Pearl - August 12, 2025


@AaronClarey The Sitdown ⧸ Women Don't Like Men That Much


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Length

1 hour and 51 minutes

Words per minute

190.8563

Word count

21,360

Sentence count

12

Harmful content

Misogyny

102

sentences flagged

Toxicity

118

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Hate speech

81

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Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

In this episode, I sit down with economist and author Erin Clary to discuss the economics profession and why economists are full of shit. Erin is the author of 10 books, including A World Without Men, which is one of my favorite books of all time. He's also the founder of Asshole Consulting and has a blog called CaptainCapitalism which you should definitely check out.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 what up guys welcome to the audacity network and welcome to the sit down today i have my
00:00:06.620 favorite author favorite yes oh my goodness my number one draft pick
00:00:11.560 on the show um i reference his book all of the time a world without men
00:00:16.800 but uh you have what five books on the market no i got 10 oh my gosh you have yeah it goes uh
00:00:23.180 first one predates the housing crash predicting it so that was 2007 you predicted the housing
00:00:29.500 crash yeah a lot of people did but no one listened to us wow yeah so that was my first book 2007 2008
00:00:36.320 so that was yeah and then nine real books after that i have a couple other like compendiums that
00:00:43.380 aren't you know just backup of the blog okay uh but yeah the real books about 10. wow well welcome
00:00:50.860 to the show erin clary um where before we start where can the people find you uh my main website
00:00:57.820 is assholeconsulting.com okay uh but i like the name yes and then the uh youtube channel you just
00:01:03.520 find erin clary um on youtube and then my blog which no one blogs anymore but you can find my
00:01:09.560 archives at captaincapitalism.blogspot.com awesome so how did you like when did you you're an economist
00:01:16.660 that's your background i was yes okay so when did you start doing that technically when i was 21
00:01:24.640 i was an intern i was a sovereign risk analyst and assistant to some risk analyst and i covered
00:01:30.560 asian countries uh so that was like my first real uh work into it uh then i went into banking
00:01:36.660 credit analyst route and i believe banker and then also uh economist for a bank small bank but uh
00:01:44.440 ended up working as an economist in a bank as well and i've heard you say that economists are full of 1.00
00:01:48.980 shit they're full of shit okay why because it's not it's like it's like therapy or psycho the 1.00
00:01:55.760 psychology industry all right wait economy economics is as bad as the psychology yeah it's it's efficacy 1.00
00:02:02.200 is i'm not saying there isn't things in economics or psychology or any of the social sciences that
00:02:07.700 doesn't have merit or worth uh it's not like there aren't things that are worth studying but to treat
00:02:12.640 it as a real profession that has any kind of practical use or efficacy in the real world
00:02:17.740 it's it's absolutely horrible um for example if you look at psychologists should be ashamed of
00:02:23.940 themselves today in the united states i don't know about other countries because we're not getting
00:02:27.660 healthier mentally speaking people are more antidepressants the self-deletion rate is going
00:02:33.060 up all these metrics are getting worse it's the same thing with economics we have higher debt to gdp
00:02:38.120 ratios lower labor force participation um let's see how there is there's like some inflation
00:02:44.320 obviously aren't economists just supposed to give like reports isn't that just advice yeah but you're
00:02:49.940 so you're yeah that's what they do you're supposed to be an advisor to the people who have the levers
00:02:54.400 of power in whatever institution whether it's a government or a bank i'll give you a classic example
00:02:58.480 if my first book is all about me trying to tell the bankers hey don't make that loan uh housing and
00:03:06.940 prices are overvalued uh the rents price to rents the cash flow of these properties don't rationalize
00:03:13.400 the valuations and the amount that you're lending out on them uh and then they should follow that
00:03:19.980 advice but they don't and so that's in that's in banking where it's more so i would say academia
00:03:27.040 and the government where they fail where you are to inform the government that you just can't print
00:03:31.740 off money it it's so ridiculously simple you go in but a lot of the economists now are and have been
00:03:39.100 politicized themselves where they're no longer coming in like stop printing off money they're
00:03:43.880 like they come up with a way well you can actually print off more money and you can lower the reserve
00:03:48.180 requirement ratio you could do all these things but it won't trigger inflation because literally pull 0.95
00:03:54.460 it out of my ass theory explanation or rationalization okay that's what happens sometimes 0.79
00:03:59.580 where i'll talk to someone that's like they're i can tell they're smart yeah but their theory doesn't 0.98
00:04:05.340 make sense right but like because i was an economics major and even like i can't even remember so long
00:04:12.060 ago but i remember them explaining to me why they could keep printing off money in school
00:04:16.600 i'm not like and i was like that doesn't really make sense but i guess i'll take it and that that's
00:04:25.800 why more or less to i would say today the the economics profession is is horrendously corrupt
00:04:32.200 and ineffectual it's pointless they're they're i mean what's his name paul krugman who's a clark
00:04:37.400 medal winner which is like the most prestigious uh economics award you can get uh he was like oh yeah
00:04:43.240 you could print off money and then i think two three years ago he was shocked about all the
00:04:47.640 inflation it's like dude if you can't but how do they get in these high up positions you you you give
00:04:54.440 the people in power the way for example let's go back to banking if i told them what they wanted to
00:05:00.600 hear then they could continue lending money and because of their economic uh their their compensation
00:05:06.120 package rather is based on sales and volumes not whether you're actually paid back now i'm greasing
00:05:12.200 the skids for them making it easier for them uh giving them the rationalization for them to do
00:05:16.840 what they want to do it kind of do the same thing with politicians it a politician might say well geez
00:05:23.240 won't that cause inflation or don't we have to increase taxes and if if you're um a snake of
00:05:28.840 an economist you can no no no there's a special magic economic theory and it'll totally work and you
00:05:34.360 can have your cake and eat it too and like okay and then they'll cite well all the social sciences here's
00:05:40.440 a study that shows this here's some research that shows that and like this research shows that you
00:05:45.640 can bang yourself in the toe with a sledgehammer and not feel any pain and people like oh my god
00:05:51.080 and they all oh see it's peer-reviewed it's like this none of it means anything anymore because it's
00:05:56.840 all a self-serving kind of rationalization particularly in the domain of government academia
00:06:02.440 okay so how do you know the difference between an economist who's being honest and economist who's not
00:06:07.160 it's it because the economist who's being honest is going to give you advice you don't want to hear
00:06:12.600 an economist that is lying is like oprah you want to hear it you're big as anything that sounds great
00:06:18.200 we could print off more money it's not gonna be any inflation it's not your fault you're unemployed uh
00:06:23.160 it's the patriarchy your pick whatever group uh any degree is a good degree you oh i can major in fluffy
00:06:29.720 bunny studies and get you know a quarter million dollar a year job of course you can if you don't 0.95
00:06:34.600 right it's trump's fault anything nothing productive or good in any system right comes
00:06:43.560 from less effort everything that is good comes from work and pain and sacrifice or cost we just call it
00:06:51.480 cost right either physical labor time money intellectual rigor you have to sit down and think or study and
00:06:58.920 research your car doesn't fix itself you have to get under there bust a knuckle and get dirty and so
00:07:05.720 anyone who tells you in anything whether it's economics or not if it sounds good chances are it's not true
00:07:12.200 if it sounds well you know losing weight how you lose weight you work out more and you eat less right
00:07:17.880 that's it and that's the truth and it's the same thing with economics or or any other field
00:07:22.520 do you think they're all in on it like do you think they all know or do they i think both i think some
00:07:28.760 people actually believe their own farts i think they actually you know like oh because they they
00:07:33.000 were academians they've never tried to practically put in the into the real world uh joe biden kind of
00:07:38.120 in a bubble they are very much in a bubble they actually believe their own stuff um biden has never
00:07:43.400 worked a real job in his life he has never been outside of politics he's he's just he was he's been in
00:07:50.200 office longer than i've been alive yeah and this guy is leading the freaking cut so i could see
00:07:56.120 people like that who come from genuinely privileged backgrounds never had to work um and then you have
00:08:02.840 like a perfect example would be his wife joe biden she has a doctor in education that's not a real thing 1.00
00:08:08.920 that's not a that's not a real you know you're not a doctor you're a make-believe play school playmate 1.00
00:08:13.800 doctor rather refuse to date education majors yeah they're too stupid yeah no and they are if 0.99
00:08:18.840 you look at the iq you rank by iq early childhood education majors have the lowest iq up top is 0.99
00:08:25.480 astrophysicists and economists i might add but um yes i do believe these people a fair amount of them
00:08:31.960 believe their own uh and then others i think paul krugman is one of them he's too smart uh having read
00:08:39.320 his stuff a long time ago oh who's that he's uh probably the most famous boomer economist um now
00:08:45.240 thomas solwell is taken over because he is he is he's awesome he's that's my other him and you are
00:08:53.000 like the two my two favorite books like one's from you and one's from him i wish i just would like to
00:08:57.880 meet the man before he passes but um paul krugman i think he knows he's too smart the way he writes in
00:09:06.120 his research i'm like do i see what you did there like it's conscious he knows what he's doing yeah
00:09:10.600 he is making a ton of money telling people in the new york times or whatever advisory or politician
00:09:17.080 he's making a lot of money so i i don't think he believes his own so you predicted 2007 2008 crash
00:09:24.200 and there's a bunch of economists that also predicted yeah it wasn't just you yeah it was
00:09:29.560 it was there was peter schiff i mean we're gonna go back 15 16 years there were other people out there
00:09:34.840 who were even the economist the publication was worrying about price to price to rents
00:09:40.920 on some other indicators so it wasn't it wasn't like just me there were thousands of people so it
00:09:47.480 just wasn't popular to point out because once you point it was the same thing with the dot-com bubble
00:09:51.400 which probably predates uh the 90s right that was the late 90s where if you told someone yeah these
00:09:58.840 companies that don't make no money i don't know how their stock prices keep going up you need to make
00:10:03.960 money for that there's gonna be an influencer bubble there's um so i'll meet people that like
00:10:11.640 make so much money off of just doing nothing and i mean there's people that are legit but there's
00:10:18.440 people that just like off of snapchat making thousands and thousands of dollars a day and i'm
00:10:23.320 like this can't go on forever there has to be some catch yeah i don't know if there'd be an economic way
00:10:28.440 to annals i'm sure there always is but i think that's just good times don't last forever save
00:10:33.480 your money yeah like i have not been pissing away my money for the past 15 years i'm just like what i
00:10:38.360 get paid to yell on the internet like okay we're saving this ain't gonna last forever and surprisingly
00:10:44.040 this lasted a long time but yeah all good things come to an end predicting it i i wouldn't know but all
00:10:49.800 would take us another adpocalypse from youtube or a great demonetization spree um i i could see it
00:10:57.800 happening there's been a piece of me that's wanted to look at what is the up because it's all based on
00:11:02.760 advertising what is the possible upper limit like what percent of our gdpr economy is going to be
00:11:07.880 youtube advertisements you know how many people you could kind of see it already in uh only fans where
00:11:13.400 it's very asymptotic um the top one or two percent make nearly all the money in the bottom 98 don't
00:11:19.960 so i i'm thinking if that money from advertising starts to shrink yeah you could you could have a
00:11:27.480 collapse uh and certainly if people spend their money and borrow money and thinking the good times are
00:11:33.480 going oh i'm making two you know two million a year for the rest of my life like no man save your money
00:11:38.520 don't don't buy boats don't don't get fancy cars yeah just save your money and and then if it goes away
00:11:44.440 you you can be retired for the rest of your life right okay so you predicted that
00:11:49.800 and then um did you predict like like what do you think is going to happen in the future now
00:11:55.960 like just same thing as we are now long ago people asked that i i'll say the same thing i said about
00:12:01.960 20 years ago i think we're just going to slowly decay into like a brazil okay uh a solid second world
00:12:08.760 country um it's my predictions become true but it's just a gradual slow we'll have our ups and downs but
00:12:16.120 you're going to have more inflation you're going to have less labor force participation um our labor
00:12:22.520 productivity will go down our debts are going to go up the currency is going to become less and less
00:12:27.160 valued uh yeah pretty much we're going to slowly uh come we're going to become an unnotable country
00:12:35.400 we're not going to become you know a third world war torn shithole but we're we're not going to be
00:12:40.280 the the the idea of american exceptionalism is over when would you predict that would happen
00:12:48.360 i i don't like times right because it's it's akin to like well when is this you know i could tell you
00:12:56.280 there's an overhang of snow for an avalanche like that has the potential that's going to be an avalanche
00:13:00.520 someday where in which snowflake and where does it fall on that avalanche to achieve the critical mass
00:13:06.920 that it causes it i don't know it's crashes and economies and all that it's it's more like
00:13:14.040 you can see the potential fuel for an explosion where the spark's going to come to ignite it is
00:13:18.840 another issue so it's real hard you ever see um uh what was the movie it was about the big short
00:13:26.040 yeah did you see it where the numbers and the data started coming in like people weren't paying their
00:13:32.120 loans back yeah and the quantitative analyst was correct but wall street kept bidding up the price
00:13:38.680 of housing assets you can have the data coming in saying oh my gosh it's all over but psychology the
00:13:46.040 mental the the psychology of the market will keep it going up and being irrational even after the
00:13:51.800 empirical evidence comes out says this is wrong this is bad and so um yeah it's it's real hard to 0.99
00:13:57.800 predict when essentially when are the normies going to pull their heads out of their ass that's the 0.99
00:14:02.680 question you're asking like i don't know normie behavior when will they pull their heads out of 1.00
00:14:07.880 their yeah when in the normie say hey wait a second we can't print off all the money hey did you know
00:14:13.720 getting a master's degree in education doesn't get it but look at look at education right i wrote worthless
00:14:20.600 degrees take a wild guess national center for education statistics not down well no that okay
00:14:35.960 overall enrollment has gone down and the enrollment and choosing of majors that are poor have gone down
00:14:41.720 but microscopically so we're we're 13 years after that came out and about 85 of the kids who go to
00:14:49.320 college still major in worthless degrees 85 85 you have the news the news i mean and there's debate
00:14:56.440 on what one considers a worthless degree i consider are you going to have a job at the end of it um but
00:15:02.840 we have had news media coverage about the education crisis and the the student loan crisis 1.6 trillion
00:15:11.160 um young people the zoomers now who are the college going age it's not like they haven't seen the 0.95
00:15:17.800 millennials like bodies on the floor like a battlefield with just all these millennial 1.00
00:15:23.000 bodies who've been ruined by the worthless degrees and their student loan yet they still they still go 0.99
00:15:28.760 in and 85 of the time about you know the plus or minus uh they're choosing these joke of joke degrees
00:15:34.840 and so it takes a long time for normies to wake up to bad things and it's it's impossible for an
00:15:43.720 economist or anyone else to predict when that will be now when did poofy bangs go out of style when 0.99
00:15:48.920 when did the queen bee of the 80s decide i don't like poofy bangs anymore and oh and then it cascaded 1.00
00:15:55.080 it's impossible to predict that trend but you can look at the numbers you can look at the data and
00:15:59.240 say there's a mismatch here and it's got to correct something if it's that high 85 yeah it's mostly women 1.00
00:16:05.240 getting the worthless no last last stats i pulled uh 60 of men's choices are pretty worthless and
00:16:13.080 women it's like 90 92 or so i'd have to again look at the data 60 of guys the vast majority of all 0.95
00:16:19.400 people are wasting their time in college and they are crippling themselves financially men and women
00:16:24.680 men you could go up and say hey stop majoring in political science you tell a girl that why do you 0.86
00:16:29.960 always my dream i hate you you're patriarchy all right fine go be poor and debt ridden 0.95
00:16:35.560 and go join only fans i don't care i'm curious if you think by because you would say economics 0.93
00:16:40.280 that's a good degree in hindsight no horrible degree horrible degree i didn't use it anyway yeah
00:16:45.480 no i i would not recommend an economics degree at all you got to get a doctorate i got lucky i don't
00:16:50.680 have a doctor i don't even have a degree i have a minor in economics i just ended up doing it okay it
00:16:55.960 was it was weird um but generally you got to get at least a master's if not a doctorate
00:17:01.720 then you go you got you're going to go work for some stodgy boring go work for the fed you go work
00:17:08.520 for a bank for the most part if you do any real work you say god we can't increase the debt anymore
00:17:14.520 you'll get fired or you'll be lectured and no it's it's just totally not worth it for asking questions
00:17:20.440 yeah no you would make a horrible economist dude do anything i made a horrible economist there's just
00:17:27.080 no one who's honest going to economics i did business administer i double majored was business
00:17:32.280 admin good no not dang it you need accounting or some yeah and that's that's where a lot of people
00:17:36.840 would argue with me is that for all business degrees except for accounting and uh it or worthless
00:17:42.920 at all at the jobs after yeah no i didn't know what i wanted to do well why does it take us 15 years to
00:17:48.040 have this conversation yeah you know and glacially slow glacially slow to get like we're we're three
00:17:55.800 less kids going to college okay that's the right trend but we'll finally get to where we got to be
00:18:01.080 by 22.75 at that rate and uh the financial costs are way too here so getting people to wake up is
00:18:09.480 impossible this is impossible so good i'm no better dang it guys okay but good degrees are accounting
00:18:16.600 um stem engineering engineering yeah i wrote a book called worthless if you want all the details
00:18:21.960 it's there no i'm not updating it for inflation people kill you gonna update for inflation no i'm
00:18:27.000 not just multiply it by 1.7 you'll have your numbers um there are the trades of course yeah uh their
00:18:33.800 medicine uh and some which aren't even four-year programs like uh radio tech or rate radiologist tech or
00:18:39.720 x-ray tech um so there's anything with a truck driver you know you you go and they'll train you in
00:18:47.640 so that you can do your research but the education whether it's trade school self-study online or an
00:18:56.520 in-person college make sure there's a job at the end of it i can't believe 60 percent um of men even
00:19:03.960 pick bad degrees that's crazy yeah well but i know a lot of people are focusing on women i guess
00:19:09.320 because maybe their behavior is a little more amplified or um exotic but you see like wow you
00:19:16.920 majored in dance therapy what the hell you know and most guys well i'm going to major in journalism
00:19:22.520 or something a little less zany but yeah the it's it's not going to help we could focus on women and 1.00
00:19:28.600 say look you got to stop majoring in this this dumb crap but that does says nothing for the 60 0.99
00:19:33.560 of guys who are doing the same thing and ruin their finances going forward so you have to be 0.99
00:19:36.840 you have to be you have to tell the truth regardless yeah so we really just have a population of people
00:19:41.880 that are making really bad choices economically yes that's it and the national debt is the sum total
00:19:47.800 of those bad choices more or less yeah yeah that's my dad said my whole life that the debt is gonna
00:19:53.800 um that we can't keep going like this my whole life they've just kept going like this yeah
00:20:00.360 but now we're starting to see inflation people are starting to yeah they wonder yeah they even this
00:20:07.080 that was like three dollars yeah i remember when they were like i think a buck 25. yeah i remember
00:20:11.880 when mountain dew cost a quarter wow yeah i'm old but after a while though you kind of give up where
00:20:20.200 because i've seen gen x that's my generation they were a bunch of dopey leftists as well back in
00:20:25.240 the day free stuff why can't what's gen x that's that's like 70 to 85 roughly born or 68 depends on
00:20:34.600 who you're not that old i'm 49 oh yeah okay you're not 70 that's no no born in 1970 up to 1985 or so
00:20:42.920 oh i think you meant 70 years old no no no no that would be boomers yeah okay and so they made they 0.97
00:20:49.560 made a lot of poor choices too yes i pretty much most americans have made bad choices since world
00:20:55.000 war ii and it and we could talk about culturally and socially but all it is is lazy people not
00:21:00.440 wanting to work we want welfare we want this i don't want to work out i want people to like fat
00:21:05.000 people i'm into i'm gonna get divorced it's just you could you know thousands of different cultural
00:21:12.280 economic and political individual topics we talk about at the end of the day people are just lazy 0.99
00:21:17.480 they don't want to work they don't want to opt to responsibility and want free shit and you you'll 0.92
00:21:22.280 see that that thread of dna in every socio-political topic we could talk about so you when did you write 0.99
00:21:30.680 your book a world without men that was last yeah last year it was last year that came out last year
00:21:37.320 um and you talked about in that book how the economy could not function without men it could not i mean 0.54
00:21:43.480 you'd have an economy but it would be the equivalent of kenya based off of my my estimates okay could you
00:21:49.720 go through the numbers a little bit well everyone says your number i quote you so much and i know
00:21:56.360 they're i know they're it makes me so mad because i i'm doing these debates and i'll quote you and
00:22:01.240 they'll be like that book or like but they'll discount it even if it's right it's so did they read
00:22:06.040 it did they have other data i in in both of the books that i've done most recently yeah i say if you have
00:22:12.360 new data send it to me um and i'll it's just you could go well those aren't the real numbers then
00:22:19.960 you say okay you're a poopy face i mean that's the level you can't either counter it with data or
00:22:25.560 not and i'm good not to brag i'm good because i'm intellectually honest i don't go out most
00:22:32.120 here's the most people figure out their economics okay they have their politics first like they do a
00:22:37.960 religion and then they go and try and find the data to prove their politics i did it the reverse
00:22:42.200 and that should scare the piss out of anyone that criticizes me i go and get the data first and then
00:22:47.720 i form my opinion and you would think people especially economists politicians all that would
00:22:52.600 would be that empirical they're not and so i don't view that i got this here in case i was asked about
00:22:57.160 numbers these books aren't my opinion that's numbers and this is the same thing happened in the
00:23:02.360 doc or not dot com the the housing bubble i'm like there's an oversupply of housing the interest
00:23:06.760 rates are artificially low this person can't afford it you don't know what you're talking about
00:23:11.960 bam you know well okay prove me wrong and so when it when someone dismisses that out of hand it's
00:23:18.440 it's it's infuriating but you gotta you gotta control you don't get angry and then you go back
00:23:23.720 you go to their level was like oh yeah well you smell like a fart i mean if we're gonna do this 0.57
00:23:28.440 childish level of i know you are about one am i you know that kind of thing i i don't have time for
00:23:33.080 that but you know i i keep getting proven right over time and i've i've kind of learned to let
00:23:40.840 reality in the real world prove prove me right and them wrong because it's it's pointless to
00:23:45.400 waste your time arguing because even on my michael knowles interview did you see the part he talked
00:23:50.120 about is that the one where he didn't read the book and said there was like five mistakes in the first
00:23:55.240 first yeah yeah okay he's lying there's not five grammatical errors in the first page he obviously
00:24:02.200 didn't read it i because i'm empirical first i'm like was there i didn't see him but i don't know
00:24:08.200 you know no you could you could say well i'd write it differently but i go through my own yeah stuff you
00:24:13.320 said you enjoy reading because it's very well written and easy to understand and i have it's like a
00:24:18.360 a vodka purifying or what do they call it um you filter you filter vodka three times i have
00:24:25.000 three different editors that go over it to look for things like that are there typos in my books yes
00:24:30.520 there's not five on the first page tell me you didn't read the book without telling me you didn't
00:24:35.080 read the book so i i can dismiss that guy up well yeah but it's it's so weird when i was trying when
00:24:41.400 i try to tell them about the number of marriageable women um it's like it's so weird how they 1.00
00:24:49.080 they won't believe me and i'm like i've interviewed a thousand so i because at first i didn't really
00:24:54.440 come in with the opinion of that but then i interviewed a thousand women yeah but in in 1.00
00:24:59.640 criticism of you there is a selection bias so you're going on shows so it it skews you know a certain way
00:25:06.440 and these guys uh whether it's i look from my hometown that's christian conservative like
00:25:12.600 still half divorce right no and that and that that's where like i'm from i'm from a pretty
00:25:19.240 rural part of chicago a very catholic they call it maga county yeah what more what do you guys want
00:25:26.440 well but they they also have a selection bias because in their defense um like matt walsh um
00:25:32.440 um not dennis prager you kevin no i i don't no i think uh uh dave ramsey these guys who are
00:25:39.880 pro-marriage and oh you just gotta go up there and be swell son i mean they actually have good
00:25:45.000 marriages they have good wives so i think they also have a selection bias you know where i get my
00:25:49.880 information about divorce center for disease control among other places now someone wants to question
00:25:56.360 that i'd like to see a more authoritative source than the center for that's the official government but
00:26:00.440 you know uh you know if you want to disagree fine go ahead but i i'm still waiting for other data
00:26:07.560 which i still have the model i used yeah uh ready to just plop numbers in as i get better data and i
00:26:13.800 can update the data but yeah this is it it's tiring this is what i dealt with in academia this is what i
00:26:20.920 dealt with in banking where i don't like your figures well f off then i don't care they come from
00:26:25.800 their ideology first they come from their idea you come from the numbers first right or they just
00:26:30.680 come from their personal experiences which until relatively recent we didn't have like yeah all you
00:26:35.400 had was your eyes and ears and personal experiences like look out for girls with tattoos son and all
00:26:39.640 and it's like oh okay yeah because there was a correlation back in the day uh if these guys have
00:26:45.320 happy marriages great awesome that that's wonderful you are not the remaining 168 million 999
00:26:52.280 american men in the world well what happened was i interviewed uh paul elam the other day oh yeah
00:26:58.120 okay yeah yeah and he brought a friend of his and he was from michael knoll's church community and he's
00:27:04.360 like i don't know what he's talking about because he got he spent three hundred thousand dollars trying
00:27:08.680 to get his kid and still now his kids in russia and speaks another language the the friend the friend
00:27:13.400 yeah he spent three hundred thousand yeah yeah yeah he's from like michael knoll's like latin church
00:27:17.880 community okay no but it's it just confuses me because i think like i'm like there's no way you
00:27:24.280 don't know somebody that's gone through it i just don't believe it no and here's one thing that really
00:27:29.960 helped me be a quote better economist than the average economist is i'm all about data and
00:27:35.320 research and removing your emotions and your political biases and just what does the data tell
00:27:39.800 you and you'll be amazed what it will tell you um oh shoot i forgot where i was going with that
00:27:45.720 what was the what would you ask before that michael knoll's i i said that he spent three hundred
00:27:50.520 thousand dollars trying to get his kid it confuses me because they have to know somebody that got
00:27:56.280 divorced right right and and that's where i was going data will carry you very far but in today's
00:28:04.920 world where everyone has a bias or an agenda or political motivation even the data and the research
00:28:11.000 can get corrupted or when people get you statistics they're they're biased oh oh you got a study study
00:28:16.280 suggests who did it who did the study you know this is why i look at databases um how do you but
00:28:22.200 what that's what i was going to say is sometimes you have to use your eyes and ears and say okay what if
00:28:30.360 i i i am not biased what if i'm what i'm seeing in the real world is actually representative of the
00:28:36.840 real world not just bad luck for example i've been shot down to the majority of dates that i've been
00:28:41.480 asked out i've asked a girl out on if i was more worried about data i'd be like god girls just don't 0.98
00:28:50.680 like me it's like well wait what if there's a chance that you know i look around then all my friends are
00:28:57.160 getting shot down all all the older guys i know are getting divorced soon you you have to start trusting
00:29:03.240 your own eyes especially in absence of quite of real data and where it's just questionable data
00:29:08.280 as well and so it's kind of a little bit of both you don't you definitely don't want to be biased
00:29:13.400 but sometimes especially how academia and polling and everyone's got an agenda has been so corrupted
00:29:18.440 soon you got to look out there like big is beautiful no it isn't no i i see it with my eye no
00:29:24.200 it's not beautiful so sometimes you have to just uh i don't have a gut check and and and trust your own
00:29:29.160 vision so they often quote the stat that like if they pray every day there's only a five percent
00:29:36.040 divorce rate have you seen that one no okay i was curious what your thoughts were on it i'd want to
00:29:41.720 know the methodology like in in all fairness i had to come up with some really hard statistics to come
00:29:47.080 by yeah like tattoos and bodily mutilation that's probably the the most uh dubious or the weakest bit
00:29:53.240 of data that i have in there but they actually have polling data on you know how many tattoos is
00:29:58.120 you know it's crazy i asked my youngest sister because you said you had some stat about women 1.00
00:30:04.200 younger like gen z having tattoos yeah and my youngest sister is 10 years younger than me and
00:30:09.080 then the next is eight and so i was asking them like how many of your friends have tattoos and this is
00:30:14.440 conservative yeah catholic school this is upper class she said majority a majority yeah and more than
00:30:20.920 more than 50 right and it's it's good to collect the empirical data but the the five the five percent
00:30:27.000 divorced that prays okay i could see if you're praying every day you probably follow the bible
00:30:32.920 pretty precisely and whether your marriage is happy or not and keep in mind the book the book of
00:30:36.840 numbers isn't about whether your marriage stays together it's whether you are happily married which is
00:30:42.920 another measuring issue right there so that's fine five percent you know the divorce rate how many people 1.00
00:30:50.520 aren't christian how many people don't pray every day yeah this it's like great people with who play
00:30:57.560 guitar left-handed whose names are bob and they have blue underwear on those guys have no divorces well
00:31:05.240 okay what about literally everybody else yeah and so that's nice but if people aren't christian or
00:31:10.920 they're secular or they don't pray every whatever the obtuse kind of uh um statistic is fine and then
00:31:17.320 yeah i wouldn't actually call into question the methodology that they used on that and then i'd
00:31:21.560 want to interview everyone and say okay when you can interview them but i want to look and say are
00:31:26.840 you overweight all right oh really is that is that a happy marriage over there let me show me your
00:31:32.440 wedding picture now let me look at you now don't tell me you guys are happy you know so so that's kind
00:31:38.520 of so how do you how can you tell a bad methodology from a good good method because it's so it's so
00:31:44.360 confusing for like the average person where it's like okay you have this study and like and then
00:31:51.240 yeah the the the main way to tell if it's a good methodology if there's intellectual honesty and
00:31:55.480 integrity in it where uh that that research paper where me and a bunch of other guys made it on the list
00:32:03.640 oh that yeah the peril yeah diverting hate and middlebury university and asu you want to see
00:32:10.920 absolute i'm not saying because i disagree with them i'm saying they should be
00:32:15.560 fucking embarrassed that they published that that methodology was horrible the the peril institute 0.95
00:32:22.040 the ones where they came up with the male supremacy scale yeah i think i i think i out supremacied you 0.96
00:32:28.040 did you yeah i think yeah okay yeah scores but did you did you read through his methodology not at
00:32:33.160 all it was there was no one like no it was just it's you could already tell it was wrong because
00:32:37.640 like wait there are channels that are bigger than me where are you didn't do any research at all but
00:32:43.000 the main thing is and you could read through people's methodology in the research publications
00:32:47.000 that they publish and say okay what did they do and you'll be able to tell quickly we have a theory
00:32:54.040 the theory is this affects that and if that stands up to reason okay philosophically or logically
00:32:59.240 that makes sense and we measured this and that using these techniques and then you're going to be like
00:33:04.360 wait that how does that measure we're using these measuring techniques to get to a i'm like how does
00:33:10.760 that measure a can i have an example of one that would be bad um the same guy who did the peril research
00:33:17.640 at the diverting hate he took the top five most popular videos um
00:33:25.320 i'm just wondering if there'd be an easier one that that would the audience could understand
00:33:32.120 you can make it up like just no because i want to use i want to
00:33:37.560 to be on that male supremacy list he had a list of 15 things
00:33:43.880 and one calling men simps or something yeah calling men that got me so right and then calling men simps well
00:33:51.320 simps exist what that doesn't mean i hate women and believe in male supremacy another one was i 1.00
00:33:57.400 think you used the word woman it's like that's just that's just a funny way to say what no it's just 0.99
00:34:03.080 so if if you go through a list of 15 things at least two-thirds of them are not does not
00:34:10.600 does not measure a does not mean you're a male supremacist that does not it might correlate but that
00:34:16.280 does not mean you're a male supremacist and so you'll see that rife in academia another one is the
00:34:21.000 end number the number of people they surveyed or the number of test subjects you know like maybe
00:34:26.520 a couple hundred and you might get it but also you'll see sample sizes of five it's like who the
00:34:32.200 hell did you interview like when you only find five people right so uh that that is another way to look
00:34:38.840 at at bad methodology what's a good number that you would you would say it depends on what you what
00:34:44.760 you're trying to measure i 50. i guess i was surprised that low well the a lot of the things
00:34:52.600 you're trying to measure there's not that there's not enough real world instances of things you're
00:34:58.360 trying to measure like let's say you're trying to study a very rare disease you know okay well good
00:35:04.120 luck finding you know people that have that disease it it really depends on on on what you're trying to
00:35:10.840 measure but i i mean really rule of thumb 50 would be would be a starting point you'd like a couple
00:35:18.920 hundred a couple thousand maybe so a world without men um you know i often hear women say that they
00:35:24.920 don't need a man yeah do you think that's true it's it is provably true not true prove you you don't
00:35:34.040 need men sure but you're gonna you're gonna have like a gdp per capita on par with kenya you're going
00:35:40.040 to be living in literally a 70 square foot closet um you will not have electricity you will barely
00:35:47.720 have electricity you will not have cars you won't have road you'll have very little of this spread
00:35:53.480 across an entire female you women are helplessly i mean that in the literal sense so they are 0.99
00:36:00.120 helplessly dependent upon men absolutely so why do you think women believe this um because they want to 0.99
00:36:06.600 do uh it feels good um i think a lot of it you know how much of it is nurture versus nature i think
00:36:14.280 the past three generations maybe fourth one of the boomers there's been some cultural um push and uh
00:36:21.960 um i'd even call it indoctrination where it's almost its own ideology or religion like the church of
00:36:30.120 girl like oh i'm so great because i'm a girl it's like no that's just a trait you were born with you're half 0.95
00:36:34.600 the population you're not special um but it's it's a simple tribalism where you know what why is a
00:36:41.000 green bay packer fan because milwaukee chicago why why would i cheer for the green bay packers of those 1.00
00:36:46.680 stupid chicago bulls there's there's yeah you're born there it's it's you guys got the cheese heads 1.00
00:36:53.400 yeah we got the chip what yeah so what you got a piece of styrofoam on your head it doesn't mean you 1.00
00:36:58.200 yourself or anything so i think it's human nature to rally around a flag and rally around a tribe
00:37:04.440 and i think the concept of feminism which you know fine yes equal rights voting rights right to 0.73
00:37:10.280 property all that sure everyone was on board with that but more modernly especially since i was a
00:37:15.000 kid and later younger generations it's become its own cult it's become its own religion it's become its
00:37:20.280 own value system where ah vagina i that's all i need not whether i'm a doctor or a pilot or a good 0.99
00:37:28.280 mom or whatever else i just have a vagina it's great well and you said in your i can't remember 1.00
00:37:35.160 if it was a stream or in one of your books you said that most women don't like men that much i i'm 0.97
00:37:40.600 pretty convinced this the data is in my favor but yes i would say women don't like men that much they 0.58
00:37:47.480 don't hate men not saying all women hate men but most women i would say are pretty indifferent to 0.91
00:37:52.520 most men and there's a ton of data more at least recently brought to light kind of what our realm
00:37:58.040 that we're in this industry where the online dating data has kind of bore that out where there's the
00:38:02.920 famous ok cupid study where only 20 of men are rated attractive by women there's also tinder
00:38:09.000 analytics where you look at how many swipes men do versus women do and how many women go on dates
00:38:13.640 versus how many men um the vast majority of here's where you would go empirical data pre-internet you
00:38:20.760 could talk to old timers like me or rollo or that exceptionally handsome man troys for troy francis that
00:38:27.480 that despicably handsome man even troy francis no he's just just like he's a great guy i know but
00:38:34.680 he's oh he's just so good looking and then he has his british accent on top of it and then he's 0.96
00:38:39.720 nice like ah you're a dick i gotta i gotta enjoy your company too um troy francis handsome as he 0.98
00:38:45.800 is british accent as he does uh he's been shot down the majority of times uh by women and you think 0.99
00:38:51.320 like wait a minute just and there's a very simple study where uh i think it was a professor he had a
00:38:58.760 hundred what the heck oh he had one female student one male student go up and ask i think it was a
00:39:07.080 100 men 100 women will you go to go to bed with me just like that and not one girl said yes to the
00:39:12.760 guy everywhere i think most of the guys said yes to the gal uh it's there it's genetic it's ingrained
00:39:18.920 it's not evil it's not malicious i just don't think women are that attracted to to men and it's born out 1.00
00:39:24.920 in many different sociological even genetic uh statistics with the uh the genome why do you say
00:39:31.080 it's genetic when like 100 years ago most women married most men well because they 85 percent of 1.00
00:39:38.200 women were married well yeah you needed men back in the day right previous and that's one of the 1.00
00:39:44.200 premises and even a premises one of the facts i i established early on and point out and i think
00:39:49.480 both books is you had the industrial revolution and then more moderately the um it or technical
00:39:54.920 revolution and that liberated everyone from physical hard labor so now we have mostly white 1.00
00:40:02.440 collar work which women can do we can do white collar work and find accountants doctors whatever 1.00
00:40:08.120 uh but in the times past they needed the guy mainly 90 odd percent of the population was farmers they
00:40:13.880 needed the male's physical labor to go and either hunt farm protect all that other stuff and and the
00:40:19.800 ladies stayed home well the industrial revolution especially air conditioning and computers liberated 1.00
00:40:25.880 everybody from that now women could go make their own money so now they are not financially dependent 0.88
00:40:30.040 upon men you throw on the welfare state uh you have an insurance policy yeah 65 in the united states and
00:40:36.760 on but now even if you fail in your career or you just don't want to work uh you are now doubly less
00:40:44.920 dependent upon men and you can you can make your own choice and it's been a fascinating just it's like
00:40:51.640 tom cruise and tropic thunders like sometimes if you listen the world's trying to tell you something
00:40:56.040 peck all men have to do and this is what i've done in my research step back what are women choosing 0.97
00:41:03.400 they don't need anymore they haven't needed them for quite some time how are women behaving what choices 1.00
00:41:08.680 are they making they are not choosing to get married and if they are choosing to get married they're only
00:41:13.640 going to sell for a very top echelon of men and so you can see this in their behavior that the you
00:41:20.680 could say oh the girls are crying themselves to sleep all girls would pining they really do want 1.00
00:41:26.120 a guy i'm like okay that's fine maybe at night they're crying themselves to sleep and they really
00:41:29.720 want a guy and yes we can always make that yeah but only a top two percent guy whatever microscope
00:41:33.640 percentage it might be they still choose career education politics sometimes even kids before with
00:41:42.760 outside of a husband you still look at their behaviors and i don't care what they say right
00:41:48.600 crying at home after they got back from the nightclub drunk i just really want a guy their choices in the
00:41:54.200 real world which is the only thing that matters has made it that they are not choosing men and that's 0.97
00:41:59.400 only what men can react to and so i would say looking at that and i i believe they're being honest they
00:42:05.400 want to you could argue well they've been conditioned and okay that's fine they've been conditioned
00:42:09.880 at the end of the day they're still choosing to go into debt for largely worthless degrees they're
00:42:14.360 still going out and partying and having fun they're choosing careers and i'm a libertarian i don't care
00:42:19.320 what you do with your life that's fine all right but it is fascinating watch from a i guess an
00:42:25.320 anthropological anthropological viewpoint like we're watching gorillas in the mist and oh now now they have
00:42:33.000 the industrial revolution and now oh look now there's the welfare state how will these creatures of the
00:42:38.280 human world well they're not going out with guys and you're you're getting your answer through their
00:42:43.800 behavior and their choices and again and it's kind of hard for in some of the people we mentioned before
00:42:49.960 that's hard for men to acknowledge and realize emotionally psychologically engineer it's a very
00:42:57.400 yeah but i had um it was not so much the data it was just trial and error because i'm old we we had to
00:43:03.800 ask people out in person back in the day we we put our spears away after we slew the mammoth and we'd
00:43:08.600 walk up to the pretty girl with her you know uh leopard bikini you were never married though right no 0.97
00:43:13.640 never like a crazy most guys in the space not most but a decent amount had like a crazy divorce yeah
00:43:20.120 i've dated crazy girls yeah i i i i just watched i just watched all the boomer men in my family get
00:43:27.160 divorced and i'm like this is not and it also um in in my benefit it didn't seem at a benefit at the
00:43:35.720 time but it ended up having me here uh there was no help from my parents like no money i dropped from
00:43:40.280 147 to 118 pounds in college because i just couldn't afford a lot of food also i worked securities
00:43:46.680 your bike and all that um i didn't have time to be worrying about world chasing girls and all that 0.92
00:43:53.880 other stuff so i had to be very much more shrewd and economic with my resources and you just like
00:44:00.280 for example kid i can never afford kids these girls one girl i dated nice gal i want four kids minimum 0.99
00:44:08.360 four kids minimum where are you gonna get the money i i can barely afford parking where where what world
00:44:15.240 are you in um i talked to i talked to um one guy his his dad isn't from here and he was like american
00:44:22.040 women that's amazing they can like your mother never paid at least like you're these american 1.00
00:44:26.920 women they pay right and he's like no no they don't no no they don't they really don't yeah 1.00
00:44:33.640 i thought it was i thought it was so funny yeah i mean at any point in time well maybe not at any
00:44:37.800 point but these gals could have like oh i really want to get together with you it's like okay well 1.00
00:44:42.200 you're gonna pay my rent are you gonna like because in the meantime i got to work another shift
00:44:46.840 um so having that those limit i had to be much more shrewd uh with prospects like having kids or
00:44:54.440 getting married and when you just see everyone getting divorced like no this is no no this is
00:44:58.680 i can't afford to go through a divorce and what meager assets i have you know be split in half it
00:45:03.320 just wasn't wasn't doable what do you think about like women want the soft life now and they want to 1.00
00:45:09.560 be no no no no no you don't know no that that is you don't get to tell men for literally 50 years
00:45:20.360 you don't need them and you're going to do it on your own and and that's you haven't seen the tick
00:45:24.840 tocks there oh i've seen them no no no the dresses are here
00:45:29.000 so much political economic educational corporate and i would say psychological on a society-wide
00:45:41.080 level so much infrastructure has been laid that women are going to be equal they're going to support 1.00
00:45:46.520 themselves we've invested in that for generations like three generations can you give me an example
00:45:51.960 of the infrastructure um well for example quotas um we got to get concerned my dei affirmative act
00:45:59.080 affirmative action being kind of law that that'd be an example um the psychological infrastructure well
00:46:05.080 should be educational infrastructure is they're pushing women into it like now fine push women 1.00
00:46:09.400 in education they got to do absolutely i'm all for you going to becoming engineers but then also
00:46:13.640 besmirching and like oh my god you you don't need a man you're a pick me that kind of like
00:46:18.360 uh belittling and and smearing uh marriage so there's a psychological predates you but i would
00:46:26.680 love to go and read some of those teen beat vogue 17 magazines uh what they told young women back in
00:46:34.440 my age what it was or more modernly which would be your tick tock filth that you have now um and then
00:46:41.000 not to get too political but the democrat party and and feminism as a as a i guess the women's wing 1.00
00:46:47.320 of of leftist politics again getting back to that cycle the the the value system like oh my god
00:46:55.080 you're a woman it's just just that's all you need to be and that's just so amazing it's like me saying
00:46:59.720 oh my god i'm a brown-eyed person i'm just amazing and i'm gonna live my entire life that so no one says 0.76
00:47:05.720 that to you no one because it's ridiculous it's it's equally ridiculous yeah can i mention his name 0.96
00:47:13.320 name jeremiah is black all right i have brown eyes and you're tall oh my god let's just go 0.99
00:47:19.720 jerk off to ourselves in a mirror with traits where it's ridiculous and it's the same thing 0.98
00:47:23.800 look at brown eyes oh my god it's amazing have you seen the eye chart on twitter no what's the eye 0.97
00:47:28.680 chart oh so i found this that i just got on twitter in the last year and i didn't know there's this whole
00:47:35.080 like eye chart and they believe that if you have like the bluest of eyes you're like royalty royalty
00:47:41.240 yeah so i'm apparently in um i forgot i'm like third on the charts i have green eyes so you know
00:47:46.840 i think your ancestors are just from northern climates that's pretty much i don't know if it
00:47:50.360 means you're from royalty i don't know i don't know they keep putting trump's son as like the king
00:47:55.000 they're like okay that's exactly my point this is ridiculous it that's what it reminded me of yeah
00:48:02.040 there's a little sect on x that that's what they believe but but uh however whether it's
00:48:08.760 government politics laws i would say more so current social psychology among women in general
00:48:15.240 i mean look at younger gals but the polling data is born out in polling younger gals gen z 0.99
00:48:19.960 men are ranked seventh on the priority list behind a whole bunch of other things uh that is having an 0.82
00:48:26.760 effect and is an example that infrastructure uh that has been uh laid down and sent several
00:48:33.560 generations of women down a path that in hindsight now they're like oh i want my soft girl life no 1.00
00:48:39.320 we can't we have a welfare state you need to work and pay for those taxes that you voted for it's all 1.00
00:48:44.760 this free crap that you wanted yeah you know where it comes to a head it's exactly can't have your 0.91
00:48:50.360 your cake and eat it too what do most women want but they can't have now um top five percent of men 1.00
00:48:57.800 uh sure okay yeah in terms of lifestyle what's something that they you know they're 40 they're
00:49:04.760 crying and drinking the wine staying home mom too bad too bad you voted in all these entitlements you
00:49:12.520 voted in the welfare state you said you're gonna work you gotta work and you might still spend more
00:49:17.640 than we got we got i don't know 32 trillion in debt right no all hands on deck you said you're
00:49:23.400 gonna do the thing you're gonna do the thing and if you don't there's a tremendous amount of economic
00:49:28.920 hurt that's coming our way okay so for young women i do see a little bit i mean it's tick tock god only
00:49:36.440 but you see the younger women um putting on the dresses doing the trad content do you see the younger
00:49:43.880 women going that route i see uh little little what do they call them sprouts of grass for every one 1.00
00:49:53.080 legit i think there's nine posers well yeah yeah i so i think obviously like cake tits right whatever 0.98
00:50:00.760 you know hey guys uh big crucifix and some take old bitties yeah that's that's bs however but i do 0.82
00:50:10.680 believe there's some sincere i i see some younger gals who are like i don't want this yeah and i 0.99
00:50:15.720 think the internet has made it acceptable to acknowledge maybe not believe it full force 0.91
00:50:21.640 but to acknowledge that is an option and criticize them as you might the the uh tits for christ girls 0.99
00:50:29.080 or whatever you know i just want to be a stay at home and we'll go to church and then i'll be a porn 0.99
00:50:34.520 star that um they are actually you have to have a certain intelligence to know that's fake a lot
00:50:42.680 of people believe it's true and so a lot of girls like oh well she's making cookies and she's pretty 0.94
00:50:48.440 she's wearing a pink dress and they the idea is now planted and so it's no longer we shall not speak
00:50:54.520 of voldemort we shan't say his name the idea of being a stay-at-home wife at least now is known as an
00:50:59.400 option and i think the internet is you're starting to get uh voices that are counter to it so there is
00:51:06.440 i think there's more resistance than there was before but i don't think enough to counter like
00:51:13.400 your education industry your teachers and that's what that's what i was wondering because on one hand
00:51:19.000 you said gen z girls pull seven yes like they rank men seven yes i talked to my younger sisters and i i
00:51:27.080 think i get more of like an insight than maybe some people because i have a sister that's like
00:51:31.880 one 17 ones you got boots on the ground yeah um and i kind of look at her and their friends um i would
00:51:40.520 say maybe they're less like like when i look at my siblings that were the most wild it's like five
00:51:47.240 years younger so i think they're less like crazy that generation they don't really seem to get into
00:51:52.040 trouble yeah but i i don't i wouldn't say they're like dying to be wives and mothers them and they're 1.00
00:51:57.640 no um and that polling data is you keep in mind they're younger ask a 19 year old girl what's your 0.97
00:52:02.600 priorities well it probably should be education and getting your finances together and looking at a
00:52:06.760 job plus let's just be honest the men are in no condition to get married themselves right i mean
00:52:11.720 we could go do a whole other show on the low quality of men and living at home and overweight and
00:52:17.560 skinny fat and soy boys and all that other stuff so women you know are somewhat in a a paradox or 1.00
00:52:23.400 quandary where what are you going to do until you're 25 or 26 and i i get actually a little bit of guff
00:52:29.560 and flack uh where i'm like well yeah you should go to school or go get a trade or go into engineering
00:52:34.520 you know yeah it's a good skill to have some maybe uh work from home so you could work from home and have
00:52:39.320 kids later on well what i was thinking i saw um a job posting for someone a woman that would make 1.00
00:52:45.480 well i'm assuming it's a diversity inclusion position all right and it was paid 22 an hour
00:52:50.520 then there was a firefighter position also paid 22 an hour and i i thought to myself if there's
00:52:56.120 all these useless overpaid jobs are we going to see more female breadwinners in the future 1.00
00:53:02.680 anecdotally and i'm curious your thoughts because you're you're an economist so we have all these
00:53:07.960 jobs for women that are clearly overpaid right clearly just yeah welfare jobs programs yes 0.94
00:53:13.320 so and then on top of that one anecdote that i saw in london is i saw the trend of personal
00:53:21.960 um trainers that are men dating women that are lawyers so i would notice like women yeah okay 0.99
00:53:28.680 all right so clearly she's the breadwinner and i'm wondering if in the future if there's all the if
00:53:34.680 because i'm thinking okay like let's say there's a family guy and a girl and they want one to work
00:53:38.360 mm-hmm well if there one goes to an office job and wants to go be a firefighter wouldn't it make
00:53:43.080 more sense for the whole family there what god that's gonna be hard maybe they'll both have to
00:53:49.320 i don't know but i'm wondering if women will just go get and maybe there's going to be an in because 1.00
00:53:53.800 one of my um producers in london he i i explained this to him i was like i think there's going to be
00:53:59.880 men that just go to the gym and are like if i look smacks i can go get like a 30 you get a cougar or
00:54:05.080 something like that not even a cougar i'm like a 30 year old lawyer okay then she can't like 1.00
00:54:09.720 you know young enough where you could still have a kid she can't put me on i can put her on child 1.00
00:54:13.960 support right and then i'm laying this out for him and he's like i should do this based on labor
00:54:19.800 force participation data there's those statistics again from the bureau of labor in case any hacks
00:54:25.000 want to question my resources and by the way this is just a theory i just a theory i think you're
00:54:29.560 going to have an element of both uh because the labor force participation rate of both men
00:54:35.000 and women is decreasing but men are decreasing faster than women so you will see more female
00:54:40.440 workers welfare jobs makeup jobs or real ones or not doesn't matter they're collecting a check
00:54:46.360 uh i think the trends is a favor of that happening more frequently than it is now i don't think it's
00:54:53.000 going to increase the amount of marriages because marriage is on its way out it's not popular anymore
00:54:58.040 also women seem to have a hang-up that i can't deny that i can't possibly marry a man who makes 1.00
00:55:04.280 less than me well good luck with that um but i i don't think well what else i like i mean if you're 0.96
00:55:13.240 a high earning chick what the fuck else are you supposed to do i that's not i don't care why it's 1.00
00:55:17.960 not my problem they can figure it out if you're gonna go make a ton of money like what else do you 0.96
00:55:23.240 expect i think you're gonna see an increase in gigolos whether you explicitly call it that or
00:55:27.880 not of your sugar mama and a boy toy i think you're gonna see increasing amounts i don't think
00:55:32.040 it's going to increase the marriage rates um but i also and so they may not cohabitate i don't think 0.52
00:55:38.040 that's gonna and i also don't think based on the forecast of where marriage is going that they're
00:55:45.000 going to have men and women living together either married or cohabitating oh so you and for the
00:55:51.160 opportunity you even think cohabitating is going to go away i think yes well i don't think it's it's not
00:55:56.280 going to go away it'll be there there'll be less of it in the future there'll be less cohabitation
00:56:01.400 either marriage or secular uh in the future giving less opportunity for the sugar mama young man 0.99
00:56:10.760 type of scenario to happen i think in certain fields like that makes total sense big power
00:56:16.120 corporate lawyer type gal she goes to the gym she's very serious about things here's a good
00:56:20.600 looking piece of meat that's her trainer absolutely you go get it i i cheer you on
00:56:26.600 was another one sure whatever whatever is whatever men do that is sexy yet poor that's fine you can do 0.73
00:56:32.600 you can do those things um but i don't think she's gonna marry these guys um i i really don't see that
00:56:39.960 happening you know but 320 million people i'm sure you're gonna see a little bit of everything
00:56:43.560 yeah based on marriage cohabitation just i don't think that's gonna be nominally
00:56:51.240 uh an increase of that phenomenon but you will see it in certain professions or you know good
00:56:59.560 looking men are gonna the the target group to look at that would be good looking uh physically fit men
00:57:05.240 and see how many of them get sugar mamas on the side that might be a thing oh my god i should go out
00:57:09.720 that's so interesting well now here's here's you want to play economist now go measure that have
00:57:15.160 fun you know like those are the problems you're like oh geez how do i figure this one out yeah
00:57:19.640 that's really interesting wow okay so what does the future look like then because now you know the
00:57:26.280 morgan stanley study i think it was that 50 percent of women between 25 and 45 will be single and
00:57:31.800 childless are we just there's just not going to be children i think the birth rate's going to keep
00:57:36.440 dropping the the the trends we have now will continue debt will go up fertility rates will go
00:57:41.800 down marriage rates will go down um uh i think economic growth is also going to go down because
00:57:50.040 one of the main premises is my on my book uh a world without men is you know what we run on what men run 0.69
00:57:56.120 on um women's sex we run on sex 103 octane sex uh without that and uh you've seen the memes where
00:58:06.360 it's uh men think it's great to live like this it's just a tv with a cot and a video game yes you're
00:58:13.080 you're going to see economic growth i think not only decrease more than it is now like our long-term
00:58:18.200 growth we used to grow about four and a half percent back in the 40s to the 60s 20 year average
00:58:22.840 now we're at like half that two and a quarter percent uh i think it's going to drop to one
00:58:27.400 and then just be a nominal zero uh where we'll be happy if it's positive uh because the men don't 0.94
00:58:34.040 have any incentive to work they they really traditionally speaking they might have an
00:58:38.120 intellectual interest or maybe hey it's my life i'm going to maximize it for the sake of it doing
00:58:43.320 it anyway but yes generally speaking i think the economy will continue to decay maybe not collapse but
00:58:49.800 decay uh it'll be cirrhotic growth it will be mundane people are going to get fatter are going
00:58:57.400 to be it's just going to be malaise is going to be just an increasing amount of malaise of what we
00:59:04.280 have now but just more of it in the future wow it's so weird to think about it and it's weird to even
00:59:11.240 think back to like when i was a kid because i grew up with nine siblings and i know i know wow i know
00:59:17.480 you're like your old man was busy well three were adopted it's kind of a weird story like three were
00:59:22.760 adopted and then but like biologically seven um and so it's weird and everyone pretty much had families
00:59:30.920 and it was a little bit bigger i would say like two to four which i think yeah like i didn't know a lot
00:59:36.600 of only children which is common now so it's weird how the world is changing like so fast yeah no it's
00:59:42.680 rapid it's happening rapidly and sometimes i have trouble keeping up on it because it you never get
00:59:49.080 pulling that you don't get data right that's not the first bit of information identifying a trend or
00:59:53.880 something that's happening it's usually an anecdote uh and i don't really like the daily
00:59:59.000 mail or the new york post because they're tabloids but those are usually the first ones
01:00:03.400 are going to pick something up on their radar uh we're like what are they doing now why are they
01:00:07.960 they dying their hair pro well yeah nose piercings they didn't have those when i was young right you 1.00
01:00:12.760 you looked like an idiot back then and you still look like an idiot now but now i just you can't 0.99
01:00:17.320 go all day without some girl without a bull ring in her nose and so it's overton's window as to like 1.00
01:00:23.480 how how much more ridiculous towards the malaise and depression and sadness spectrum are we going to
01:00:28.280 get going and i i just kind of almost don't want to watch someone says oh my god can you like no no 0.81
01:00:34.040 not today man no i'm gonna go swimming or i'm gonna go shoot guns or something i'm just gonna
01:00:38.760 go have an ice cream watching like the decline of like a great society pretty much it's watching
01:00:43.720 someone die yeah it is watching someone die watching your dog die of a slow painful death
01:00:48.600 and after a while you just can't watch it anymore even patriotism is like gone like like i don't
01:00:54.600 i don't know when i was growing up like we would always blast like the courtesy the red white and you
01:00:58.520 know i mean it's kind of propaganda the way but it was fine you know everyone was really proud to be
01:01:02.760 american and i don't i don't get that same like sense the way i used to well what's to be i mean
01:01:08.680 i am for the principles and ideals of america yeah freedom individual individuality responsibility
01:01:16.200 leave us the f alone um that kind of thing but you don't have that right in the united states your 0.98
01:01:21.160 average american is frankly a fat loser who doesn't want to work is it depends on your generation is 0.99
01:01:28.120 rapidly trying to find some kind of disability they can claim either something they were born 0.99
01:01:32.680 with or they can claim to have which is why uh mental disorders are very popular what was it uh
01:01:38.360 like one in five zoomers claim they're not straight get the out of here you know it so that's 0.91
01:01:44.920 that's what's going to uh continue to happen but yeah you could you can see
01:01:51.720 the the elimination of traditional historical americans and your modern day people who live you 0.99
01:01:58.440 couldn't call them americans people who live in america and have american citizenship you're not
01:02:03.240 american the vast majority you're not americans so what are there going to be catastrophic effects on
01:02:09.640 the economy with the birth rate declining because all of the industries will be super old and then they
01:02:15.880 won't be able to and then the younger generation has to take care of them no no it's no but population
01:02:22.520 the truth is here's the truth population growth or decline doesn't matter no way it's per person
01:02:34.680 per capita standards of living all right for example japan oh japan or korea or even australia
01:02:42.760 oh they're not having any more babies just think that through okay so let's say
01:02:48.040 the boomers die in japan or here what happens to the one child they had they have kids or speak
01:02:58.520 or maybe they don't mom and dad die there's one child what who the one kid they'll probably want
01:03:03.880 a family right i don't know what happens after death oh they get the money they get all the money
01:03:10.600 and instead of you're going a different direction instead of on the individual level of a family
01:03:15.320 think of it as a nation okay there's all these plants there's all these factories there's all
01:03:19.800 these roads there's all these assets in japan okay so uh the the older generation dies the
01:03:27.560 younger generation inherits twice the amount of right that okay now you might have an argument okay
01:03:33.800 well we're not using the roads as much so we'd use less roads maybe you know housing would get cheaper i
01:03:39.800 know younger people are concerned about that so what your population went down that doesn't mean
01:03:44.520 your productive capacity your standards of living go down where it becomes an issue for everyone this
01:03:49.960 is where you can't trust the economists because everyone's a liar the reason they want a younger
01:03:53.800 generation is because we have a ponzi scheme type of uh retirement system social pension
01:04:01.560 mainly social security here and medicare but other countries have the same thing and this is why
01:04:07.560 there's a big poll we got to get immigrants in we got to get younger people because older people
01:04:12.120 they don't want their they they don't want these retirement systems or these pension systems going
01:04:17.720 bankrupt if you got rid of the welfare state and just i hope everyone's sitting down and maybe you 0.66
01:04:24.840 paid for your own goddamn retirement you it wouldn't matter whether there was a third less americans or a 0.90
01:04:32.680 third more americans or half the japanese or twice the japanese because it would be the same amount of 0.98
01:04:38.040 people there wouldn't be this archaic pension system you have to fund that's why they're really worried
01:04:43.720 about population growth it's not because the environment or anything like that they want the
01:04:48.440 freaking government check it just blew my mind i have been hearing about the population the birth
01:04:55.800 no i've been hearing about this my whole life oh yeah well wait which is it are we going to
01:05:01.080 overpopulate the world it calls global warming well there's not enough young people being born choose your
01:05:05.960 crisis no you're choose your freaking crisis i got did i get bamboozled yeah oh everyone's gotten 0.91
01:05:11.800 bamboozled yeah if you've been alive in the past 40 years as a kid you've been bamboozled you've been 0.95
01:05:16.120 lied to wow so the real reason they go on about the birth rate is not because society couldn't function
01:05:24.440 with less people it's because of the social security that's collapsing older people need look in the olden 0.99
01:05:32.040 days you would just take care of your family right right before the welfare state before fdr and social
01:05:37.400 security predates the the welfare state if you would just take care of grandma and grandpa all right
01:05:43.000 you outsource that to the tune of 15.6 of everybody's paycheck young people paying old people now 0.57
01:05:50.840 you had the government take take over of taking care of the old people and that's it so now oh my god 1.00
01:05:56.680 there's less young people well we got to do something otherwise we'll one not get reelected 1.00
01:06:01.960 and then two of the old people won't get their mind then they'll vote us out of office wow it so 0.91
01:06:08.840 what's going to happen with social security it's got to collapse eventually no i don't know if you know
01:06:13.560 not well okay did venezuela collapse i don't know see you see it it's a philosophical question i couldn't
01:06:21.800 tell you tfm talks you don't turn flinging monkey no okay you might want to listen he's a little bit
01:06:27.320 he's he's your he's your sex bot girl expert in the field so he's interesting conversation on its own um
01:06:36.040 what were we talking about um social security is it going to collapse no because tfm he's like oh we're
01:06:43.720 going to run out of money that's not how collapse has happened that's not how it's going to you will
01:06:49.480 never run out of money because you can always print off more you're always going to get your
01:06:53.320 welfare check you're always going to get your social security inflates what can you buy with
01:06:57.560 that check i could give you a ten thousand dollar a month check on welfare social security but if gas
01:07:03.080 is twenty dollars a gallon and that's what's that's how it's going to hit everybody it's happening now
01:07:09.640 that's the it's a i can't afford housing why is gas so high right do you see bitcoin as a good
01:07:16.760 alternative yes i do see cryptocurrency in general i can't endorse an individual one nor at these
01:07:21.080 individual prices i'm just saying as an asset class that is a that is an insurance policy i recommend
01:07:27.000 financially that it should be the part of every well-balanced investment portfolio do you think
01:07:31.320 that the entire like dollar is going to collapse in the next 15 years have you seen the chart of what
01:07:37.320 a dollar would buy you a hundred years ago we've see everyone's like what's going to happen you know
01:07:43.320 we got to collapse it's like what do you call a loss of 98 of your purchasing power it's just been
01:07:48.280 a really slow collapse yeah that's what i'm asking whatever it be do you think i can't remember what
01:07:54.120 country but i know there was some country that overnight it just was like oh that's several
01:07:58.920 countries i mean it depends but yeah uh no it will continue he i don't know this might be too much
01:08:08.360 math for you okay i'm glad you're saying let's say our gdp we produce two percent more stuff right
01:08:15.320 okay but we increase our money supply by ten percent right now i'm no economist eight percent but i'm
01:08:20.760 going to guess inflation is going to be eight percent you're going to have eight percent less purchasing
01:08:23.880 power yeah it's a it's a pretty simple math you could do what was our real gdp growth how much more
01:08:29.640 money in m1 or m2 did we print off whichever measure you want to do take the difference that's how
01:08:34.600 that's a tax that's how much money you've lost in purchasing power so if you have a hundred dollars
01:08:39.880 what i'm curious do you what percent do you think people should keep in dollars bitcoin or investment
01:08:47.000 oh that's it depends on how old you are and what you're like if you're 65 you're going to be more
01:08:52.360 fixed income that's your classical financial planner type of stuff younger people obviously going to skew
01:08:58.280 more towards equities um i and i advocated long ago um you can especially young people you could say
01:09:07.160 well should i invest in cryptocurrency should i invest in silver should i invest in the s p 500
01:09:12.520 young people should invest in skills that appreciate with inflation that's your biggest hedge against 0.76
01:09:18.440 inflation dentists don't worry about inflation they just raise the prices cpas don't worry about
01:09:23.800 inflation they just raise the prices mechanics plumbers all those guys they just diversity and
01:09:29.800 inclusion consultants depending on whether you get your funding or not you are hosed if the funding
01:09:35.240 gets cut uh journalism majors you're hosed so do you think these women's jobs will be cut then even 1.00
01:09:44.120 no i i think an academic well you're already seeing it happen you got to be empirical texas
01:09:51.400 texas just defunded dei so they laid off a bunch of people in academia uh it will depend on the
01:09:57.400 government yeah thank god it'll it'll depend on the state or the government uh whether or not there's
01:10:02.520 funding for it i think corporations are starting to realize with the different in general woke stuff
01:10:09.000 it doesn't have to be you know unemployment but any kind of political bullshit um they're starting to
01:10:13.880 realize that that doesn't pay so disney hasn't changed their mind they're just doubling down on 0.88
01:10:18.440 everything but bud light uh is is turning around target is not gonna stick pride in your face every
01:10:28.120 june as much as it used to um i think i think there's i think we probably did hit peak dei employment
01:10:39.000 i think that and then not that it's gonna go away but it's gonna plateau maybe go gradually down but
01:10:44.600 it's gonna be with us for a while um and it probably is it's like hr i don't know who came
01:10:50.440 up with the idea of human resources it's not necessary women but well not i did did they really 1.00
01:10:56.760 i i don't know i don't know anyone that likes to tell people how to talk more than women it well yeah 1.00
01:11:02.200 okay we but what is the manifest what are the origins of hr i don't know but it's still here yeah you
01:11:07.400 know and and and it's been slowly eroding over time people don't trust hr as much as they used to
01:11:13.160 they're outsourcing it so i think that at one point say in the 80s or 90s hr was was at at its
01:11:20.760 best and now it's been slowly eroding because it doesn't serve any value or serves less value than
01:11:24.840 across my roommate in college um she got an hr job right out of college started making like 0.99
01:11:31.400 60k a year that's good really good yeah yeah but she had trouble because she got a really big car
01:11:39.000 lease i know i know i know i know i know i remember one time she was like late paying me 0.96
01:11:44.920 rent or so she was like complaining to me and i'm like well why did you get the new car like you had a
01:11:48.680 car math is hard it's really hard no but it was crazy so do you why does my generation like why are we
01:11:57.240 so bad with money your generation have you met the baby boomers where like a third of them don't 0.99
01:12:03.400 they're not going to retire what i don't know i don't know you guys don't have not oh this is
01:12:09.160 normal you guys don't have a monopoly on bad financial moves okay you you uh i'm a millennial
01:12:15.160 i'm at the end of okay well again every american alive today yeah you're not real americans you're 0.99
01:12:21.640 just money-spending debt-ridden right morons no uh that is uh yeah i could show you a ton of baby 0.99
01:12:32.200 boomers balance sheets where they have that classic car they always wanted and they got their 0.99
01:12:37.560 boat and they have 300 in their bank account and they're living paycheck to paycheck yeah that's uh
01:12:43.240 i don't think the poor financial management is is strictly a boom a zoomer affair well yeah that's true 1.00
01:12:51.240 yeah it's i guess people are really bad with money i don't know did you see the 32 trillion dollar
01:12:56.840 national debt well i mean you need to look at the student loan they're still begging for a student
01:13:03.240 but the the time they've always did begging for a student loan bailout if they all got off their 0.93
01:13:07.880 their lazy asses and worked a second job they'd have their student loans paid off by now most of 0.96
01:13:12.200 them anyway really yeah well i mean i'd have to i'd there i'd have to do the numbers but they've been 0.99
01:13:16.040 complaining about for what about a decade now right you work another the average balance uh student
01:13:20.840 loans 36 000 bucks that's less than your your brand new car average brand new car so 36 000 10 years
01:13:27.160 you work a part-time job you could have easily paid that off years ago we're gonna sit here and
01:13:30.920 and whine about it right wow what do you you mentioned sex robots yes do you think that's
01:13:39.160 really going to be a thing it it already is a thing you keep asking me is it going to be inflated yes
01:13:45.080 it already is i don't know anybody like with a sex robot it had how common is it hasn't gone pop if
01:13:51.720 you're saying when's it gonna boom i don't know uh yes they they already exist i don't think that's
01:13:57.480 why i think you should have tfm fm on because i think tfm turk flinging monkey very obscure i think
01:14:04.040 the sex robots is a very obscure thing uh it will remain niche i don't think it'll catch on because men
01:14:09.640 want a real woman generally speaking i think what is a much bigger threat and already has been a 1.00
01:14:15.320 bigger threat has been prawn oh yeah uh where guys like doing the calculus like okay i can yeah i
01:14:21.480 got to go on a date with a girl three times we're looking at 12 hours of labor lord knows how much 1.00
01:14:26.840 money or i can just jerk off to this over here in five minutes and play my video games and be done with 0.89
01:14:32.280 it i think that is that's the real competition that women are going to face in the in the sexual 1.00
01:14:36.920 market the the sex robots those are actually more not even for the sex they're more for uh
01:14:43.880 companionship and all that uh a biophysiological um presence uh there i think the japanese even have
01:14:51.000 holograms now like having a another human or not a human being having an ai human being or an entity
01:14:56.360 they're kind of like like you know a dog has its favorite chew toy or a stuffed bear or whatever it's
01:15:03.320 it's more akin to that uh but i i think it will remain obscure and niche going in the future do you
01:15:09.480 think that how will it affect the economy if ivf becomes cheap and affordable well
01:15:21.160 you'll have more kids but i don't think women want that many kids um because ivy if we want to get 1.00
01:15:27.720 pregnant they go get pregnant it's not that hard and they can find a guy you know and here's where
01:15:33.640 they get a little picky and you know who do i want so you'd have a little bit of a bump in children
01:15:39.720 but uh to be perfectly honest i think if you remove those uh people who have troubles you know uh fertility
01:15:50.280 issues genuine fertility issues like oh we need some help versus those it's a lifestyle choice i can't
01:15:54.600 find a man you're going to have a couple more uh kids being born but it's going to be born to a 0.98
01:16:00.920 career as professional type of women and they're not they've made their choice in terms of what's 0.98
01:16:05.560 important to them it's their career uh especially you're going to have a kid without a dad around
01:16:10.200 so you're going to have one kid because they they quote want to have a kid there's your check mark and
01:16:14.680 and move on so i don't think it'll be that much of a boom and it'll be a little uptick but nothing to 0.70
01:16:21.080 nothing to seriously affect the economy what about hookers do you think there'll be an uptick in sex 1.00
01:16:28.120 work to the point where you could get i i wonder sometimes if they'll make a tinder but for sex
01:16:33.720 workers well wasn't that seeking arrangement well i guess but that's don't you have to be rich to do
01:16:40.200 that yeah well you gotta be rich to get prostitutes they're not like free or nothing like here's your 0.98
01:16:45.000 two dollar prostitute doesn't sound like a good idea i guess i just wonder if like some of these 1.00
01:16:49.320 jobs like okay so let's say they start cutting these like dei jobs right right so then we have
01:16:54.840 a bunch of women they don't have jobs anymore then we have an increase in single women well women pick 1.00
01:17:02.520 finding a husband or being a prostitute from my anecdotal experience 0.73
01:17:07.960 women love being hookers i think i don't know i don't know it blew my mind because i always thought 1.00
01:17:13.640 that i don't really know a lot of hookers before i started this right but the more i spoke to the 0.99
01:17:18.840 more i realized they're not coerced into it it's not a last resort they love it and so it makes me
01:17:26.040 wonder if if we get to the point where they have to start cutting a lot of these useless jobs will we
01:17:32.360 see an explosion in prostitution here's your pro define prostitution the i hate to be so because 0.94
01:17:41.720 right there there's legit professional sex workers in pahrump nevada they are on a bunny ranch you go 0.99
01:17:48.280 there you pay the money there's negotiation and then i think they get benefits and things like that
01:17:53.320 they're they're it's a real business what about the guy who talks to a girl and then pays for a flight
01:18:00.680 and buys her groceries and helps her with the rent well they're dating but is that prostitution 0.59
01:18:06.920 what about the guy that gets married and loses half his assets is that prostitution and and there
01:18:13.000 is an answer do you know what the answer is i i feel like the answer is technically no i don't know
01:18:22.920 okay tell me the answer everything is prostitution it's all prostitution the percentage of relationships
01:18:29.880 out there that are actually about love and liking the person is is a minority i'm gonna say
01:18:34.600 microscopically so it was a minority the average guy who gets divorced paid what what do you call
01:18:42.520 settlement and alimony that is in a sense prostitution right you paid a lot more on that than you would
01:18:49.320 get in a regular or a high-end once a month and the guys have done the math and the calculus the guy
01:18:54.120 that goes out and i need help with rent oh okay i'll help you out baby it's prostate now when i worked 0.69
01:19:00.840 at a bank was that prostitution i would say no it is prostitution everyone's a everyone's a john
01:19:10.280 everyone i i got paid to do things i don't want to do all right so you know the the definition i think
01:19:17.480 you're going to see a lot of girls get into the gray area i need help with my car payment you say well 1.00
01:19:23.320 isn't that technically from an economic standpoint you give him sex and and and he helps you with
01:19:28.680 your car payment and then they then they act like well no it's barter so you know that's love but if
01:19:34.440 it's cash oh that's that's prostitution it's like no it's cash or money it's the same thing what i think
01:19:40.680 using history as an example when there was the great financial uh the the great recession okay in 2007 to
01:19:47.880 about 2009 there were articles i don't know if they've been expunged from the the um websites
01:19:55.000 but there was like an uptick in women who were like contemplating now how they figured that out i 1.00
01:20:00.040 don't know i know personally anecdotally some of my female friends were like well you know having new 1.00
01:20:07.320 gas is really i'm like okay i guess gas is really expensive well you know if you want to like oh is that
01:20:13.560 what you're suggesting oh well okay but so if if there was a no joke recession there'd be an increase
01:20:23.400 in women who would be amicable towards it overall depending on how you define it like if a girl is 0.98
01:20:32.600 like hey if you help me with gas i'd sleep with you oh like a whore it's probably not gonna work then 1.00
01:20:39.000 i say yeah okay that's fine sure oh yeah you know i understand you're a single mom whatever sure 1.00
01:20:44.440 let me help you out let me help you and your kids at the end of the day it's prostitution but 1.00
01:20:49.560 whether they're gonna call for it so how many girls what do you call only fans is that prostitution 1.00
01:20:54.920 i i would i think if i had to guess you know totally i think like
01:21:00.040 like oh 20 15 20 percent of women under 35 have done some kind of sex work well right and
01:21:08.280 okay fine but my point is that yeah they all sort of yeah and there's a huge gray as to how you want
01:21:15.160 to define it i wouldn't consider only fans sex why it's sex works but i wouldn't call it prostitution
01:21:20.120 because there's no actual sex going on right so you know how how do you want to define it and
01:21:25.480 female shame would be involved in defining that but i think you would if there was a no joke 1.00
01:21:32.920 recession you would see an increase in women looking to get some kind of material or financial 0.94
01:21:39.720 benefit either bills paid things bought or outright cash uh you would see an in exchange for sex you
01:21:45.720 would see an increase in that it would be up to the man to finesse it and euphemistically call it
01:21:51.000 something else so that that so yes in a way can you tell me about your book um the curse of the high
01:22:00.920 iq oh um friend of mine we're having a conversation and uh we were talking about how we never thought
01:22:10.600 that we were all that smart in school right i was like a solid c minus d plus student and he and then
01:22:17.960 we went to college we got really good grades and he was pointing out like yeah he got his iq tested
01:22:23.800 and he never thought of himself as that smart but he was like a 140 something he's up there
01:22:30.440 i was tested between like 131 to 139 somewhere in the 130s he says you know that means like we're
01:22:38.520 freakishly rare like there's there's just you know your top two or one percent or something like that
01:22:43.320 have to look at the bell distribution curve and it wasn't until and i had a math and stats
01:22:49.000 finance background i i know but then i looked at the the z score tables and the charts i'm like 0.71
01:22:54.360 wait a minute all these other people are quote dumber than me and it was i don't know why but
01:23:01.560 seeing the tail i was like wait a minute there's a tremendous inefficiency you're like i didn't even i 0.96
01:23:07.720 wasn't aware that how smart i was neither was my bunny i don't think most people are because it's
01:23:12.600 arrogant and conceited like oh i'm so smart like that you're kind of ashamed you shouldn't do that
01:23:17.640 and you shouldn't it's it's too arrogant and cocky but at the end of the day there's the test and then 0.97
01:23:22.040 i started thinking about economies like like your transportation system or the electrical grid things
01:23:28.760 are made for the masses they're not made for the minority because you can't you can't have a highway 0.98
01:23:34.200 system that only helps people named jim all right it's not going to work out and i'm like were there
01:23:39.080 other instances where um there are inefficiencies just as uh mentally impaired people like let's say
01:23:45.720 you're legit mentally retarded you're like 68 iq they obviously have huge hurdles would there not be 1.00
01:23:52.760 other hurdles of a different variety that super intelligent people face because they're 0.99
01:23:57.240 divergent and my one did the research yeah obviously there's there's a ton there's
01:24:00.920 social ramifications romantic ramifications um career and education is probably the hardest one
01:24:07.080 unless you get into like a a phd program and nasa and like super high intelligent like type of research
01:24:13.080 uh so you would in the short version of that is not society cannot operate on excellence it needs
01:24:19.320 to operate on performance in some key areas and so because you need to conform not perform
01:24:26.280 smart people run into a bunch of uh social financial career all these other type of hurdles
01:24:31.560 that they may not be aware of and so a classic example is like me i thought i was dumb because 0.61
01:24:38.440 i didn't get good grades because that's what i and i come to find out like no school sucks it's a 0.99
01:24:43.320 fucking prison and truly intelligent kids they just die in that environment really intelligent kids die in 0.98
01:24:50.200 the education program right i mean now if you get into like an accelerated program 1.00
01:24:54.920 or if you have like a gifted and even gifted and talented it was just like no take the kid
01:24:59.880 who's in the second grade and put him in the fifth get him there or her there you know because
01:25:06.120 that's the level that they're operating at and they're not going to be bored because it's the
01:25:10.360 same thing they understand the concept the average kid might need so were you just bored oh yeah
01:25:15.800 oh oh god it was horrible just bored on your mind yeah and then you don't have any energy
01:25:20.120 yeah you do do it because but then wouldn't you get good grades i got good tests do you remember
01:25:27.960 the standardized tests you didn't do homework i didn't do homework yeah school was horrible but
01:25:32.200 when you when you sat me down in front of those standardized tests that they make all the kids
01:25:36.840 take i'd ace all the math and then the english and history i just right like c-minus working in
01:25:42.040 because it's not really something you test it's just did you memorize dates math was logic
01:25:47.240 intelligence reasoning follow-through and all that other stuff so i but you don't know that you're
01:25:53.480 like well my parents would get help oh my god look you did so then they use it you could try better
01:25:58.120 in school it's like no the math is easy doing good in school has nothing to do with intelligence
01:26:04.360 or effort well i mean it does have to do with effort too but for a smart kid that's stuck at the
01:26:08.600 glacial speed at their elementary school teachers and intellectual capacity like so they should have put you
01:26:14.840 in like that makes sense but don't they have cases where they let them skip a grade or something
01:26:21.000 yeah but you got to be a straight-a student see you got to get good grades you can't just skip grades
01:26:26.200 education system it went more female in a way i'm in the sort of yeah like you know women tend to show 1.00
01:26:32.840 up on time and they tend to do conformance not performance yeah and they do more of the homework stuff
01:26:39.160 so i heard it switched in the 80s around there i mean i could be off by like 10 years or something
01:26:45.880 but and it benefited women more because it included things that don't really matter like homework and 0.96
01:26:53.000 attendance yeah but did it benefit girls more i mean good you're really good at school the real world
01:26:57.720 is in school right yeah well i'm in the education system right girls i think still to this day get
01:27:03.560 better scores than men yeah they're boys yeah uh there's no doubt about that and they added in
01:27:08.440 like writing to the act yeah okay good you you wrote really well yeah you you oh you're a really
01:27:15.240 good obeyer congratulations you follow the rules that's great yeah uh you don't annoy your teacher uh
01:27:21.160 boys are not cut out that way yeah right so um but then and this isn't to separate between men and
01:27:27.640 women but intelligent girls are going to face the same thing if they're really smart they're going to get 1.00
01:27:33.000 bored too um so it it's uh it wasn't written for men or women but just smart people in general
01:27:39.320 don't let you specialize in things you're interested in early on i don't know how you feel about that but
01:27:45.320 personally like i i think it would in europe i know they let you if you're really good at like say
01:27:51.240 math at 12 you can start to like specialize in math from like a younger age me like i really liked history
01:27:57.800 so like i don't know that that route but um i don't know do you think that would be helpful or no
01:28:04.760 yeah i you need like basics you you what what what yes you need to stop it with this you're what age
01:28:14.280 you go to this grade no yeah you're what skill level we get the goal should be to get the smart
01:28:20.280 kids out as quickly as possible right almost even self-study like can you learn this on youtube go at
01:28:25.000 home fine boom you're done i don't frankly we don't need high school then you have extra resources
01:28:30.520 you can save money and still have some extra resources for kids who actually need it who are
01:28:35.480 not as smart who are a little bit slower or just have some kind of learning issue or problem and so 0.97
01:28:40.840 all you're doing is you're holding the smart kids hostage the dumb kids aren't having a grand time 0.98
01:28:45.240 either themselves they might feel a little bit bad because jimmy got better grades and they keep 0.98
01:28:48.920 getting bad grades or something like that so and but it it really is if you could say okay can you
01:28:56.600 test which correlates with intelligence but isn't necessarily that can we get you out of here and by
01:29:03.480 the end of your eighth grade give you a skill where you're like okay uh you go into the trades or maybe
01:29:09.240 you look at college become an accountant or engineer there's no reason we can't be shipping kids off
01:29:13.720 14 15 years old into college nowadays and then okay we got some kids who if they don't learn a
01:29:20.200 basic skill they're going to be on the welfare state or drag on society so let's focus on them
01:29:24.760 so yes there now there is ways but you need parents who are very active there was an article
01:29:29.080 a young gal in alabama uh 17 and she got her master's degree her old man was on her like married
01:29:35.960 family he's like and because you just don't do that as a kid you have to have parents pushing you
01:29:42.440 and so her folks she homeschooled i don't know how did that happen well she had to be homeschooled 1.00
01:29:48.760 that a little bit because okay let's say you're in school but how do you get your college course and
01:29:52.280 college credits so there had to be some homeschooling going on uh but now she's obviously very high
01:29:58.040 iq and she's an exception but why don't we see that more often there are kids out there with iqs 130 0.67
01:30:05.880 plus that could be out with a college degree by 17 and completely employable um but with the reason
01:30:12.680 we don't do that one and not to sound too cynical most parents don't love their kids that much to
01:30:16.920 take that too much of a vested interest in them they send kids to daycare because that's what the 0.99
01:30:22.200 public schools largely are mommy needs to work daddy needs to work we need an suv you need to go to the
01:30:27.560 school and maybe we help with your homework or not um there's that and the teachers teachers don't
01:30:32.920 they're not teachers are not exceptional people they're very average they're very common they
01:30:39.800 chose teaching generally because they're lazy and they want to have summers off and that work ethic
01:30:45.000 shows they're they're not going to your average third grade teacher does not have the intelligence
01:30:54.760 or the work ethic to take identity identify take mold and send a wunderkind on the right track they
01:31:03.880 got their criteria they got the curriculum it's largely up to the parents to say yeah my kid's
01:31:08.680 smarter than that we're getting them out of there and send him down that track but the the the motives
01:31:14.280 and the incentives are all wrong parents want free daycare teachers want a easy check with summers off
01:31:20.280 kids suffer more or less my sister's the one that's watching all these kids she's right out of high 1.00
01:31:25.160 school you know they always say that a mother is like the hardest job on the planet and i i'm not
01:31:30.680 saying it's it's easy but my sister's able to do it with no skills right out of high school so yeah no 1.00
01:31:37.800 it's not just like 10 of your kids at a time yeah well you know i don't know i i've had a bunch of
01:31:46.520 kids hanging around i'm like just do what i say you know it doesn't seem that hard to me but okay
01:31:52.680 but the incentive structures are off and so the challenges that really smart people get especially
01:32:00.360 boys because they're non-conformant is they get bored right and then they're not rewarded in the
01:32:05.480 school system which really it should all be testing now that i think about it like what's the
01:32:10.760 what's the point of having like extra like attendance scores if you can figure it out
01:32:16.920 without going to class let me let me give you in addition to the population doesn't matter let me
01:32:21.080 give you another thing in the day of the internet do you think we even need teachers in schools anymore
01:32:26.520 no you can if you can teach the first thing you should be teaching kids is autodidactism i believe
01:32:32.040 is the word self-teaching all the information is out there for free to the point i've even pontificated
01:32:38.680 about a theory that having you have to go to school and certainly paying for tuition is somehow
01:32:44.280 a violation of right to knowledge like there should be a right to knowledge or right to free education
01:32:49.800 where it doesn't matter how you get the education if you have the knowledge it cannot be discriminated
01:32:54.040 against and so especially with the internet now i understand okay kindergarten kids gotta learn his abcs
01:33:01.320 name on day i don't go okay fine and then okay your colors everything i've learned on youtube was
01:33:06.840 literally from the internet right and and kids will learn stuff from the internet but what i'm saying is
01:33:11.800 at a certain point in time like maybe the third or fourth grade kids should be like this is a book 0.91
01:33:16.440 here's how you read right and none of this well jimmy has a learning disability no he has crappy parents 0.55
01:33:22.440 get on him you know and if jimmy really does have an issue fine well we'll deal with that later but no we
01:33:27.160 have mostly lazy parents right you could have these kids going at their own rate saving trillions over
01:33:33.720 the years of property taxes for schools that we no longer need and probably with better educational
01:33:39.240 results than having a bunch of lackadaisical genuinely generally disinterested teachers okay
01:33:45.160 it's a check that kind of thing well and you see the clips coming out of these teachers 0.97
01:33:49.160 fucking the boys well okay that's that there's three million teachers in the united states it's not 0.98
01:33:54.760 i see like a new story every other week i'm like god damn it's it's very sensational yes it it's uh 0.99
01:34:01.560 it it's uh wrong uh yeah like what the what is wrong with you people yeah well i teachers aren't i'm 0.59
01:34:09.640 not a fan of teachers yeah i'm not a fan of my brother wouldn't date him i remember i remember in
01:34:15.560 college he's like i went on i went on this date and she was so hot and i usually that's my first name 0.81
01:34:21.800 she was so hot god she was so stupid i cannot date these education he ended up marrying he's about to 1.00
01:34:29.560 marry a chick that's going to be an engineer good there you go that's the ticket you could not deal 1.00
01:34:34.040 with these like dumb women yeah no i got an accountant so it's uh yeah but the the uh you you can't and 1.00
01:34:41.640 go look at iq by major teachers are early childhood education is the lowest and then elementary or rigged it 0.99
01:34:47.320 depends really oh yeah they're they're on the bottom third bottom quartile even yeah you don't
01:34:53.880 have your you you definitely do not have your smartest people teaching the kids i'm so curious
01:34:58.200 where do music majors fall oh god dead last i mean they're down and i mean they're not early child you
01:35:03.240 look it up and it depends on your source there's different polls and i'm sure different ways they
01:35:08.280 type but it's nothing that you wouldn't look if it didn't take math it didn't take any rigor
01:35:13.320 lower right and we're not by the way the average iq of early childhood education major i think is one
01:35:17.160 oh three one hundred you're still smarter than the average person you're still going to college
01:35:21.080 but you know barely um and then like your astrophysicists are up there with like 140
01:35:26.280 something it's just it's off you could have been a we're too close to you could have been a nuclear
01:35:30.120 physicist i was thinking about coming a nuclear engineer and there's a piece of me that it probably
01:35:34.840 paid off not to do it because they're decommissioning and yeah um but yeah i really i really
01:35:41.160 enjoyed physics i really enjoyed it um but now i'm an internet podcasting person but so when people
01:35:47.480 have really high iqs the issue is society conforms to people with like low iq not low average average
01:35:56.920 and it's not there's no pejorative or negative connotation in low iq or high iq just as there's
01:36:03.400 no compliment it's an issue of efficiency your your society has to be built around the average
01:36:10.520 person's intelligence right so i'm trying to think of an example tradesmen where are they in terms of 0.99
01:36:16.840 uh the ones i deal with are like negative uh they're really stupid people um no i the tradesmen are um 0.95
01:36:25.080 um they're they're lazy i have not seen any data testing tradesmen but i gotta imagine they're higher 0.98
01:36:34.280 than average because a lot of that stuff requires some math geometry trigonometry common sense whether
01:36:41.000 they're sober or not uh whether they know how to finish a job or they have maturity to like i'll do 98
01:36:47.160 of the job and just mess up the last two percent rendering the whole project pointless that's another
01:36:52.360 issue but uh yes there's i would guess they're higher than average because the the math involved
01:36:59.080 in precision okay but is the job market similar to the education system where they punish people with
01:37:09.560 high iq yeah oh god yeah no that's where you're going to run into the the trouble um i didn't think
01:37:14.520 this was true but they used to say oh your bosses are intimidated by you i'm like that doesn't mean no
01:37:20.200 they're not whether they're the boss why don't they hire me why don't they give me more projects
01:37:24.760 why don't they again big problem of high iq people you overthink you think why would they do that doesn't
01:37:31.720 make any sense uh the amount of petty uh vindictive people in the world like there are people who worry
01:37:39.320 like this kid's gonna outshine me um things that even to this day i don't understand i the gray chart story
01:37:48.280 is in banking i made a chart it it was something important where it proved like hey this this is
01:37:56.120 not going to pay off we got to stop and you know what my boss complained about the color of gray didn't
01:38:01.720 like the shading of the gray and the chart i'm like did you see the number what do what and one thing 0.99
01:38:08.440 that smart people have a problem understanding is just how many stupid people there are but it's not 0.97
01:38:12.760 stupid let's say you got your average person right iq of 100 and then you have someone who's 1.00
01:38:18.920 legitimately mentally retarded 70 iq can't wipe their ass i mean really you know can't function 1.00
01:38:26.120 so you're talking two standard deviations 15 30 points down from 100 to 70 now take someone with an 0.99
01:38:32.920 iq of 130 you look at someone with an iq of 100 because you're in society you think well that person is
01:38:40.040 normal that that's just a normal person they do normal things they talk english like i do and and
01:38:45.720 whatever else so they they uh there's no differentiation differentiation between them
01:38:51.480 but then when you enter they can function as a normal human being and they're the majority of
01:38:55.320 the population but when you interact with them on some key things like here's a chart showing the
01:39:00.840 crisis oh geez you need to do this i'm sure doctors have a problem with this where the doctor's
01:39:06.040 brilliant like you need to lose weight or you're going to die and they don't understand why they don't
01:39:09.560 lose weight you have to understand being 130 looking at an average person is the same thing as 0.96
01:39:15.240 the average person looking at someone who is actually functionally mentally retarded wow you 1.00
01:39:20.120 just don't realize it because they're functioning normally it's in a normal society but you know
01:39:26.760 like your brother who went out with the teacher major i guarantee you if he got tested he's 130 plus
01:39:33.320 and the teacher's like 104 105 yeah so and then he's like oh my people who could talk about
01:39:41.000 the girly shows or the did you watch the latest soap opera guys who watch sports guys who watch
01:39:48.600 get excited about it you go to the bar i don't think my brother watches right thinking about it if
01:39:53.720 if you show me a man with a jersey a sports jersey with another man's name on it i'll show you a guy with a
01:39:58.920 102 iq who doesn't understand philosophical things like stoicism you know but not that they should
01:40:05.320 it's just i can't associate with you know i don't hate the guy yeah but do you want to sit and watch
01:40:11.560 two people throw a ball at each other for three hours no dad i mean they'll watch like the super
01:40:16.440 bowl if it's like a big game but none of them really are that into right yeah i mean and some people like
01:40:21.800 sports but if you get to the point you're throwing a controller through a screen tv because some guy
01:40:28.680 who doesn't know your name didn't catch the the funny ball and run it past the line yeah yeah you
01:40:35.000 you know it's like jeff foxworthy's you might be a redneck you're like yeah you might have a low iq 0.70
01:40:39.160 you know we could do a whole comedy routine on it but it's not really like good or bad it's just no it
01:40:45.080 is what it is yeah it's not if you like football you like football if you get emotionally invested
01:40:50.520 and then you get emotionally invested yeah if if you go too far away from that the guy with down
01:40:55.720 syndrome don't get it and the super high iq nuclear physicists don't get it either and so that
01:41:00.680 do you think that's why because some of the trad con i really i just find that they like
01:41:07.960 it's like i'll be like stat but it's like they don't it almost doesn't compute you know that there's
01:41:15.240 not a lot of wives marriage is disappearing and i'm like no no look at these these numbers i
01:41:20.120 i think this is real but you know they'll just say pray every day do you think that's like a low
01:41:26.520 iq thing it's human okay they're emotional i'm not not even in a bad way either because it's their
01:41:32.920 emotions invested in their religion yes they're also religious yeah they also are human one of my
01:41:39.880 flaws is i'm very inhuman okay i i can i can look at it yeah you're fat that's why you're not finding
01:41:45.240 god i have no problems none because i just didn't have the time when i was younger like yeah you know
01:41:50.840 one girl like this one gal she had a crush on me one of the few girls to build up the courage to ask me 1.00
01:41:56.280 out she's like oh would you want to go out and i remember i was like no and just why not i'm like
01:42:03.400 because you want to have sex i'll do other things i'm like yeah yeah no i want to have sex so and since 0.77
01:42:08.760 you're really i knew she was religious she wouldn't have sex i i can do that um most people can't 0.96
01:42:14.120 they have a soul they have a heart okay they love their wives they love their god they love their
01:42:19.800 religion they like to think dennis prager is an incredibly soulful person right he very much cares
01:42:25.640 he he he probably did make one of the best dads ever yeah he's not a great empiricist or economist
01:42:32.040 it might be a good economist but you just these people you can't fault them yeah because they they
01:42:38.920 love people there's nothing wrong with that except for their recommendations what do you mean he's not
01:42:43.000 a good economist i don't i don't watch his stuff he he is i misspoke he he's not a good empiricist
01:42:52.760 i love telling uncomfortable truths because i was lied to so much of my life that's how i feel and
01:43:00.680 everyone that were so popular i hate popular people because they all promoted the lie and that
01:43:07.320 was the value system before you get into the real world the value system is popularity and the popular 0.97
01:43:12.520 kids typically were lying scheming assholes and it still continues to this day right like i got my boat 0.78
01:43:18.520 i got this and i no you just got debt i and because i'm an economist or studied it and you're looking 0.99
01:43:26.920 at this horrific shit that's coming our way that's going to have a horrific effect on everyone okay i 0.84
01:43:32.360 come in and try and warn people about it i just got more flack especially in banking and now i love 0.99
01:43:39.480 making people uncomfortable i love pissing them off uh and whereas beforehand i'm like aren't you 0.78
01:43:45.880 concerned about this this is very serious i'm just threatening to get right no no no it's war and i just
01:43:52.680 i love it when people make mistakes i love it when they when they they get overweight so i have no
01:43:58.120 problem that's why it's called asshole consulting not nice guy consulting there's a market for it
01:44:02.360 there's people that desperately need the truth things have gotten so bad in their life they might listen
01:44:06.360 to constructive criticism but on the contrast side then you got like oprah which is just touchy good
01:44:12.120 feel good lies all the time dude that's been done to death it's just it's done with it so i have no
01:44:17.080 problem pointing out things like iq i have no problem pointing out whatever inconvenient facts
01:44:22.920 or you know your your dot-com isn't worth ten thousand dollars or any other pretty lie you want
01:44:29.720 to believe like a big is beautiful like guys are going to like you for your personality and other stuff
01:44:34.200 like that um because it's i don't know life is almost too short yeah uh but there is economic
01:44:39.640 ramifications for constantly lying and so the the patience for lies and kind of tending to the
01:44:46.520 normies and protecting their fifis no i don't have time no i hope someday you you would out debate
01:44:52.920 so many people i could just see it do you know why i would out debate because you're smarter than no
01:44:59.560 because i'm empirical i don't have an opinion i would just go get all the data and the information
01:45:05.800 and then let's say i got all the the we're debating does x exist and i go and i say i don't
01:45:10.840 think x exists they say oh no x exists and i go do my research i found oh looks like x doesn't
01:45:15.880 exist i wouldn't argue with them i say yeah it looks like you're right and i was wrong but yeah
01:45:20.120 it's it's i don't really have debates i have information and research and it's up to you to
01:45:25.240 like kind of disprove that you said in one of your streams that the people that we think are rich are
01:45:32.360 not generally rich and that is it true that teachers is one of the most common millionaires
01:45:37.880 yes because of their pensions and yeah they're they're not if you stick it now that may be changing
01:45:44.280 because um they've switched from defined or defined benefit to defined contribution going
01:45:49.400 from pensions to 403bs and 457s so but yeah that's that's one of the more common ones is that
01:45:56.520 i think i know actually a couple teachers uh in the generation before me uh and they're they're
01:46:01.720 well to do i don't know if they're millionaires but they good pension and good savings yeah yeah i
01:46:05.880 think you said it was accounting engineers teachers i can't remember the fourth one you remember that stream
01:46:11.640 it was it was really funny you were giving female dating advice oh women you're selecting for the 0.97
01:46:17.080 wrong things you girls couldn't pick a genuine rich man if the men had bags of money they you you could 1.00
01:46:25.800 set a guy who bought a lamborghini in front of a guy with a bag of money and like okay who's the rich
01:46:30.200 guy they'll go with the lamborghini like he has no money he spent it all on the car that guy has money
01:46:35.640 what don't you why don't you see the money you only see the stuff no that's you know what's so funny
01:46:42.200 my dad he he he had a software company with like two he did really well um and he drove in like a
01:46:49.320 beat up um it literally looked like a pedophile van for years literally like it looked like one of those
01:46:55.880 like candy that you know yeah yeah you never see your kid again sure sure it's so funny he even now he
01:47:01.880 got like a nice car and then he just bought a honda civic he's like i'm sick of paying for the gas on
01:47:06.360 this yeah it it i have never had a fancy car yeah i never have and it's just it's transportation
01:47:13.800 it's transportation and you know like i was talking about that dentist before you know the
01:47:18.040 or the shoe salesman um no i was talking to jeremiah um the the most legit rich guy i ever
01:47:27.000 met in my banking he was a shoe store owner and then there was a dentist who was rather well off
01:47:32.040 too but these are not sexy flashy people and you wouldn't you wouldn't know it because he just
01:47:36.440 looked like he got his clothes at goodwill yeah no that's what i've found like most unless it's
01:47:42.200 first generation wealth which is like maybe bitcoin or like like someone who got rich quick but they
01:47:47.640 made enough money that it'll last yeah you meet those occasionally but i find that like wealthy
01:47:52.680 people really don't show off their wealth no it took if you had to work for it yeah it took so much
01:48:00.360 effort labor sacrifice you're not going to give it up and you share the hell in the united states 0.58
01:48:05.080 aren't going to like advertise it so you can get sued that's why a lot of people get trust instead of
01:48:09.160 things like that um yeah and so i i know and they're not wrong women aren't wrong to want a man who's 1.00
01:48:15.640 financially stable of course you don't want to unfinance or a state uh a not financially stable man
01:48:22.040 but oh my gosh girls did there is an entire course on how to go find a financially stable man but not a 1.00
01:48:28.840 single girl is going to sign up for it they're just not going to be interested in it they'd rather get 1.00
01:48:33.480 the car they want to they they conflate the conflate they confuse stuff with wealth okay yeah if a guy says
01:48:43.720 yeah i got a fully funded 401k and then some some you know douche canoe shows up on a boat boats are
01:48:50.600 horrible like if you if you see a guy with a boat he's poor don't go with the guy with the boat
01:48:55.160 that's not no no the fully funded 401k the fully i know it's boring i know accounts are nerdy i know
01:49:02.840 engineers are just squaresville yeah well they're the ones that you're not going to starve we're like
01:49:07.320 oh how are we going to pay the mortgage i guess i gotta go and pull tricks on seeking arrangement or
01:49:12.520 something okay um yeah well thank you so much for coming thanks for having me um it's such a
01:49:21.160 pleasure to have you here i quote your book all the time like on every other show i'm on
01:49:26.920 how's that working for you does it do they okay well i i get better at quoting it every time
01:49:32.600 you know yeah but they don't listen so yeah it's gonna be frustrating right no longer than me after a
01:49:39.080 while you just don't care that that's where the the pain enjoying other people's pain ends up
01:49:43.560 becoming a joy you shouldn't become a single mom you tell me how to live my life fine go become one 0.87
01:49:49.240 i don't care hey look 20 years later how's it going how's you not fully funded war 401k you don't even
01:49:55.720 have one all right uh well where can the people find you where can they get guys seriously i'm gonna
01:50:02.040 give my recommendation easiest read and if you want to dunk on feminists you can literally just 1.00
01:50:07.320 yeah the you could find search aaron clary on amazon i have 10 books uh the most popular ones
01:50:13.240 the ones we've been talking about world without men and then the book of numbers analyzing the roi
01:50:17.480 and the pursuit of women uh there are other books economically generally philosophically themed if you
01:50:22.120 want to do that like uh one maybe for your audience would be how not to become a millennial
01:50:27.160 because you skew younger that might be one of interest to them um what does that talk about
01:50:31.480 it's all the lies that the baby boomers told the millennials and the consequences that the 0.76
01:50:35.560 millennials suffered and then how to get out of that or to avoid it as a younger generation
01:50:39.960 oh so it's it's uh if you want it's uh it's an audible if you don't want to read a 500 page book 0.58
01:50:46.600 uh if you need to contact me for a consultation or i run a company called asshole consulting go to 0.69
01:50:52.120 assholeconsulting.com uh and then youtube just search me there where i do most of my consultations
01:50:58.600 it's like a dear abby they send in a question and i answered on youtube but i also have podcasts and
01:51:03.080 things on youtube or i just spew uh whatever i want to talk about and that's about it those are
01:51:08.600 those are the main places you can catch me in oh and then i i apologize uh i also have courses uh
01:51:15.000 largely financially related like how to stop being lazy the dad you never had and um achieving financial
01:51:22.840 excellence that's all offered through uh teachable so if you don't like reading books but you want to get
01:51:28.040 your financial act together you can find that stuff there yeah guys i watch his streams all the
01:51:32.760 time it's really funny he like goes in my favorite one is female dating advice that's like my those are
01:51:38.920 very popular no one listens to it but they're very popular they're so funny okay guys make sure you like
01:51:44.840 the video on your way out um subscribe to the channel bring that notification bell and let me know
01:51:49.640 who you want to see on next time on the sit down i'll talk to you guys later bye