Episode 2361 CWSA 01⧸22⧸24
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 12 minutes
Words per Minute
145.84514
Summary
Coffee with Scott Adams is the highlight of human civilization. Today, he talks about the Super Bowl, and why he thinks the outcome may have been rigged. Plus, a new study that suggests kids who are more often on YouTube have higher levels of depression.
Transcript
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Do-do-do, do-do-do-do, do-do-do-do-do, ra-pa-pa-pa-pa.
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Good morning, everybody, and welcome to the highlight of human civilization.
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It's called Coffee with Scott Adams, and I'm pretty sure you're the happiest people in the world, because you get to see this.
00:00:20.400
Now, if you'd like to take your experience up to levels that nobody can even understand,
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and all you need for that is a cup or a mug or a glass, a tank or a chalice or a stein, a canteen jug or a flask, a vessel of any kind.
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Fill it with your favorite liquid. I like coffee.
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And join me now for the unparalleled pleasure, the dopamine at the end of the day, the thing that makes everything better.
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It's called the simultaneous sip, and it happens now.
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Oh, I hope you all participated, because it was good. It was good.
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Don't let people just tell you how it was. You've got to be a joiner.
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I had a tragedy earlier, my first cup of coffee.
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I don't like to admit this, but I didn't have my coffee warmer on.
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Have you ever tried to take a big sip of coffee, only to find out it was ice cold?
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And you go, wah! Oh, yeah. If you're ready for it, it's okay.
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All right, let's talk football, a sport which I have almost no interest in.
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But, you know, it's a thing that's happening, so we'll talk about it.
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As you know, you can predict the winner of almost any major playoff game by looking at their mascots.
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Yes. In this case, last night, the Chiefs beat the Buffalo Bills.
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Yeah. Buffalo, in a fight with a Native American, probably would lose.
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Probably would lose, unless, you know, unless the Native American had no spear.
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But I think there's a good chance that the Super Bowl will be the Kansas City Chiefs versus the 49ers.
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Well, San Francisco is just sort of the city at the moment, isn't it?
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And then the Chiefs have Taylor Swift as a special interest story, because, you know, she's dating one of the players.
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So doesn't it feel like the simulation or possibly whoever's really running things is trying to set it up for a Chiefs versus 49ers victory?
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Does it seem to you that none of the—it feels like it's all rigged.
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I mean, but it—the outcome looks exactly like it's rigged.
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However, if it comes down to a contest between the Chiefs and the 49ers, who wins?
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Chiefs and the 49ers, based entirely on the mascot.
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Because, you know, the thing we all care about is we want to see Taylor Swift hugging her boyfriend after a Super Bowl victory.
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We want to see him climbing all the way up through the other people, through the stands, and hugging our icon, Taylor Swift.
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I feel like everything just has to go that way because it just has to go that way.
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It just sort of has to go that way, like we're dreaming it?
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In science, it looks like it's forward, but it might be backwards.
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So there's a new study that suggests that teens who are more often on YouTube had higher levels of depression.
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Does it tell you that YouTube makes you depressed?
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Because there are more people who are more kids who are depressed on YouTube than the ones who are not.
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Could it be that kids who are not so happy, don't have so many friends to hang out with, spend more time on their phone?
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But certainly the biggest impact is that they didn't have something else to do.
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When you're playing with your friends, you're far more likely, less likely to look at your phone at the same time.
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So here's the thing you need to know about science.
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If they had studied a bunch of random people who had never heard of YouTube, right?
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This is the way you would do the study if you did it the right way.
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You get some teens who had never heard of YouTube.
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It's actually not possible to study this because you couldn't find anybody who had never used YouTube.
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Then you randomly pick half of those people and make sure you've got a much bigger group of people than the ones they studied.
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But you should study people who had never heard of YouTube and then half of them randomly are put on and then you check them in two years and you find out if they're more depressed.
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Now, if you could do that and then it was repeatable, you might have something.
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The very thing they did is the thing that even on paper doesn't work.
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You can't take people who have self-selected to watch a lot of YouTube and then look for a disease because the reason they self-selected that may have to do with their mental state, right?
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If you can't untangle that, this is not real science.
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If the people have already selected, self-selected in, you're not studying anything because you don't have any way to control it.
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It's such a basic scientific concept that if you don't have a real control group, like a real one, the whole thing is garbage.
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You know, you know, of course, that 3D can make photorealistic pictures and you knew that it could make photorealistic movies, but it would take a while to render them.
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But now we have, it looks like, real-time photorealistic video rendering.
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In other words, you could, if you were in virtual reality, for example, you had goggles on, you could walk into a house that had never existed, you know, a virtual house that had never existed until you walked into it.
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And then it could build the house, and then it could build the house as you walked through the rooms in real time so that you would never be aware that it was building it before you got there.
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If you haven't seen it, I don't know how many times, how many more hints you can get.
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The fact that we're recreating a simulation that's perfect, and we're watching it, we're watching ourselves create a perfect simulation.
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The odds that we're base reality are just so small.
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I mean, it's possible, but the odds are so much against it.
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But as the, I'll say, the evidence mounts up, it's going to get funnier and funnier.
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It's kind of like watching the Democrats realize that they're the bad guys.
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The evidence just keeps piling up and piling up to the point where even Jamie Dimon can't take it anymore.
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Elon Musk says he expects a billion humanoid robots by 2040, in the 2040s.
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Amazon apparently has up to 750,000 robots working for it in its warehouses and whatnot.
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I mean, maybe the truck could drive itself, but you still need the robot to get out and put it on your doorstep.
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But yes, I'm pretty sure a robot could drive a car today.
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Because all you'd have to do is put Tesla's AI into the robot, because the car can already do it.
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When I say it wouldn't be hard, I mean it wouldn't be hard for smart people, not for me.
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Do you know how many cars there are for the people in the United States?
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And of 100 people who are alive in the United States, how many cars are there?
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Now, a lot of those humans are too old to drive and too young to drive.
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So when Elon says there might be a billion humanoid robots in 2040,
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I feel like there's definitely going to be more robots than people.
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Because our population is declining, we're not going to need more people if the robots are doing the work.
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The whole point of getting married and having kids is becoming, sadly, uneconomical.
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So I think Elon's number is way small, maybe not small for 2040,
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but there will be way more humanoid robots than people.
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That eventually there have to be more robots and more cyborgs.
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Well, India has made a goal of having a commissioning a nuclear power reactor every year.
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So India is going to spin up a nuclear power reactor one a year, and I think they can do it.
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Now, do you realize what good news this is for America?
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This is one of those stories in another country where you say to yourself,
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Number one, India is an alternative to China for manufacturing, so they need powers.
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That's good if you want an alternative to China.
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Number two, if they lead the way in making nuclear even safer than it already is and easier,
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there will be a whole bunch of Indian engineers who will become really good at nuclear power plants.
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Some of them might want to live in the United States because of our productive relationship with India
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What we need in America might be some of those Indian engineers.
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So if India does well in nuclear power, I think that directly spills over into America because we work with them very productively.
00:12:10.700
It just seems like a small story, but it might be a big story in the long run.
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There's a product being advertised called No More Colds.
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I'm not going to tell you it works because I wouldn't know that, but it's a little device you stick to your nose on the outside
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and it shoots light into your nose to kill viruses.
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There's a product on the market that you can buy that injects disinfectant into your body.
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2024 is so lit, I've never seen anything like this.
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Like all the stories are just, oh, there's just something so delicious about all of them.
00:13:02.400
Now, I'm not going to say this, you know, changes anything, but you talk about Trump being right.
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Apparently the difference between Trump being a crazy monster and being right about everything is three and a half years.
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Between being crazy and right about everything.
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So the big news last night is DeSantis has dropped out of the race.
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I love the fact that I live in a country that has a Vivek Ramaswamy and a Ron DeSantis.
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Because both of those people, I think, ran for all the right reasons.
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You know, everybody has personal ambitions, of course.
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I think they were a credit to the Republican Party.
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And I think everything that Ron DeSantis did, you could say it wasn't exciting as a campaign.
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But if you took Trump out of the mix, he would have been fine.
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DeSantis didn't need to be more interesting than other politicians.
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Which was, all right, Ron, all you have to do is be more interesting than Trump.
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And people have emotional attachments to Trump that you can't overcome at this point.
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So, the fact that DeSantis didn't hit Trump hard.
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The fact that he is backing him unabashedly after pulling out.
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And even the timing of when he pulled out and how he did it and what he said, it was just pitch perfect.
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And congratulations for doing something very good for the country.
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Individually, both men, Ramaswamy and DeSantis, you know, they ran their race and they got out with honor.
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Mostly DeSantis because he was the more established politician.
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But what I mean was, if Trump had never had a legitimate primary opponent, he would not look like the best candidate.
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Is there no Republican in the world who's sane?
00:16:04.560
They took a long, close look at the alternatives, including Nikki Haley.
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Not only did they look at them, they lived it, they breathed it, they ate it, they smelled it, they touched it, they kicked the tires.
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That's so different than if he had run unopposed.
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Running unopposed would have made me really uncomfortable.
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Running opposed by such capable and patriotic citizens really gives me a good feeling about the fact that the Republicans have took their time,
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looked at the options, did not really give DeSantis or Ramaswamy a hard time
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for competing against their, you know, beloved candidate.
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This is like the most positive thing I've seen, I don't know, in years.
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DeSantis is respectful and capable of leadership.
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And I think, I'm going to say something that you're not going to want to hear.
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But I think that DeSantis' run was so honorable that he's got to be the leading candidate for 2028.
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I would probably back him if he decides to run in 2028.
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But I think DeSantis has, basically, he did everything he should do.
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So, Nikki Haley is now turning it into more of a man-woman kind of thing.
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And she's saying, it's now one fella and one lady left.
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So she's pushing hard that, let's see what she said.
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What she said was, it's now one fella and one lady left.
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Because, you know, the thing I care most about is her vagina.
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This is so non-Republican to be selling her genitalia.
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Anyway, the person behind the libs of TikTok, Chaya Reitschik, posted, I have yet to meet
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I remember I told you there was one person I knew.
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And that is somebody I had not even met in person.
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But one person that I've interacted with a lot, I would call him an online friend, changed
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So Trump has been teasing on his choice of VP, because it's what we all want to talk
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And Trump is just the master of teasing the show, you know, the trailer to the movie without
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So listen to his exact choice of words about the VP he was asked about.
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Quote, I may or may not really decide something over the next couple of months.
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So he's basically saying his VP choice won't make any difference.
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The person that I think I'd like is a very good person, a pretty standard.
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But I would say there's probably a 25% chance there would be that person.
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First, he tells you he may have made up his mind.
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I wouldn't call him a standard because he's not a lifetime politician.
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So standard suggests to me somebody already in politics.
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Now, he says there's a 25% chance he might do it.
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Tim Scott got engaged and then immediately endorsed Trump.
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And then Trump says that he might be looking for a vice president who's, quote, pretty standard.
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What are two words that you would use to describe Tim Scott as a politician?
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His whole problem is that he's a little too standard.
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There's absolutely nothing interesting about him except his shareholder story.
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So I think his story is that his grandparents were picking cotton.
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And then two generations later, he's in the Senate, maybe running for president.
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And what I want is for the simulation that clearly we live in.
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Do you know sometimes you remember thinking about a joke, but you don't know if you already told it?
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But I'm going to lay it on you anyway, even if you've heard it.
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Tim Scott, he's most famous for his grandparents picking cotton, and that he went from a cotton-picking family to running for president in two generations.
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Now, if he were ever to run for president again, and let's say he got the nomination, who would you want him to pick as his vice president running mate?
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Well, I would go with Tom Cotton, because then he's got a perfect story.
00:23:10.060
In three generations, he went from picking cotton to picking cotton.
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That picking cotton joke is really pretty, pretty good.
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If he goes with the double cotton-picking, the cotton-picking bookend strategy, I'm all in.
00:23:47.640
I'm saying if he can go with that, that's good enough for a cartoonist.
00:23:57.200
But I do think he's not decided, so I'm sure there'll be lots more on that.
00:24:04.440
RFK Jr. continues to be fascinating, which doesn't mean I agree with all of his policies.
00:24:09.920
But he does harp on this, and I say harp on it like it's bad.
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And I don't know why he can't get people to be interested in this.
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I feel like I'm the only person interested in it.
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There's a lot of truth behind it, but we don't know exactly.
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We don't know the reality, but there's stuff we see.
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So he says, RFK Jr. says, the chronic disease epidemic is now 60% of our young people have
00:24:48.660
It's the highest levels of neurological diseases, ADD, ADHD, speech delay, language delay, tics,
00:24:59.460
He says, in 70-year-old men, the autism rate today is 1 in 10,000.
00:25:19.280
And then he said, I had never heard of juvenile diabetes or rheumatoid arthritis or Crohn's disease
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So you can track when all the badness started happening.
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Now, some are going to say it's because of the vaccination schedules.
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And I'm not sure that RFK Jr. thinks it's proven.
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But I think he's saying just a smart thing, which is, all right, this is too big of a coincidence to ignore.
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Well, I thought about that, that the older ones were not diagnosed.
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But I lived a long time without meeting anybody who was autistic or had Asperger's.
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So, you know, observationally, they're everywhere now.
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Obesity from 13% when JFK was president to 42% today.
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And then he says, did American kids suddenly get lazy?
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When I was in my 30s, mid-30s, I think it was, I ended up in the emergency room with asthma
00:27:18.660
You know, either you had asthma as a kid or you didn't have it.
00:27:22.040
And if you had it as a kid, you might maybe grow out of it.
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I may be talking beyond my level of knowledge there.
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But the doctor did tell me this wasn't even a thing not many years ago.
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But now we're seeing a whole bunch of adults with asthma.
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So RFK Jr. is 100% right that there's a major, major problem that we're ignoring as a country.
00:27:56.200
How would you like to see Trump put, and by the way, RFK Jr. blames regulatory capture.
00:28:06.200
You know, he says the problem here is that the regulatory agents are owned by the industry,
00:28:16.160
Now, imagine Trump being president and saying, RFK Jr., I'm going to give you a special job.
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Sort out what the problem here is and see if you can do something about regulatory capture.
00:28:30.180
I mean, regulatory capture feels like the easiest thing you could fix.
00:28:37.060
And just, you know, put in a rule that says you can't go work for the company you're regulating
00:28:43.600
Now, it'd be a problem because in order to get people who understand the industry, you're
00:28:48.640
going to get people entering government who someday do want to go back because that's
00:28:55.140
You know, that industry they left to be in government for a while.
00:28:57.660
So it would be a problem, but it's very solvable.
00:29:02.140
Well, Jamie Dimon, the biggest banker in the country, once again said more on immigration.
00:29:07.460
He said, if you do not control the borders, you are going to destroy our country.
00:29:11.240
Now that we're sending migrants to New York, all my super liberal friends realize what a problem
00:29:41.240
Do you think they simultaneously all had the same idea?
00:29:46.100
There's somebody somewhere who was the originator of that idea.
00:29:55.280
That stuff comes from smart people who make suggestions.
00:29:58.640
I don't know where it came from, but there's somebody who probably changed the direction
00:30:05.080
of the country with one good idea that when they heard it, they said, oh, shoot, that's
00:30:14.040
So you're saying it was Ken Paxton, but I'll bet it wasn't.
00:30:17.720
I'll bet it came from somebody below government.
00:30:28.780
I think I know because there's only one person smart enough to do it and pull it off, but
00:30:40.440
Yeah, that's not who I was thinking, but it's a good guess.
00:30:46.500
So Jamie Dimon, again, I'm going to give him a shout out as good citizen.
00:30:58.460
Yeah, I feel like sense is breaking out everywhere.
00:31:02.220
There's just a whole bunch of people acting like adults again.
00:31:05.500
I feel like the adults are slowly coming back into the conversation, you know, Jamie Dimon
00:31:13.440
Rasmussen asked people if they thought there was a, quote, catastrophe on the border.
00:31:41.980
And Democrats are like, do, do, do, do, do, do, do.
00:31:45.460
I think the Republicans are largely worthless on that, too.
00:31:50.600
There's a mom who's suing DHS and HHS because a MS-13 member got into the country through our
00:32:01.140
And I'm not even going to tell you what crime it did, but it involved her daughter.
00:32:08.480
And so her daughter is dead, and she's suing them.
00:32:17.600
I didn't know you could sue these big government organizations for not doing their job.
00:32:28.380
People are saying you can, but why isn't everybody suing everybody in the government?
00:32:36.080
Because you would always say, everybody has a reason.
00:32:38.320
I mean, I can sue the government for 10 different reasons.
00:32:43.940
It's like, why is Cenk Uyghur running for president when he's a naturalized citizen?
00:32:50.160
Which, by the way, I have great respect for anybody who's a naturalized citizen.
00:32:55.380
You know, you went through the trouble, you passed the test.
00:33:00.940
You know, better than an American, because you took the test.
00:33:08.560
So the naturalized citizens I have great respect for.
00:33:19.460
Anyway, so I've told you before that the most predictable thing for predicting the future
00:33:26.180
is not just follow the money, but follow the insurance money, right?
00:33:31.280
Follow the money will get you a long ways into understanding the world.
00:33:34.860
But follow the insurance money, and you're really going to know something.
00:33:40.540
Now, where that breaks down is that when the insurance company tells you there's excess deaths,
00:33:46.500
and they can't explain it, because it's in their interest to tell you there are excess deaths
00:33:52.300
So I wouldn't believe that, but I would believe if they make other kinds of adjustments.
00:34:01.060
So if this mom succeeds in suing the government, wouldn't other moms do the same?
00:34:07.340
So I don't know how there could be a story on this without saying that it's possible to sue the government
00:34:22.460
Yeah, I see you're yelling sovereign immunity, but other people are saying it doesn't exist.
00:34:26.820
So I'm not going to be able to solve this here.
00:34:31.360
Anyway, if she succeeds, then it would be a thing.
00:34:34.120
If she can't sue them and get away with it, then it never will be a thing.
00:34:48.280
Nikki Haley says that she has experienced discrimination.
00:34:51.780
So not only does she have a vagina, which is a big selling point, she wants you to know,
00:34:56.480
but she's also got some experience with discrimination.
00:35:04.620
I mean, I was unaware of the struggle, but apparently she had it really bad when she was a kid.
00:35:10.840
She says, if you want to know what it was like growing up, oh, here it comes.
00:35:28.100
I was disqualified from a beauty pageant because I wasn't white or black, because they didn't know where to put me.
00:35:47.920
Now, I did not just, you know, I'm lucky, being a white guy, that I didn't have to suffer any of this discrimination.
00:36:01.820
In fact, I was far too ugly to be considered for any beauty contests, and I have a penis, which used to be disqualifying.
00:36:11.980
In the modern world, that wouldn't have stopped me a bit.
00:36:14.720
And in fact, even being unattractive wouldn't have stopped me in the modern world.
00:36:18.060
But back then, the discrimination against me was terrible.
00:36:22.140
They say, you can't get in that beauty contest, Scott.
00:36:33.860
And so I said to myself, well, at least I won't be discriminated in employment for being a white guy.
00:36:47.440
But once I hit that employment market, wow, I could be jumping over the heads of all the poor brown people who couldn't possibly compete with my white supremacy.
00:36:58.780
But what happened instead was I lost five separate careers because I was white and male.
00:37:03.860
You've all heard the stories, so I don't have to reiterate them.
00:37:12.220
If you're complaining about the discrimination of your youth and you can't get it up to a level that's worse than mine, white guy in America, you don't have a fucking thing.
00:37:32.620
Yeah, I'm so sorry about your terrible experience with the beauty pageant.
00:37:41.020
All right, let's talk about Alex Soros who tweeted an article from The Atlantic.
00:37:47.120
Now, there are two versions of how to understand this story.
00:37:50.560
One is that Alex Soros is the mastermind behind what I'm going to explain.
00:37:55.500
Or two, he is the dupe who didn't realize that he was being used.
00:38:11.960
But it's basically a Democrat organ to say bad things about Republicans and good things about Democrats.
00:38:19.780
So, but I think they've taken it to a new level because here's what Alex Soros said in his post, and then I'll describe it.
00:38:29.220
Well, what he said was that the Atlantic article shows that the arguments that crime was under control and inflation was under control have been blown apart because crime is falling, he says.
00:38:46.940
You know, based on the Atlantic, you know, based on the Atlantic, I don't think that's true.
00:38:58.820
So as Alex Soros points out, and here's the part I agree with.
00:39:03.380
When he says that the reasons for the inflation must not have been true because those reasons didn't change, but the inflation did.
00:39:12.620
Well, the reasons given for our inflation were all the debt and money printing, mostly debt and money printing.
00:39:21.920
But the debt and money printing are still there, but the inflation is down.
00:39:27.860
So Alex Soros says whatever you thought was the cause of the inflation must have been wrong because those causes still exist.
00:40:04.480
and I've got an MBA from the same school that Alex Soros got his PhD, Berkeley.
00:40:12.820
I'm pretty sure that nobody understands economics.
00:40:18.640
And I observe that nobody else seems to either.
00:40:21.720
Because if we don't know why inflation went down, we don't know anything.
00:40:26.540
And if we couldn't predict that it would go down, given that every force we understood to make it go up, you know, except for maybe supply chain stuff, I don't think that you're both...
00:40:41.800
The people who think they do understand economics are the dumbest.
00:40:46.380
Because there are people telling me that both Soros and I don't understand economics.
00:40:54.020
But if you're hallucinating that you do, and all the economists in the world are confused, but you've figured it out, the problem might be on your end.
00:41:05.020
You might be an example of what I'm talking about.
00:41:08.360
Yeah, sounds like a Dunning-Kruger situation there.
00:41:18.080
So I do agree with him on his point that whatever we thought about economics was probably wrong.
00:41:30.600
But whatever's going on, there's a thing we don't understand.
00:41:42.340
Unless the numbers are just made up, which is possible.
00:41:48.940
But the bigger story is that the image that came with the Atlantic article that Alex Soros posted showed two pictures side by side.
00:41:57.200
One was a bullet hole through a window or through glass.
00:42:00.960
And the other was a hand holding a bunch of dollar bills.
00:42:06.560
If you added up the currency in the hand, it added up to $47.
00:42:29.860
But you say to yourself, well, that's a coincidence.
00:42:32.280
Except you look at the numbers that are on the two first bills.
00:42:36.320
There's some kind of number that's like in the middle of the bill.
00:42:44.800
Now, I'm not going to say that the Atlantic knew that that added up to $47.
00:42:54.700
But that would be the biggest coincidence in the world, wouldn't it?
00:42:58.440
That at the very time we suspect the Democrats are putting out the word to assassinate Trump,
00:43:04.520
that the Atlantic, the very entity you would think would be behind such a horrible, horrible thing,
00:43:09.960
if such a thing ever happened, hypothetically, that is so on the nose.
00:43:17.080
And then Alex Soros is the one who is posting it.
00:43:26.320
My hypothesis is that the intelligence entities, probably in this country, I assume it's this country,
00:43:42.400
know how to prime the public to assassinate a president.
00:43:48.280
And it looks to me like this was a signal to the Democrats to put the idea out there.
00:43:53.500
It wasn't necessarily a bat signal for somebody specific to be an assassin.
00:43:59.640
It looks like it's the beginning of what you're going to see will be a whole bunch of imagery and conversation around it.
00:44:07.260
Because if you talk about it enough, you can basically will it into existence.
00:44:15.520
I think we all know that the reason there are so many mass shootings is because we've heard of other mass shootings.
00:44:24.540
The people who have done mass shootings have all heard of mass shootings.
00:44:29.560
So it does feel like it's exactly what it looks like.
00:44:34.720
This does look like a call from our intelligence people to assassinate Trump.
00:44:43.580
Now, I can't prove it, but it has every signal of it.
00:44:47.580
And the people who are in our intelligence groups would understand persuasion at least as well as I do.
00:44:55.580
And if you understand persuasion, it's kind of staring you right in the face.
00:45:06.800
Not only that, but one of the bills was a silver certificate.
00:45:16.460
When was the last time you saw a dollar bill that said silver certificate on it?
00:45:26.960
But do you think that when somebody picked up a handful of bills to take a photograph,
00:45:31.280
do you think that they had a silver certificate laying around and they just thought,
00:45:50.640
So in this one image, the two side by side, there's a bullet hole.
00:45:55.340
There's silver on a dollar that shouldn't be there.
00:46:17.600
And in the context that we know the January 6th stuff was an op,
00:46:21.620
we watched the Patriot Front people getting ready for Charlottesville 2.0,
00:46:31.640
Charlottesville was obviously an op, in my opinion.
00:46:35.540
And most of the actions against the president from the Russia collusion, which was an op.
00:46:43.060
And then we look at how many people our country has killed in other countries,
00:46:50.060
Then you look at the information about the JFK assassination.
00:47:13.660
Now, I think that Alex Soros is more likely a puppet of something larger.
00:47:23.240
I don't believe that the Soroses are the top of the pile.
00:47:27.460
I believe that they're acting under instruction or pressure or incentive
00:47:33.980
from some other entity that's bigger than them.
00:47:37.460
So you have to ask yourself, what's bigger than Soros?
00:47:44.420
I think Soros was kind of anti-China, wasn't he?
00:47:55.000
And it wouldn't make sense if he had some kind of Israel connection
00:47:58.820
because Israel doesn't want to destroy the United States.
00:48:06.300
But to me, it looks like there's somebody above the Soros organization.
00:48:19.240
Ibram Kendi, you know, he's the force behind CRT, DEI stuff.
00:48:25.000
And he said, you know, he posted how important it is
00:48:29.500
to make sure that we don't stop teaching about slavery
00:48:32.640
because I guess some kids are not getting the message in school.
00:48:37.760
if you teach kids economic strategies, you raise happy winners.
00:48:43.120
But if you teach kids about the horrors of slavery
00:48:46.140
and horrors of the past, you get basically angry losers.
00:48:57.820
my economic strategy would be to get good grades,
00:49:14.180
hey, did you know that you have the better path?
00:49:44.460
and then the corporations will be begging for you
00:49:49.660
So not only will the government pay for your education,
00:50:16.040
you know, or at least more people would do well.
00:51:18.380
I mean, I don't think he means bad for the world,
00:52:09.400
that black kids don't have good mentors and leaders
00:53:07.160
They're not going to have food to buy pretty soon.
00:53:12.160
Did I tell this about the hacker technical expert
00:53:32.500
Because there are a few things I say in my man cave
00:54:23.540
And the fact that he didn't bring a pen with him,
00:54:45.880
that I'm not going to say it's going to happen,
00:54:48.740
but I want you to just delight in imagining it.
00:55:00.700
I don't know if this story is accurate and true.
00:55:03.100
I don't know if there's anything about that special device
00:55:23.980
And he does it right in front of the rally crowd.
00:55:30.840
And then they reset the machine back to its original state,
00:55:37.160
and he hacks the machine with a pen while you watch.
00:55:44.760
you want to make sure you have the crowd all microphoned,
00:55:52.520
I want to see the picture of the Trump rally crowd
00:56:10.460
They would be completely wet from the waist down.
00:56:14.080
They would be high-fiving and hugging each other,
00:56:19.360
and it would be the best thing you ever saw in your life.
00:56:29.120
that doesn't prove anybody hacked any machines.
00:56:41.820
So it wouldn't tell you that anything happened in 2020
00:56:59.980
Because we know how to make an election where you can tell.
00:57:09.900
that voting machines are only for the purpose of cheating.
00:57:37.900
I make no allegations about any specific company or machine
00:57:52.480
And what I'd like to see is Trump doing a sort of a...
00:57:58.480
how big comedians will do a bunch of acts in small clubs
00:58:15.920
Well, I'd love to see Trump keep working on his Biden impressions
00:58:19.800
until he gets into a debate with Biden in the final days.
00:58:27.660
And I'd love to see Trump just treat that like his Netflix special
00:58:31.960
and just start breaking out his impressions of Biden
00:58:34.840
and watching Biden just seethe as he's doing impressions of him,
00:58:47.080
you know, if he could trigger his dementia anger.
00:58:49.800
And then I imagine the two of them up there are behind lecterns,
00:58:58.500
Like, and I'm going to give my own Biden impression