.000 Have you ever asked to speak to somebody and it's turned out they're not that interesting?
01:16:31.000 Yeah, I've had a few of those.
01:16:33.000 I don't need to mention any names.
01:16:35.000 See, that's the kind of question where I'm trying to get a news line out of you.
01:16:38.000 I don't want to be mean.
01:16:42.000 Yeah, there's some that I thought were going to be interesting and it just turned out to be sad.
01:16:47.000 It was depressing.
01:16:51.000 But I think you're lucky in that you have a reason to have a podcast, which is that you're a comedian, you do your ultimate fighting thing.
01:17:00.000 You have you as a brand.
01:17:01.000 And for me, the problem that I've had as a journalist my whole life is that people always say, like, what kind of journalist are you?
01:17:08.000 And I'm a journalist who, like, I look at stuff I find interesting, whereas most other journalists, they're like, you know, I'm an environmental journalist, or I write about women's issues, or I'm a political specialist, and I've only ever, I've been able, I'm like you, like, I want to do whatever interests me, but I haven't been given the same opportunities to do it,
01:17:24.000 because I don't have that other thing, which is, I'm a comedian, so you should come along with me, hear what I think, because, you know.
01:17:30.000 Yeah, but you're a respected broadcaster.
01:17:32.000 People know who you are.
01:17:34.000 You're an author, a published author.
01:17:35.000 I think if you build it, they will come.
01:17:38.000 I really do.
01:17:39.000 I really think you should do it.
01:17:41.000 Okay, well, if you say so, then I've got to.
01:17:43.000 Please do it.
01:17:46.000 Let's talk about vegan meat.
01:17:48.000 I want to talk more about that.
01:17:50.000 I've always found the vegan substitutes to be very disgusting and weird.
01:17:56.000 Weird because...
01:17:58.000 This is a thing that you don't like, right?
01:18:15.000 But filled with all these disgusting processed oils that mimic the taste of beef in some strange way.
01:18:21.000 So why don't you have that?
01:18:23.000 I've always found that to be so weird because I feel like if you do veganism correctly, it's great to have vegetable dishes that taste good, but shouldn't they be fucking vegetables?
01:18:37.000 Like, why are you tricking yourself?
01:18:38.000 Like, if you're a cannibal and you're like, can we all agree cannibalism is bad?
01:18:43.000 Yes, we can.
01:18:44.000 Okay, so let's have fake babies that you can eat.
01:18:47.000 We would never agree to that, right?
01:18:49.000 But yet we'll agree to these fake burgers.
01:18:53.000 We all know what a burger is.
01:18:54.000 It's ground-up meat.
01:18:56.000 So you have a fake burger?
01:18:57.000 Why are we doing that?
01:18:59.000 Why can't you just eat vegetables?
01:19:00.000 Why do we have to play these weird mental gymnastics games?
01:19:04.000 The people who make this stuff, so there's two things.
01:19:06.000 There's plant-based meat, which is meat substitutes, clever meat substitutes made not from animals.
01:19:13.000 And then there's the stuff that I look at a lot in the book, which is meat that is grown from cells that are cloned in a lab, in a medium grown in a lab.
01:19:23.000 But with both of them, they all come down to a particular view of human nature.
01:19:28.000 Which is that human beings are incapable of change, that human beings should be eating less meat because it's bad for our bodies, it's bad for the planet, enormous contributor to carbon emissions, antibiotic resistance, water pollution, water wastage, land wastage,
01:19:44.000 it's a disaster.
01:19:45.000 You know, zoonotic diseases, so diseases that jump from animals into humans like swine flu, bird flu, maybe coronavirus, are linked to animal agriculture.
01:19:54.000 So we have to stop eating so much meat.
01:19:56.000 But the people who make this stuff think, Human beings are not going to change, so we have to give them what they want.
01:20:02.000 We have to give them what they want.
01:20:03.000 So we have to make a burger that looks like a burger.
01:20:05.000 Because the whole premise behind all of this is that the kind of ethical campaign of animal rights has failed.
01:20:12.000 That you can see pictures of animals in abattoirs and yet people still eat meat.
01:20:17.000 They shut their eyes when they open their mouth.
01:20:19.000 They just don't want to see it.
01:20:20.000 They know it's cruel, but they like it because it's tasty.
01:20:23.000 And so we've got to give them something that looks the same and tastes the same but isn't the same.
01:20:26.000 And that's how the kind of animal rights...
01:20:29.000 I think that the campaign will win, not with arguments, not with saying, oh, you should just like vegetables more.
01:20:35.000 So it's quite a dim view of human nature, which is, you know, we're never going to win people over with arguments, so we're going to give them something.
01:20:42.000 And yeah, maybe very unhealthy.
01:20:44.000 I mean, some of the plant-based meats that's being made now is very convincing.
01:20:50.000 But it's ultra-processed food.
01:20:54.000 Those plant proteins taste and feel like animal proteins.
01:20:58.000 You have to ship a lot of elements from around the world and put them together, so it might be responsible for a lot of carbon.
01:21:04.000 And actually, I think we just need to eat less meat.
01:21:10.000 You know, the argument of meat being bad for you, most of those arguments are epidemiology arguments.
01:21:17.000 Meaning you ask people, what do you eat?
01:21:20.000 How often do you eat meat?
01:21:22.000 And then you find out who's having heart attacks.
01:21:25.000 It's not meat being bad for you.
01:21:27.000 It's usually that the people that eat meat are eating a lot of other shit too.
01:21:32.000 They're usually eating french fries and drinking soda.
01:21:36.000 There's a lot of contributing factors to them being unhealthy.
01:21:39.000 There are some things you can pull out like colon cancer is really connected to red meat.
01:21:46.000 When you're talking about meat being bad for you, that's a big umbrella.
01:21:50.000 And yes, obesity is caused by a lot of different things.
01:21:53.000 But overconsumption of large quantities of meat is connected to heart disease and cancer.
01:21:59.000 But again, it's connected through these epidemiology studies.
01:22:02.000 That's the way it's connected.
01:22:04.000 There's no one who's shown a study, people who eat grass-fed, grass-finished beef and organic vegetables only.
01:22:12.000 Over a period of X years, what are the results?
01:22:15.000 Because I guarantee you, they would be healthy humans.
01:22:19.000 They look at societies where people don't eat, like where people generally, epidemiological, but when you look at societies where...
01:22:28.000 Traditionally, there is not a dairy culture or a beef culture.
01:22:32.000 How those societies have changed when it's become fashionable to have dairy in those cultures and what kind of diseases have sprung up because of that.
01:22:41.000 I think, I mean, I would need to go and look at the evidence base, but I do think there's quite a well-established link between overconsumption, and I mean overconsumption of meat, so like eating it every day, several times a day.
01:22:53.000 I don't think there is.
01:22:54.000 I've looked into it pretty deeply.
01:22:56.000 The real issue is human beings have eaten meat since we were human beings.
01:23:02.000 We've always eaten meat.
01:23:03.000 This idea that all of a sudden meat is bad for you.
01:23:06.000 Meat is protein and water and amino acids.
01:23:10.000 It's not bad for you.
01:23:11.000 What's bad for you is food.
01:23:13.000 First of all, processed sugar and nasty carbohydrates and those fake burgers, all that shit's terrible for you.
01:23:21.000 What's bad for you is hydrogenated vegetable oils and all the sugars and all the...
01:23:28.000 Yeah, but I would say what's bad for you is the overconsumption of anything.
01:23:32.000 So yeah, human beings have eaten meat since the beginning of time, but you would kill one animal and then live off that one animal for a really, really long time and then maybe go quite a few days without...
01:23:41.000 Getting another kill in the same way.
01:23:44.000 It's the greediness and the overconsumption of it that's bad for you.
01:23:48.000 Well, obesity for sure is bad for you.
01:23:50.000 So the overconsumption of anything, meaning too many calories, more than your body's burning off and you get obese.
01:23:55.000 Obviously, that's terrible for you.
01:23:57.000 But most animals are edible.
01:23:59.000 So when human beings were evolving, we ate whatever we could get a hold of.
01:24:04.000 Most plants are inedible.
01:24:07.000 And when you're running around trying to figure out what you can eat and what you can't eat, the animals that survived are the ones that ate other animals.
01:24:14.000 If you just run around...
01:24:15.000 Unless you're an animal like a cow that figures out, well, I'm just going to stick to grass because grass seems to work out for me.
01:24:21.000 Well, what happens when we feed cows things that aren't grass?
01:24:25.000 They get really sick.
01:24:26.000 I mean, that's one of the problems with...
01:24:28.000 Have you ever watched any of those documentaries on...
01:24:33.000 Yeah.
01:24:56.000 There's two things I'd say to that.
01:24:57.000 One is, yes, the problem is industrial agriculture.
01:25:02.000 Producing a factory production line of animals because we are all eating meat so much.
01:25:09.000 It is unsustainable.
01:25:11.000 The only way to produce it and produce it cheaply enough is to produce it in that way.
01:25:15.000 And, you know, it's disgusting.
01:25:17.000 I saw some of these farms from the outside as part of my research for it.
01:25:22.000 And it's like it's disgusting and awful.
01:25:25.000 You know, there's the Harris Ranch that's in between L.A. and San Francisco.
01:25:32.000 The nickname is Cowschwitz because it's like a giant concentration camp for cows.
01:25:36.000 It's horrific.
01:25:37.000 They're all just crammed in there.
01:25:39.000 But then I think you also have to be careful talking about it being natural to eat meat on the basis of the fact that as cavemen, that's what we did.
01:25:48.000 It is natural, but that doesn't mean to say that that meat, that's a reason why we should continue to...
01:25:54.000 I'm talking to you as someone who is still a carnivore.
01:25:57.000 I still eat meat now, even though I wrote this book where I set out the argument for why eating meat At the levels that we're doing now is completely unsustainable.
01:26:05.000 So I like the way it tastes.
01:26:06.000 But the thing is, there's a lot of the way that we live now.
01:26:08.000 It was natural for us to be naked and for us to die when we were 30. There was a lot that was natural before that we don't necessarily live with now.
01:26:17.000 And the point is, I think a lot of people are very defensive about They're right to continue eating meat because we really like it.
01:26:24.000 It's tasty.
01:26:24.000 It's part of our culture.
01:26:26.000 It's something that we don't want to let go of.
01:26:27.000 And that's why people are going to all these great lengths to give us these kind of substitutes because it's such a big part of who we are.
01:26:37.000 But it's difficult to make an argument that it's right for us to continue eating meat because it's natural, because it's good for us.
01:26:44.000 Because those arguments, I think, don't necessarily stand up.
01:26:46.000 But it is okay to say, I want to continue eating meat because I like the taste of it.
01:26:50.000 I think the argument that it's right to eat meat is a very tough argument to make when you're talking about factory farming, and I agree with you 100%.
01:27:00.000 It's disgusting, and it shows the worst aspects of human nature that we have conceded that the best way to feed people in mass is to stuff these animals into these I think?
01:27:35.000 Not only can they not have this massive carbon emission, but they can generate carbon neutral farms.
01:27:45.000 There's a guy named Joel Salatin who runs a farm called Polyface Farms.
01:27:50.000 He speaks to people all over the world about this particular style of regenerative farming and about letting these animals live like they would naturally.
01:28:01.000 Only eating grass.
01:28:03.000 He sets up these enormous chicken coops and they're mobile where these chicken coops, he moves them all throughout the farm so these chickens can go out and free range and then come back in.
01:28:14.000 And he loses a tremendous amount of chickens to natural predators like hawks and eagles and things along those lines.
01:28:20.000 But his take on things is that it's completely immoral what human beings have done in the name of profit as far as raising animals and that it should have never been done and that is the main argument against animal agriculture is factory farming.
01:28:39.000 Yes, but I would say that even though that sounds great and it is great, there is not enough land on planet Earth For all the meat that we're currently eating to be produced that way.
01:28:52.000 I don't know if that's true.
01:28:53.000 It is true.
01:28:55.000 I think we'd need like five other planets.
01:28:58.000 For everybody to continue eating meat at the level that we're eating it now, the population of the Earth is going to be...
01:29:06.000 50%, again, what it is now.
01:29:07.000 By 2050, there's going to be nine...
01:29:09.000 Unless they factory farm?
01:29:09.000 Unless they factory farm the way they're farming it right now?
01:29:12.000 There is no way that we could meet the demands of all of those people eating meat, particularly if there's going to be nine billion people on the planet by 2050, with the land that we have now.
01:29:23.000 So you're talking about an expansion of population, but with the current population that we have right now, is it sustainable to live in a way where they don't have to factory farm?
01:29:32.000 I think it is sustainable if we eat less meat.
01:29:35.000 That's the thing.
01:29:36.000 If we don't eat it twice a day, seven days a week.
01:29:38.000 If we eat it twice a week, it's totally sustainable.
01:29:41.000 I think this is a complex issue, and I honestly don't think neither you nor I have all the data at our fingertips where we could argue this.
01:29:48.000 But I think we'll both agree that...
01:29:52.000 First of all, factory farming is fucking disgusting.
01:29:54.000 It's horrific.
01:29:57.000 I think it's one of the worst things that human beings do in terms of not just our impact on the world itself, but also how we feel about what we do.
01:30:11.000 If you know that you're eating something that was tortured most of its life, but you do it anyway just because it's delicious, how could you respect yourself?
01:30:20.000 How do you feel about yourself?
01:30:21.000 I think it's very bad for us to accept factory farming.
01:30:25.000 In America, we have these ag-gag laws that are even more disturbing where, say, if you work in a factory farm and you find the conditions to be horrific and you film it and take photographs of it, you go to jail.
01:30:38.000 They'll arrest you.
01:30:40.000 They'll lock you up for showing horrific actions that will disgust most of the people that are eating that food, which is really crazy.
01:30:49.000 Well, I think, I mean, most people when they eat food, they know kind of theoretically that It is produced generally through a lot of cruelty, but they just push it out of their minds.
01:31:01.000 You can't be thinking about that on a daily basis.
01:31:03.000 If we're agreeing that most people are good people, they don't want to feel like they're complicit in the torture of animals on a daily basis.
01:31:11.000 But that is what's going on at the moment, really.
01:31:15.000 And even the ones that live a good life, they still have to be killed for us to eat them.
01:31:20.000 Well, they don't live forever if you don't kill them.
01:31:23.000 I don't know if you know that.
01:31:26.000 It's not like if you don't kill them, they become fairies.
01:31:31.000 It's not very nice to be killed.
01:31:33.000 No, it's not.
01:31:34.000 But if they do it effectively and humanely, it's instantaneous.
01:31:38.000 You do that rod to the brain, it really is instantaneous.
01:31:41.000 It's a very messy, complicated argument though, right?
01:31:45.000 Is it okay for human beings to kill their animals?
01:31:48.000 Yes.
01:31:49.000 And for me, what's interesting is I am on an intellectual level.
01:31:54.000 I buy the arguments.
01:31:57.000 I totally agree with the arguments for not eating meat.
01:31:59.000 I wrote all about all of this.
01:32:02.000 And that's why I was a kind of interesting person to go and look into this world of, okay, so if you could grow meat without any animal dying.
01:32:10.000 And I ate a chicken nugget that It came from a chicken called Ian who's still alive.
01:32:15.000 So I ate a piece of meat from an animal that's still alive.
01:32:18.000 So I'm the kind of dream target market of this stuff.
01:32:21.000 How vile was it?
01:32:24.000 It was really bad.
01:32:25.000 It was bad in a way that you don't really expect because it tasted like chicken because it was chicken.
01:32:35.000 But it's chicken cells that have been grown in a lab, and they're in a kind of mass, a mushy mass.
01:32:42.000 So it wasn't like it didn't have the texture of meat at all.
01:32:47.000 It didn't have, you know, fibres in it.
01:32:50.000 It wasn't a cut of meat.
01:32:52.000 And you know when you eat meat, but the texture's not quite right, or something's not quite right, you have a kind of primal response where your brain is saying, spit this out.
01:33:00.000 Yeah, yeah.
01:33:02.000 So I had that, but then I had all these PR people looking around me going, it tastes like chicken, doesn't it?
01:33:06.000 And I was like, yeah, it tastes like chicken.
01:33:08.000 A chicken that has cancer.
01:33:10.000 Yeah, a chicken who's been mushed up and stepped on and rolled into a ball.
01:33:15.000 So it's not ready yet, but ultimately, these people are thinking they will be able to grow a cut of meat, and they will be able to grow a steak, a beautiful steak.
01:33:25.000 But at the moment, it's really, really difficult to do that.
01:33:27.000 They can grow the meat.
01:33:28.000 I don't think the argument is just a taste argument.
01:33:31.000 I think the argument is a health argument because I think there are some in the neighborhood of the high 80% of people that try veganism and quit.
01:33:41.000 And a lot of them, I mean, I've had a bunch of them on my podcast that talk about it.
01:33:45.000 Miley Cyrus is one.
01:33:46.000 Mike Tyson was another.
01:33:47.000 They just give up because they don't feel good.
01:33:50.000 And immediately upon eating meat, they start feeling better again.
01:33:54.000 Some of them become pescatarian.
01:33:57.000 Some people don't have problems with fish because they don't have eyelashes and they don't really look like us.
01:34:02.000 It's like if you're going to kill something, kill them.
01:34:04.000 But the thing is, the moral argument against eating fish is even greater.
01:34:08.000 Yes, it is.
01:34:08.000 I was going to get into that.
01:34:09.000 Because we're completely overfishing the oceans.
01:34:12.000 We're doing genocide in the oceans with a fish.
01:34:14.000 And the way we do it is even more horrific.
01:34:17.000 It is really horrific.
01:34:19.000 And we can't farm fish in the same way.
01:34:21.000 We can't do the awful things that we're doing on factory farms with animals.
01:34:24.000 We can't really do that with fish because they die.
01:34:25.000 Most fish don't really like living in those conditions and they just don't grow properly.
01:34:31.000 But yeah, it's terrible.
01:34:33.000 But yeah, with...
01:34:35.000 The thing about me is it's a very efficient way of getting that nutrition into your body.
01:34:40.000 You can get that nutrition in other ways.
01:34:43.000 I mean, I'm sounding like a vegan here, aren't I? I'm not a vegan.
01:34:45.000 I'm not a vegan at all.
01:34:47.000 No, but I know you're right.
01:34:49.000 I have friends that are vegan that do it right, and it can be done.
01:34:53.000 I just don't think it's optimal.
01:34:56.000 I don't believe it's optimal.
01:34:58.000 We haven't worked out how to do it yet, but it is possible and it's not like the only way to get adequate nutrition is to have a hamburger or whatever.
01:35:07.000 Certainly not a hamburger.
01:35:08.000 I think the argument for this vegan meat, the creating meat in a lab is really the future.
01:35:16.000 And I think they're going to be able to do it.
01:35:19.000 The question is if they're going to be able to do it, as you're saying, where it has the texture of an animal that's been...
01:35:26.000 Animals that taste good are animals that are healthy.
01:35:30.000 To me, I enjoy grass-fed animals.
01:35:33.000 And I enjoy particularly wild game.
01:35:36.000 Because wild animals, they live a wild life.
01:35:38.000 They taste better.
01:35:40.000 There's more chew to it.
01:35:43.000 There's more substance to it.
01:35:45.000 If they can figure out how to do that in a lab, that's going to be fascinating.
01:35:49.000 And that will be a difficult thing to do, because the reason why the texture is different is because those animals exercise.
01:35:55.000 You're eating muscle, and you're not going to be exercising those little things in the lab, even if you're growing it.
01:36:02.000 So it's a really, really tricky thing to do.
01:36:04.000 And the other thing is that food is really an intimate experience.
01:36:07.000 Eating is a very intimate experience, and people don't forgive.
01:36:11.000 If you eat something that's disgusting, you don't try it again.
01:36:14.000 And so the issue with this is whether or not the first products that come onto the market are going to be good.
01:36:19.000 And if they're not, you could have some giant bubble.
01:36:22.000 And it will be a bubble and there'll be hype cycles and then people will try and do it again.
01:36:26.000 Eventually people will get there.
01:36:27.000 But the sort of thing that I think would satisfy you and make you feel like this is great, we're really, really far off.
01:36:39.000 Yes.
01:36:42.000 Yes.
01:36:54.000 Thing that's bolted into this machine where you're shocking it constantly in order to keep the muscle strong, and then you eat it.
01:37:02.000 But it's never had a head.
01:37:03.000 It's never going to have a head, so it can't really experience pain.
01:37:06.000 It's very interesting because the whole...
01:37:08.000 I hadn't thought about this, but you're quite right.
01:37:10.000 It's like the whole appeal of this stuff is this is meat, not from animals.
01:37:14.000 But if you have to make it behave a little bit like an animal so that it has the right texture, Where does that work in terms of the philosophical approach, the ethics of this?
01:37:23.000 If it's not an animal, but it's been moving like an animal, how much is it still de-animalized?
01:37:31.000 Yeah, don't you think that's where it's going to go?
01:37:32.000 If somebody wants a bone-in ribeye...
01:37:34.000 And they're like, hmm, well, there's a way.
01:37:37.000 There's a way.
01:37:38.000 And they just decide to recreate an artificial cow and clone the whole thing but sans head.
01:37:44.000 And then, you know, you will actually have a boned ribeye from an animal that you can ethically eat because it never really had a chance to be alive and just be a cow.
01:37:54.000 I think we're much more likely to have a 3D-printed Maybe.
01:38:15.000 Bob the beef scientist comes up with some headless animal that tastes way better than those mushy, cloned animals.
01:38:23.000 He's like, look, I understand what you're saying.
01:38:25.000 We shouldn't kill animals.
01:38:26.000 Well, this isn't even an animal.
01:38:28.000 This is just a headless cow that's attached to a bunch of wall sockets, and we just charge that fucker up every day, and he's got big, thick, meaty muscles because he's been electrically shocked constantly into contracting and relaxing those muscles.
01:38:44.000 I mean, one of the arguments for this meat growing in labs is that an animal is quite an inefficient conveyor of calories because animals, as well as growing flesh, they also flap their wings and they peck and they run around and so they burn the calories they take in.
01:39:00.000 And so these scientists have done kind of equations that for every For every one calorie that you eat from beef, it's taken 36 calories.
01:39:09.000 The cow has had to ingest 36 calories to produce one calorie of beef.
01:39:13.000 So I think the argument that you make the meat and then you get the meat to exercise will kind of undermine that idea of it being more calorie efficient because the meat will be spending calories by moving around.
01:39:23.000 Maybe, but if it doesn't have a head.
01:39:25.000 LAUGHTER Yeah, it's like, how are we going to sustain this thing?
01:39:30.000 I'm sure there's scientists shaking their head at my stupid idea, like, that is not going to work that way.
01:39:36.000 It's an interesting philosophical principle, though, because it comes down to the point of what is life?
01:39:41.000 What does it take for something to be alive?
01:39:42.000 Is it alive if it's moving around, but it doesn't have a brain?
01:39:46.000 And that was something also that I looked at, is that we have a very unsophisticated idea of what life is.
01:39:52.000 And while we do that, it's quite dangerous that we're tinkering around with it and growing things when we haven't really sat down and thought about what we really mean when we say that something's alive.
01:40:03.000 It also is interesting that we've sort of conceded that we're going to continue to overpopulate the planet.
01:40:09.000 We're just like, listen, it's hopeless.
01:40:12.000 We have 7 billion now.
01:40:14.000 We'll have 10 billion in 50 years.
01:40:15.000 Let's just deal with this.
01:40:17.000 And just, yeah, that's a giant problem.
01:40:20.000 I think there's a lot of good ways that we could tackle overpopulation, the really positive things.
01:40:25.000 Like, you know, if women have an education, they have far fewer children.
01:40:30.000 That's kind of the point of my book, really, is that this is the most ridiculous overshoot engineering.
01:40:38.000 Educate women and eat slightly less meat.
01:40:40.000 But no, we're not going to do that.
01:40:41.000 We're going to go to a lab where we're going to clone.
01:40:44.000 You know, it's just ridiculous.
01:40:45.000 What does it say about us as human beings that instead of using these solutions that are within our power, we want to have our cake and eat it.
01:40:53.000 And I think that technology is going to be able to provide us with that.
01:40:56.000 And the thing about the meat grown in labs is it does sound like there's no downside.
01:41:03.000 But there are, you know, nobody really knows if it's better for the environment to grow meat in this way.
01:41:10.000 There haven't been enough studies on it.
01:41:11.000 But let's say even that it is.
01:41:13.000 The people who are going to own this technology, at the moment the startups are trying to get investment from Cargill and Tyson and big meat companies that have the infrastructure to distribute meat.
01:41:23.000 And those are companies, I mean, you know what happens in those In their meatpacking plants where people have amputations all the time.
01:41:32.000 They're not very ethical companies, shall we say.
01:41:35.000 And so it's very likely that this industry is going to be taken over by People who don't care about animal rights or human rights very much.
01:41:43.000 They just want to make sure that they're in control of the meat market.
01:41:46.000 Yeah, they're just going to want profit.
01:41:48.000 Yeah, that's going to be the bottom line.
01:41:50.000 Yeah, it's a human problem.
01:41:54.000 It's like many human problems.
01:41:56.000 It's messy and complicated and nuanced.
01:41:58.000 There's a lot to it.
01:41:59.000 And what if it's bad for you?
01:42:01.000 What if this lab-grown meat turns out to be particularly...
01:42:07.000 Problematic with our digestive systems.
01:42:08.000 Well, they're saying that they can make it good for you.
01:42:11.000 They can take out whatever's bad for you.
01:42:12.000 They're saying that they can make kosher bacon because it doesn't come from a pig.
01:42:16.000 And they can make foie gras without all the ethical problems of force feeding.
01:42:20.000 That this is the perfect meat because they can engineer it down to every last cell.
01:42:25.000 But again, we don't know what the unintended consequences of any of this stuff is.
01:42:29.000 And we only find out through experience, which is the frightening thing.
01:42:32.000 Yeah, I'm curious.
01:42:33.000 I mean, I wonder if we could do that with fish.
01:42:37.000 They're growing fish at the moment.
01:42:39.000 Are they?
01:42:39.000 Fake fish?
01:42:41.000 Real fish from fish sales.
01:42:42.000 There's a company called Finless Foods that is the pioneer in all of that, and they're growing fish at the moment.
01:42:48.000 The same way they're growing beef?
01:42:50.000 Yes.
01:42:51.000 Have you tried that?
01:42:53.000 No, because the people I interviewed there, they weren't kind of, they were much less full of hype and they're like, no, no, no, it's not ready.
01:43:00.000 What we've got yet isn't ready.
01:43:01.000 But the thing about fish is it's harder because with meat you can make burgers and sausages where it doesn't really, or nuggets where You don't really need cuts of meat, whereas with fish you really do need cuts of meat, and especially because we're so used to eating sashimi, we know what raw fish is supposed to taste like,
01:43:18.000 so you can't use the smoke and mirrors of cooking it in this butter and adding these herbs or whatever.
01:43:23.000 So fish is kind of harder in some ways, but the need for it is even greater, I would say, than for meat.
01:43:30.000 Well, it would be nice if they could figure out how to repopulate the ocean.
01:43:33.000 That would be wonderful because if you talk to people, particularly if you watch any documentaries on tuna and tuna fishermen in Japan and the way it used to be just 50 years ago and what it is now, it's a radical decrease in the population of the tuna.
01:43:50.000 It's really frightening because we've done it in such a short period of time and so efficiently and there's no one hitting the brakes.
01:43:57.000 I mean, they're just...
01:43:59.000 The only parts of the ocean which are still healthy are either so far away that it wouldn't make any financial sense to go fishing there, or they're in politically contested waters where you'd start a war if you went there.
01:44:12.000 We've pretty much taken all the fish out of the ocean that we can do.
01:44:16.000 And also, the people who rely on the oceans, the people who live on the coast, are really suffering, and quite often they're the poorest people.
01:44:24.000 So it's a total disaster what we've done to the oceans.
01:44:29.000 It's another human problem.
01:44:30.000 We're weird.
01:44:32.000 We're bad.
01:44:34.000 It's not so much that we're weird and bad.
01:44:36.000 What is bad about human beings, I would say, is our greediness.
01:44:40.000 We don't have to be greedy.
01:44:41.000 We live in a system that is encouraging us to be greedy all the time and assumes that we are greedy and that we just want more and more and more because that's what's required for the system to carry on working.
01:44:51.000 Whereas, in fact, we don't have to be greedy.
01:44:54.000 We can say, this is enough.
01:44:57.000 Yes.
01:44:57.000 People like you.
01:44:59.000 Again, introspective, intelligent people who are rare.
01:45:02.000 Well, it's not just that.
01:45:02.000 I interviewed this guy.
01:45:04.000 There is one guy I could find.
01:45:05.000 So normally there are people who campaign against all of these technologies.
01:45:09.000 And I'm sure I was going to find some crazy animal rights group or some vegan group.
01:45:14.000 Because animal rights activists, they can get nasty.
01:45:17.000 And certainly in the UK, they've done some very extreme things to fight against...
01:45:21.000 You know, animal cruelty as they see it.
01:45:24.000 And there's no organised opposition to growing meat in labs, even though there are some animal rights reasons to be worried about it.
01:45:33.000 At the moment, a lot of meat that's grown in labs is grown in this stuff called foetal bovine serum, which comes from the hearts of calves that are foetuses When their pregnant mothers are being slaughtered in the abattoir,
01:45:49.000 they put a needle into the heart of the calf and pull this stuff out, and this serum is the medium in which the cells are grown.
01:45:55.000 And they're working on finding other ways of growing the cells, but at the moment, that's the best stuff to use.
01:46:00.000 So you'd expect there to be some animal rights argument, some fight against these people, but there isn't, because it's seen as the silver bullet that's going to stop people from eating meat.
01:46:09.000 But I found one person, this British sociologist, a vegan sociologist, Um, who, uh, is, who says that, you know, actually the answer in all of this is that we have to stop thinking of meat as being, you know, the answer isn't to,
01:46:25.000 to have a sort of techno fix that solves the problem.
01:46:27.000 We just have to stop feeding meat to our kids so much and then they won't have such an appetite for it.
01:46:33.000 You know, the appetite is learned.
01:46:34.000 There are people who've been vegan for a long time who, when they try and eat meat again, they can't digest it or they think it's disgusting or they hate the texture of it.
01:46:40.000 Those people are pretty rare.
01:46:42.000 You think?
01:46:43.000 You think people rush back to it with open arms?
01:46:45.000 I think they do.
01:46:46.000 I think they smell fat steak cooking.
01:46:50.000 Smells amazing.
01:46:51.000 My sister's been vegetarian for like 30 years, and if she eats meat by mistake, it's revolting to her in her mouth.
01:46:58.000 It just feels kind of...
01:46:59.000 Don't you think that's odd?
01:47:01.000 Well, as someone who loves meat, I can't empathize with it, but I can understand if you haven't had it for a while, it's like eating a piece of muscle.
01:47:10.000 Yeah, delicious muscle.
01:47:11.000 Ha ha ha!
01:47:14.000 But anyway, he said the answer is to, you know, the way that cultural change happens is it's to do with the world that your children grow up in.
01:47:22.000 And we need to just, and I kind of buy that.
01:47:24.000 I mean, I think about my son.
01:47:26.000 My son is six.
01:47:27.000 You know, we had some upstairs neighbours who are in their 70s.
01:47:31.000 They're a gay couple.
01:47:31.000 They got married.
01:47:32.000 This is just completely normal for him.
01:47:34.000 And it's normal for me as well, but it's still a little bit because it's not the world that I was born into where that happens all the time.
01:47:41.000 I'm still like, oh, wow, congratulations.
01:47:43.000 Whereas for my son, it's like, yeah, you know, men marry women, men marry men, women.
01:47:48.000 He's native into that world.
01:47:50.000 And I think that's how you get social change is by making the next generation native into a world where Where people think differently.
01:47:58.000 And I think the way that we're going to save the world, I think vegans will save the world not by doing the plant-based meat or by growing meat in labs, but by getting people not to feed their kids meat.
01:48:08.000 That's the answer.
01:48:09.000 I don't know about all that.
01:48:11.000 I don't think it's healthy for children to not eat meat.
01:48:14.000 But you can get the nutrition you need elsewhere.
01:48:17.000 You can.
01:48:18.000 It's not bioavailable the same way it is with meat.
01:48:20.000 Meat is the most efficient way to get protein, most efficient way to get amino acids.
01:48:24.000 It is.
01:48:25.000 It is.
01:48:25.000 The best way to get B12. And B12 deficiency is one of the biggest problems with vegans.
01:48:31.000 I can't believe I'm here on your podcast making the vegan argument here as somebody who is not even a vegetarian.
01:48:37.000 It's possible with some people to do it well but there's also biodiversity in human beings.
01:48:44.000 People are very different in what they can and can't consume.
01:48:47.000 Obviously some people can't eat certain nuts or they'll die.
01:48:51.000 And other people have no problem with it whatsoever.
01:48:52.000 We all come from different parts of the world.
01:48:55.000 And that's another problem with whether it's even with meat eating.
01:49:00.000 Some people, their body just does not agree with eating meat.
01:49:03.000 Or other people, I mean, there's some science to, I mean, it's really disputed to what blood type you are.
01:49:10.000 And, you know, I happen to be O positive, which is supposed to be really good for meat.
01:49:14.000 I eat a lot of meat and I'm very healthy.
01:49:16.000 I've never had a problem with it.
01:49:17.000 But I know some people that don't like meat.
01:49:19.000 It doesn't sit well with them.
01:49:21.000 But I know some people that have a real problem with grains.
01:49:26.000 And I know some people that have a real problem with certain green leafy vegetables make them sick.
01:49:32.000 It sounds crazy.
01:49:33.000 But it's just...
01:49:34.000 No, but it's true.
01:49:35.000 I mean, people are...
01:49:36.000 We are diverse.
01:49:38.000 And so it is a very efficient way of getting nutrition.
01:49:43.000 But you also have to disentangle...
01:49:45.000 How much of our desire for meat is cultural rather than biologically necessary?
01:49:52.000 When my daughter was one years old, she was a baby.
01:49:55.000 My wife was holding her and I was cooking ribs and she's literally pulling away from her mother trying to get a hold of my ribs because they tasted so good.
01:50:05.000 She could smell it.
01:50:06.000 We have a video of this, of her with this little rib bone and she's like...
01:50:12.000 With a little tiny mouth.
01:50:13.000 Yeah, but presumably that wasn't the first time she ate meat.
01:50:16.000 That was the first time she ate meat.
01:50:17.000 That was the first time she ate meat.
01:50:19.000 I don't even think she was one.
01:50:21.000 She was tiny.
01:50:23.000 Like, she wasn't even walking yet.
01:50:25.000 It was genetic.
01:50:28.000 There was something in her little brain and her senses from smelling it.
01:50:33.000 She wanted that meat.
01:50:35.000 Maybe it's because it's my kid.
01:50:36.000 I don't know.
01:50:37.000 Maybe it's learned.
01:50:38.000 No, I think maybe there is something primal about it, but there's also a lot of primal stuff about us that we don't act on.
01:50:47.000 I love eating meat.
01:50:49.000 I just feel like we need to...
01:50:53.000 Not have so much of it.
01:50:54.000 I mean, it used to be like a big treat.
01:50:56.000 In England, we have, you know, in Britain, we have the Sunday roast, which is this traditional, you know, you would have one kind of big feast on a Sunday of a sort of giant family to get together, and it was an occasion.
01:51:06.000 And I think maybe we need to have more of a culture of that, really.
01:51:11.000 But the answer is not telling people they should not eat any meat at all, I think, also, because I think that's...
01:51:16.000 Have you ever talked to people that are proponents of the carnivore diet?
01:51:21.000 I have never spoken to any of them.
01:51:23.000 You should.
01:51:24.000 Yes, I have.
01:51:25.000 It's fascinating.
01:51:26.000 Here's what's fascinating, and it's all anecdotal, of course, but there's a lot of people with autoimmune disorders that have completely cured those autoimmune disorders by eating only meat.
01:51:35.000 They literally only eat meat, and they eat nose to tail, meaning they eat organs.
01:51:40.000 They eat a lot of organ meat.
01:51:41.000 They get most of their vitamins from liver and heart and kidneys, and they eat fatty cuts of meat, and they're basically...
01:51:48.000 Semi-ketogenic because if you eat a certain amount of protein, your body develops this.
01:51:53.000 There's a process called, I think it's called glucogenesis, where your body converts protein into glucose.
01:52:01.000 So it actually keeps you from being ketogenic.
01:52:05.000 But it's because you're eating so much protein.
01:52:08.000 It makes you smell really bad, doesn't it?
01:52:09.000 This kind of stuff makes you smell bad.
01:52:11.000 See, that's a vegan talking to you right now.
01:52:13.000 Someone's trying to tell you, if you eat the meat, you're going to smell bad.
01:52:16.000 Your breath will be bad.
01:52:17.000 You know what smells bad?
01:52:18.000 Broccoli farts.
01:52:19.000 People eat too much broccoli.
01:52:21.000 That's bad, too.
01:52:22.000 I don't know.
01:52:23.000 Is this the Jordan Peterson diet?
01:52:24.000 Is this the diet that Jordan Peterson is?
01:52:25.000 Jordan Peterson is on that diet, but...
01:52:28.000 He's not a good poster boy for it.
01:52:30.000 Not the best because Jordan has had a lot of problems.
01:52:33.000 It was good for his autoimmune disorders, but he's had a few problems publicly recently with benzodiazepine and getting off these antidepressant drugs and anti-anxiety drugs.
01:52:47.000 There's some other doctors, though, that are proponents of this.
01:52:51.000 And they actually are prescribing it for people with autoimmune disorders, particularly people with arthritis and arthritis issues.
01:53:00.000 Because a lot of people find that, particularly with grains, there's a lot of inflammation issues that certain folks have with grains and glutens and all sorts of different things.
01:53:10.000 That are really basically fairly new in terms of human evolution of our consumption.
01:53:16.000 Like breads and things along those lines.
01:53:20.000 Yes, but then again, that goes back to this idea of our insides being kind of, that we're kind of internally cavemen and that we're designed to eat a certain way and be a certain way when we don't have to be that way because we have access to a wide variety of different kinds of,
01:53:36.000 you know.
01:53:37.000 Right, but the thing is they're talking about health consequences with this wide variety.
01:53:41.000 And when they have an elimination diet, and one of the best elimination diets is this carnivore diet because you're really cutting out everything.
01:53:49.000 On the carnivore diet, are people not getting cancers?
01:53:51.000 Well, it's not.
01:53:52.000 Here's the thing.
01:53:53.000 It's not that studied, and there's not that many people doing it.
01:53:57.000 And there have been people that have done it for decades.
01:53:59.000 But again, all this is anecdotal.
01:54:01.000 You would have to study people.
01:54:03.000 And I know Harvard is actually in the middle of some long-term carnivore...
01:54:23.000 Why did you start?
01:54:25.000 Well, because I love food.
01:54:27.000 I just love food.
01:54:28.000 I love pasta, and I love bread, and I love vegetables.
01:54:32.000 I love all kinds of food.
01:54:34.000 And it's very limiting to only eat meat, but I did it for a whole month.
01:54:38.000 I ate nothing but meat for one month.
01:54:40.000 I mostly steak and liver and wild game and a lot of animal fat.
01:54:45.000 I felt great.
01:54:46.000 It's kind of crazy how good I felt.
01:54:49.000 Yeah, I lost 12 pounds and I had energy all day long.
01:54:53.000 That was what was weird about it was there was no lulls.
01:54:57.000 Like my energy stayed at a constant state all day long.
01:55:00.000 Very strange.
01:55:02.000 You should try it, just for a goof.
01:55:04.000 Maybe that's my next book, is investigating the carnivores and seeing if they're alright.
01:55:10.000 The weird thing is the complete elimination of brain fog.
01:55:14.000 I found that fascinating.
01:55:16.000 I did a video afterwards where I showed how much weight that I had lost, because I had gotten kind of fat.
01:55:22.000 I had been eating too much.
01:55:24.000 I'm a glutton, and if given enough time, I eat so much.
01:55:28.000 I eat massive amounts of food.
01:55:31.000 I don't know what it is.
01:55:32.000 I just have always been a glutton.
01:55:33.000 And I work out a lot, so I stay pretty lean.
01:55:36.000 But sometimes I can go off the rails.
01:55:39.000 I'm not even hungry.
01:55:40.000 I just keep eating.
01:55:42.000 It's really kind of a crazy thing.
01:55:44.000 But on the carnivore diet, I did lose a lot of weight.
01:55:47.000 But it's very limiting in terms of, like, I enjoy food.
01:55:52.000 I like restaurants.
01:55:53.000 I enjoy a chef's creation.
01:55:56.000 I think it's fascinating when they combine all the different flavors, and I love the art of it.
01:56:01.000 I love the art of cooking.
01:56:03.000 I think it's an amazing...
01:56:05.000 Art form that you enjoy with your face.
01:56:08.000 It's incredible.
01:56:09.000 I love food.
01:56:10.000 So to me, it was like, I'm not going to do this forever.
01:56:13.000 I just can't.
01:56:14.000 I enjoy too many different things in terms of flavors.
01:56:18.000 And I also respect the culinary art form of cooking.
01:56:26.000 To me, it's a different kind of art.
01:56:30.000 It's like...
01:56:31.000 It's like music or literature or all the other different ways people express themselves.
01:56:35.000 But they express themselves through food and I respect that.
01:56:38.000 It's exactly it though, which is that food is not just nutrition.
01:56:42.000 It's culture.
01:56:44.000 There is the culture of how we eat and the ceremony of eating together and appreciating the food and the way that food is displayed.
01:56:51.000 And actually, probably the culture is more important than food.
01:56:56.000 Well, it's definitely more important than nutrition, otherwise we'd all just be taking pills and not eating.
01:57:01.000 Do you know what I mean?
01:57:02.000 Well, you wouldn't get the nutrition from pills, though.
01:57:04.000 That wouldn't work.
01:57:06.000 No, but if you could, people wouldn't.
01:57:08.000 And not just because they want the taste in their mouths, but they like...
01:57:11.000 The way that it breaks up your day, that you sit down, have a meal, it represents a certain occasion, you know?
01:57:17.000 And it's a huge part of what it is to be human, is to eat, and how our meals are assembled, and how, you know, all of that, yeah.
01:57:28.000 And that's the point, when things are cultural...
01:57:32.000 We can change because we can change our culture.
01:57:35.000 Whether or not we want to is up to us.
01:57:37.000 That's also one of the more interesting things about food is going to a place and experiencing this new culture and their new food.
01:57:45.000 Like going to Thailand and eating authentic Thai food or going to Italy and eating authentic Italian food.
01:57:52.000 That is, to me, one of the great ways of experiencing a place.
01:57:58.000 The late, great Anthony Bourdain, who was a friend of mine, is the reason why I changed my opinion of food.
01:58:05.000 I used to think it tasted good.
01:58:07.000 But then I watched his program, and I realized, oh, this is an art form.
01:58:11.000 I had a blind side.
01:58:12.000 I had a blind spot.
01:58:14.000 I didn't look at it as an art form.
01:58:15.000 But his...
01:58:17.000 passion for cuisine for chefs and for the way that they prepared and sourced the food from these you know these fresh markets and got everything pieced it together and and then presented it I was like oh I was looking at this wrong this is art I didn't think of it that way now I think of it that way that's why I can't be carnivore I just like food too much just it's too important I like wine I like all of it I like all of it together it's like But also,
01:58:43.000 ultimately, a lot of this comes down to what is life for?
01:58:47.000 What is your life for?
01:58:47.000 I mean, there are these people who are life extensionists who do whatever they can to prolong their life, but you would argue that the way they're living, it's not a life worth extending.
01:58:56.000 It's boring!
01:58:56.000 You have to make choices in your life about what do you want from life?
01:59:00.000 Are you going to do something that's a little bit unhealthy because, you know, we all make choices.
01:59:04.000 For me, it's really difficult though.
01:59:06.000 I mean, in terms of having written the book, I've had people interview me about it who are vegan who have asked me, how come you're not vegan now?
01:59:13.000 How come having written all of this?
01:59:16.000 And it's really, really difficult because I try to explain, well, you know, I'm eating less meat and There isn't a moral argument you can make other than I really, really enjoy it, which makes you sound really superficial.
01:59:28.000 But I enjoy it, and I have a family that enjoys it, and it would involve a huge disruption in our lives.
01:59:34.000 Yeah, it's a weird one, right?
01:59:36.000 I think the real argument is health.
01:59:38.000 I really do.
01:59:39.000 I was vegetarian for six months back when I was fighting.
01:59:42.000 I did it to try to make weight, and my performance suffered.
01:59:46.000 You could argue that I wasn't doing it correctly, and I'm sure I wasn't.
01:59:49.000 Boy, when I started eating meat again, I felt so much better.
01:59:53.000 Like, instantaneously I felt better.
01:59:55.000 And then it corresponded with...
01:59:57.000 To do it well, to live really well on a vegan diet, you have to be very organized.
02:00:04.000 I don't think everybody could do that.
02:00:09.000 First of all, it has to suit your body.
02:00:12.000 You have to be organized, you have to be diligent, and you have to be educated.
02:00:16.000 You have to really understand supplementation and do it correctly.
02:00:21.000 One last thing I want to talk to you about is death.
02:00:25.000 Yes.
02:00:26.000 Another thing that you cover.
02:00:28.000 Please expand on your thoughts about death.
02:00:34.000 So I was looking at the perfect death and that we have this kind of dream that you could maybe take a tablet and fall asleep painlessly and peacefully at a time of your choosing.
02:00:49.000 But actually that That doesn't really exist.
02:00:52.000 Or rather, it does exist.
02:00:53.000 There is one substance that you can take that will give you that death.
02:00:58.000 And it's a particular substance.
02:01:00.000 It's what they used to give prisoners on death row.
02:01:02.000 It's what they give animals when they put them to sleep.
02:01:06.000 But it's illegal to possess privately almost everywhere in the world.
02:01:10.000 And so at the moment, if you want to be in control of your own death, You either have to put yourself at risk of a death that isn't very nice by doing some risky things that might not work out for you and might be horrible for people who find you, or you have to get a doctor to help you die in a place where assisted dying is legal.
02:01:31.000 And so I was writing this from the perspective of being in the UK where it's not legal at all.
02:01:36.000 And I was looking at there are some doctors that will, for a fee, teach you how to kill yourself in the best possible way.
02:01:43.000 Like either how to get hold of these illegal drugs or other ways of killing yourself that are supposedly peaceful and painless.
02:01:52.000 What is the drug?
02:01:53.000 What is the thing that they used to give people?
02:01:55.000 It's called Lembutal.
02:01:56.000 It's a barbiturate drug.
02:01:58.000 So the company he used to make it is a Danish company called Lundbeck and they stopped providing it to death row facilities I think in 2011 because it became very controversial that they were doing it.
02:02:10.000 But it's the same Bob, it's what Marilyn Monroe took when she killed herself.
02:02:15.000 But I wouldn't recommend anyone try and get it because at the moment if you try and get it you have to do lots of stuff on the dark web and you might be sent the wrong stuff and nobody wants to be taking the wrong stuff when you've decided you're going to die.
02:02:29.000 So, yeah.
02:02:31.000 Basically, the investigation that I was doing was looking at, whilst we haven't worked out how to give everyone the right to die, there are people who are stepping into that void and telling people, I can give you control over your own death.
02:02:45.000 I can give you the perfect death.
02:02:46.000 And I looked at different people who've invented death machines that can supposedly do this.
02:02:51.000 But there is a guy at the moment called Philip Nitschke who has developed this 3D printable capsule Which looks like a kind of James Bond vehicle or a kind of, I don't know, a spaceship.
02:03:04.000 You get the plans, so you have to be a member of his organisation, you get the plans and then you go and you print out this capsule, you pour liquid nitrogen into the base of it and then you lie inside and you die in about two minutes.
02:03:20.000 Yes, so I saw this being displayed.
02:03:23.000 I went to Venice to this design show in Venice where it was being unveiled.
02:03:28.000 And it was a sort of strangely beautiful thing, but it's a kind of symbol for me of how ridiculous this is.
02:03:35.000 If we're talking about overshoot engineering again, all we need to do is give people the right to die.
02:03:40.000 We don't need to be able to give people the means to 3D print their own death.
02:03:44.000 Because ultimately I think it's probably a good idea if other people are involved and doctors are involved because who's to say that you wouldn't decide to do this if you were drunk or bereaved or might one day decide that you wanted to live.
02:03:58.000 And until we've kind of worked out How to frame laws in ways such that vulnerable people aren't exploited or vulnerable people aren't killed using these right to die laws.
02:04:13.000 There are going to be people who step into the void and give people who maybe shouldn't necessarily have it a way of killing themselves.
02:04:20.000 It's another very human problem in that it's very messy.
02:04:24.000 If you have someone who has terminal cancer and they're constantly in pain and they're going to die, why do we have this archaic idea that they have to ride this out to the end?
02:04:35.000 Totally.
02:04:36.000 Although there's anything noble.
02:04:37.000 The language we use a bit about their fight against cancer or them losing their battle.
02:04:43.000 I mean, I really think you talk about, you know, if aliens were looking at us, I look at it in terms of people 200 years from now, when they are studying this era in history, what will they look back on and think, God, they were barbaric at that time?
02:04:59.000 And I think the two things definitely are drugs and the right to die and the fact that we let people suffer.
02:05:07.000 But the people who want this death machine or who are trying to buy Nembutal that I looked at, they aren't terminally ill.
02:05:13.000 They're people who are kind of baby boomers who are used to having control in their lives and being In charge of their own destiny who are terrified of things like getting dementia or motor neurone disease and terrified of losing their dignity.
02:05:29.000 And so they want to be able to own something in their home or have the plans to something that will mean that they'll still be able to be in control at the end.
02:05:37.000 But death is, you know, the point is it's a symptom of the fear that we have of death.
02:05:42.000 Rather than an actual solution to that problem.
02:05:45.000 I think we also have the fear of people making an error.
02:05:49.000 Like people who are experiencing great grief or they're experiencing the depression that comes from the loss of a job or a broken relationship or whatever it is.
02:06:00.000 And they would make a hasty decision that they would regret later.
02:06:05.000 Well, obviously they can't regret it, but other people in their life are certainly going to regret it.
02:06:10.000 But if they just hung in there, if they just hung in there and wrote it out and sought counseling and sought the advice and the love of friends and family, they could get through this and be stronger on the other side and find a new relationship,
02:06:26.000 find a new job, whatever it is, and you don't have to pull the cord.
02:06:31.000 But the thing is, who are we to tell people when they can and can't?
02:06:35.000 That's where it gets really strange.
02:06:37.000 That's what this doctor says.
02:06:38.000 This doctor is a libertarian, and he says it's ridiculously paternalistic that doctors should be able to say, I know your mind better than you do.
02:06:46.000 I know you better.
02:06:47.000 And he says that you could develop an AI that could tell whether or not somebody was of sound mind.
02:06:53.000 He personally thinks if you're depressed, you should still be given the advice on how to take your own life.
02:06:58.000 It's still your choice.
02:06:59.000 It's a choice that you can make rationally if you're depressed.
02:07:01.000 If you're mentally ill, that's a different matter.
02:07:04.000 But he's saying this is all about taking back control, the individual.
02:07:09.000 It's your life, you should be in charge of it.
02:07:12.000 But the problem is there are so many stories.
02:07:14.000 I mean, I don't know if you've seen that documentary, The Bridge, about people who jump off the golf gate.
02:07:19.000 And there's that person there who survived, who talks about that visceral feeling of being in the air and thinking, oh my God, what have I done?
02:07:27.000 And the point is you kind of do need human gatekeepers to take you through the decision that you're making.
02:07:35.000 And I think the idea that I just think most of the doctors who are in places where the right to die is legal, who are involved in making those decisions, are not people who are reveling in their power, but they are people who are genuinely trying to find out if this is what you really want.
02:07:51.000 And I think you kind of do need Those gatekeepers, because it is always a life or death decision.
02:07:57.000 It has to be the right decision every time.
02:08:00.000 It's a strange thing that we impose our own ideas on whether or not a person can or cannot end their life.
02:08:08.000 We say, no, no, no, you have to keep going.
02:08:11.000 The law says you must keep going.
02:08:14.000 It's very odd, because it's I want them to get better.
02:08:23.000 I want people who are feeling depression and want to end their life.
02:08:27.000 I don't want them to do it.
02:08:29.000 I don't want them to.
02:08:30.000 But I also don't think that I should be the person who can tell them whether or not they can or can't.
02:08:35.000 But in some countries where the right to die is legal, so for example in the Netherlands, in Holland and in Belgium, you can be given the right to die, you can be helped to die if you're depressed.
02:08:45.000 Or if you're a chronic alcoholic who says, I don't think I'm ever going to be able to beat this, it's making me miserable.
02:08:51.000 And I think a really large proportion of the number of people who are euthanised in those countries have something like depression.
02:08:59.000 So that's not to say that you wouldn't allow people who are depressed to take their own lives.
02:09:05.000 It just means you have to have come to a conclusion that there's no reason to think they're ever going to feel better.
02:09:12.000 That's the point.
02:09:13.000 And if there's ever a case to objectively think that someone might be able to feel better with medication or counselling or a change of circumstances, then there has to be hope for people.
02:09:25.000 The alcoholic one is a weird one because have they exhausted all possible alternatives?
02:09:31.000 In that case, have they explored psychedelic therapy, which is illegal but massively effective for people that are addicts, particularly Ibogaine.
02:09:41.000 Ibogaine is incredibly effective for people that have addictions to opioids, alcohol, even cigarettes, even lifestyle problems, and yet it's completely illegal in this country.
02:09:55.000 But there's lots of people trying to, there's lots of entrepreneurs working on it, aren't there, on finding a way of getting it to market?
02:10:02.000 Well, they're doing clinics in Mexico.
02:10:04.000 I have a friend who owns a clinic in Mexico, and he started this clinic after he went down to Mexico.
02:10:09.000 He had lower back pain from an injury that was severe and got hooked on opioids.
02:10:16.000 And went to Mexico, went through an Ibogaine clinic and got therapy and then completely snapped.
02:10:24.000 He was completely cured of it and realized like, okay, there is an actual real workable alternative.
02:10:32.000 To all these different methods of getting off of it, and it's for some reason not available on this patch of dirt.
02:10:39.000 I have to drive across a border, this weird fucking wall, and go to this place, and that's where I can do it, but it works.
02:10:47.000 So he just started up a clinic in Mexico.
02:10:50.000 He started bringing people that he knew had problems with it, and it's not, again, not just opioids, but alcohol, all sorts of behavior problems.
02:10:59.000 It's a very ruthlessly introspective experience, apparently.
02:11:03.000 I haven't personally rather done it, but I know many people who have and they've said it's been amazingly beneficial.
02:11:10.000 I know several people that have kicked pills that way.
02:11:13.000 It is incredible, really, that we have, you know, good drugs and bad drugs.
02:11:17.000 This is what I mean, like, in 200 years' time.
02:11:19.000 The idea that, you know, still in the UK, you know, pretty much everything is banned, and even there are epileptic kids who've had to fight to say that they need, you know, cannabis-based medication.
02:11:31.000 It stops their seizures.
02:11:33.000 They've had to really, really fight for this in the UK. But it's because of, you know, it's because of the way politics works.
02:11:37.000 But it's It's ridiculously short-sighted and the sort of thing that we're going to be really embarrassed about one day, I think, that it was ever like this.
02:11:47.000 But yeah, there's amazing stuff going on.
02:11:50.000 There's amazing boundaries being crossed if we would just allow ourselves to embrace them.
02:11:56.000 I'm a pretty hopeful person, that's the thing, and I really believe that human beings are capable of wonderful things.
02:12:03.000 And that's why I feel like The idea of entrepreneurs taking advantage of our anxieties and saying that they can make money by providing us with quick solutions that stop us from looking at why we're afraid or why we're greedy or why we don't want to compromise in relationships,
02:12:24.000 I think it's a real shame.
02:12:26.000 I agree with you.
02:12:27.000 Jenny, I really enjoyed talking to you.
02:12:30.000 I really did.
02:12:30.000 And I really hope you do a podcast.
02:12:34.000 I think you'd be amazing at it.
02:12:36.000 I've got to now, don't I? If you say I've got to do a podcast, then I've got to do a podcast.
02:12:39.000 Maybe I will.
02:12:40.000 But until then, your book, Sex Robots and Vegan Meat, it's available now everywhere.
02:12:45.000 Is there an audiobook and do you read it?
02:12:47.000 There is an audiobook and I read it.
02:12:49.000 Yes, excellent.
02:12:50.000 I loved doing it.
02:12:51.000 So yeah, get the audiobook, get the e-book, get the book.
02:12:55.000 It's a good book.
02:12:56.000 Thank you very much, Jenny.
02:12:57.000 Appreciate you.
02:12:58.000 Thank you very much.
02:12:59.000 Thank you.
02:13:00.000 Bye.
02:13:01.000 Bye.