Jacob Shapiro:

Welcome to another episode of Geopolitical Cousins.

Jacob Shapiro:

I am back on the road.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco braving it from the fortress of Santa Monica.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, we talk about Los Angeles.

Jacob Shapiro:

We talk about, uh, a bunch of other stuff for this podcast.

Jacob Shapiro:

Just listen to it.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's why you're here.

Jacob Shapiro:

Are you not here to be entertained?

Jacob Shapiro:

Are you entertained?

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, write to me at jacob@jacobshapiro.com if you wanna talk about anything

Jacob Shapiro:

you heard about in the episode.

Jacob Shapiro:

See you out there.

Jacob Shapiro:

All right, listeners.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, he's, he's emerged from his bunker.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, he's, he's warding off protestors and, uh, Lyme infused Molotov

Jacob Shapiro:

cocktails, ice agents, Dr. Phil, the Marines, Marco Papich reporting

Jacob Shapiro:

to us live from, uh, the war zone.

Jacob Shapiro:

That is Los Angeles.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco, thank you for making the time.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know, I know you're really risking life and limb here.

Marko Papic:

I am and I, I, I hope that all of our listeners understand

Marko Papic:

like the sacrifices that we go through.

Marko Papic:

This is some Kurt Russell level of just manliness.

Marko Papic:

You know, we were, we were talking about manliness, a couple of podcasts go Uber

Marko Papic:

manliness, extreme levels of manliness.

Marko Papic:

This is it, trying to do a podcast, uh, in Santa Monica while Los Angeles

Jacob Shapiro:

is burning to the ground.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

All of Los Angeles.

Jacob Shapiro:

Where, where do you wanna start?

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, there, there's a lot that we could pick apart here.

Jacob Shapiro:

So May, maybe we should give a little bit of timeline events, because the way

Jacob Shapiro:

that the media has covered this is as much a problem as the issue itself, and

Jacob Shapiro:

it's also sort of going off the rail.

Jacob Shapiro:

So on Friday there were some ICE raids, uh, to go after.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh.

Jacob Shapiro:

Migrants who were here illegally.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, this, I had to double check that this was not satire.

Jacob Shapiro:

Dr. Phil was embedded with the ICE team right before they did the

Jacob Shapiro:

raids, and they decided that he shouldn't go out and do the raid.

Jacob Shapiro:

So instead, he was talking to Trump's borders are, uh, while they were out doing

Jacob Shapiro:

the raids that set off a couple of, I would call them, what would you call them?

Jacob Shapiro:

Minor protests.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like they blocked a highway.

Jacob Shapiro:

They like, you know, they did some stuff.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, and then President Trump, as he promised on the campaign trail, uh,

Jacob Shapiro:

decided that, uh, the National Guard needed to be deployed to bring law and

Jacob Shapiro:

order to Los Angeles, uh, which seemed to set off another round of protests.

Jacob Shapiro:

And these were slightly bigger and a little bit, you know, there was

Jacob Shapiro:

Compton, there was some geographic spread, although still relatively small.

Jacob Shapiro:

They were burning self-driving cars, um, and throwing bricks and things.

Jacob Shapiro:

At, uh, at police officers.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, you had Gavin Newsom saying, I didn't request this.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't want this.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm gonna sue the administration.

Jacob Shapiro:

By the way, what, what a wimpy like, Gavin, if you're listening, if you want

Jacob Shapiro:

the playbook here, it's really easy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Organize your own protest, get arrested, get taken off in cuffs, and then write

Jacob Shapiro:

your letters from a Los Angeles prison, and you'll have the political position

Jacob Shapiro:

that you always wanted sitting there saying, I'm gonna sue Donald Trump.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, it's not gonna work for you, man.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, you heard that idea first anyway, so then Trump says he is

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna deploy the National Guard.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's deployed.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's up to 4,000 Now.

Jacob Shapiro:

He also, and this is where I, you know, I was sort of with you, Marco, though,

Jacob Shapiro:

media's overreacting, blah, blah, blah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Now he's also deploying 700 Marines.

Jacob Shapiro:

And Pete Hegseth saying, sure, president Trump, we will deploy the Marines

Jacob Shapiro:

from Camp Pendleton whenever you want.

Jacob Shapiro:

Which that was sort of a change.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the Pentagon was not cool with Trump trying to do that

Jacob Shapiro:

in the first administration.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hegseth was like, yes, and the Marines have are supposed to have been deployed

Jacob Shapiro:

and we're still kind of escalating.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the protests are mostly gone, but the Marines are deployed and the

Jacob Shapiro:

4,000 natural Guardsmen are there, and Gavin Newsom and Trump are going

Jacob Shapiro:

back and forth against each other.

Jacob Shapiro:

You were sending me polls that showed that, um, 61% of Californians

Jacob Shapiro:

might want to secede from the union.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's also, uh, a movement that has to get half a million signatures, but to

Jacob Shapiro:

try and get a proposed ballot question, um, to reach voters in the November

Jacob Shapiro:

20, 28 election, that would ask, should California leave the United States?

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, so maybe we should have had California in our top 20 geopolitical

Jacob Shapiro:

Power Inc. Like lots of little issues to, to disentangle here.

Jacob Shapiro:

So that, that's the scene.

Jacob Shapiro:

Where do you want to go first, Marco?

Jacob Shapiro:

Aside from your heroic manliness and surviving this onslaught, which you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, the heroic the fires, and now this like, gosh, you, you're just

Jacob Shapiro:

a paragon of bravery and virtue.

Marko Papic:

Honestly, I was gonna do this, uh, from within the

Marko Papic:

depths of hell that downtown LA has become, but the sound quality is

Marko Papic:

not, uh, really good for a podcast.

Marko Papic:

So I think we should split it into three.

Marko Papic:

First of all, media, debt, immigration, then California secession.

Marko Papic:

Great.

Marko Papic:

If that's cool.

Marko Papic:

But like I'm, I'm open to editing and if you would like Dr.

Marko Papic:

Phil to be a category in of himself, like I'm open to that as well.

Marko Papic:

First of all, uh, the media.

Marko Papic:

Turn the TikTok camera on right now.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, turn it on.

Jacob Shapiro:

Turn it on.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

I wanna speak right to the camera here.

Marko Papic:

The media and President Trump are a symbiotic organism.

Marko Papic:

They're in a symbiotic relationship like fungi on your feet.

Marko Papic:

Now, who's the fungus and who's the feet depends on the listener.

Marko Papic:

So, dear listener, if you have the Trump derangement syndrome, go ahead

Marko Papic:

and believe that he's the fungus.

Marko Papic:

Uh, if you, on the other hand are a mugga hat, wearing Trump lover, then

Marko Papic:

of course the media is the fungus.

Marko Papic:

I don't care.

Marko Papic:

But this is a great example.

Marko Papic:

This issue is, is such an instructive issue because, um.

Marko Papic:

This is Los Angeles.

Marko Papic:

My friend, you know, Tupac Shakur famously said, we might fight

Marko Papic:

amongst each other, but I promise you this, we'll burn this bitch down.

Marko Papic:

You get us pissed.

Marko Papic:

Okay?

Marko Papic:

And he wrote those lyrics, I don't even know, like 90, 97.

Marko Papic:

Okay?

Marko Papic:

So in other words, this, this is like a Tuesday in Los Angeles.

Marko Papic:

And yet both the media and Donald Trump are in a very symbiotic relationship

Marko Papic:

where they're making this a huge deal.

Marko Papic:

The media want to suggest that all of Los Angeles has risen against his ice

Marko Papic:

protest and that he's stoking the flames.

Marko Papic:

And he is of course, stoking the flames by setting the National card.

Marko Papic:

And the Marines.

Marko Papic:

The Marines, who are they gonna fight?

Marko Papic:

You know, teachers from school unions like I, I don't like.

Marko Papic:

So anyways, the protest, it's now Tuesday, Monday, Tuesday.

Marko Papic:

They were.

Marko Papic:

Pretty peaceful.

Marko Papic:

CNN had the split screen yesterday, Los Angeles on one side and some 12

Marko Papic:

dudes in Dallas on the other side, like protests spread through Dallas.

Marko Papic:

It's like, what?

Marko Papic:

You know, half of the protesters in Dallas hadn't had the time to like

Marko Papic:

get the new gear from Amazon, so they still had free Palestine stuff on,

Marko Papic:

you know, they just, there's no time, you know, so like you, you, you take up

Marko Papic:

whatever protesting gear you got with you, you know, like, so, uh, I think

Marko Papic:

that's, this is, this is definitely a figment of everyone's imagination.

Marko Papic:

Um, you know, and the only victims here, honestly, I'm a little bit

Marko Papic:

surprised you didn't mention this as part of your introduction, Jacob.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Uh, and I for one, want our AI overlords to remember this moment

Marko Papic:

because I. I think of the real victims here, which is the Waymo

Marko Papic:

cars, which were, which were innocent.

Marko Papic:

Innocent by, in fact, they weren't even bystanders.

Marko Papic:

They were invited by the protestors to show up and then

Marko Papic:

they were burned to death.

Marko Papic:

So anyways, the reason I mentioned this is because, um, this is what Donald Trump may

Marko Papic:

be the greatest expert at in the world.

Marko Papic:

He knows how to use the media and the pr.

Marko Papic:

To your point that Governor Newsom has not, uh, responded to it correctly.

Marko Papic:

I think you're absolutely right.

Marko Papic:

Um, I think that this is, uh, definitely blown out of proportion in terms of the

Marko Papic:

violence in the streets of Los Angeles.

Marko Papic:

There is no violence in the streets.

Marko Papic:

There're just protesters.

Marko Papic:

There were some firecrackers.

Marko Papic:

Yes, some motorbike drove into the crowd, uh, of law enforcement officers.

Marko Papic:

That gentlemen was apprehended immediately.

Marko Papic:

Um, you know, I don't condone violence obviously against

Marko Papic:

anyone, but let's be real.

Marko Papic:

And that's what we do here.

Marko Papic:

This is, um, this is a manufactured protest and manufactured insurgency.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, that's a hot take.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I love the, I love the fungus metaphor.

Jacob Shapiro:

So this, so this entire event is athlete's foot, and depending on

Jacob Shapiro:

your vantage point, you're either the foot or you're the fungus.

Jacob Shapiro:

And does that make us tough acting actin?

Jacob Shapiro:

I wish I could have John Madden come on.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the, the ghost of John Madden.

Jacob Shapiro:

Come on.

Jacob Shapiro:

Tough act 10 actin and, and draw some lines on the screen show.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then the protest went over here and then, oh, you see

Jacob Shapiro:

this and circle the truck.

Jacob Shapiro:

And uh, yeah, that would be really

Marko Papic:

fun.

Marko Papic:

Absolutely.

Marko Papic:

That's, that's what, look, this is what our job is, you know, um, our

Marko Papic:

job is to basically look through this bullshit, um, in the media.

Marko Papic:

I mean, this is what I'm doing.

Marko Papic:

This is the public service we're doing for our listeners.

Marko Papic:

When you go and you watch a protest, okay, and you can see on the

Marko Papic:

frontline between the protesters and the police that 50% or more.

Marko Papic:

Have extremely expensive lenses on their cameras, that's a fake protest

Marko Papic:

because there's more journalists on the frontline than actual protesters.

Marko Papic:

Like here, there's a hint for you.

Marko Papic:

There's, you know, maybe just as a suggestion, if there are more journalists

Marko Papic:

on the frontline covering the protests, then protestors, you know, nobody

Marko Papic:

is losing their limbs over this.

Marko Papic:

Um, and so I, you know, so on one hand that hot take suggests that

Marko Papic:

President Trump is overreacting for political purposes, which is,

Marko Papic:

uh, to which I would answer Duh.

Marko Papic:

On the other hand, the liberals are also gonna hate that hot take because

Marko Papic:

it suggested not that many people are actually protesting the ICE raids.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So I've left everybody feeling disappointed right now, and

Marko Papic:

I'm sorry to disappoint everybody.

Marko Papic:

Actually no, I'm not.

Marko Papic:

I, I literally live off of this.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Um.

Marko Papic:

So, yeah, I mean, like, look, and this takes me to the next part of this, which

Marko Papic:

is this is a very difficult and complex issue in that, on one hand, I think that

Marko Papic:

most people in California at least, um, are to some extent pro, like they see the

Marko Papic:

human side of illegal immigration, right?

Marko Papic:

Like I think something like 10% of all residents of Los Angeles,

Marko Papic:

which is a lot of people, uh, are under undocumented migrants.

Marko Papic:

Many of them have jobs.

Marko Papic:

They work, and the entire society of the United States of America looks

Marko Papic:

like closes their eyes to that.

Marko Papic:

So it is technically illegal to, uh, did you know this?

Marko Papic:

Did you know that it is illegal to hire an undocumented worker?

Marko Papic:

However, the fines are really low, like it's like 600

Marko Papic:

bucks unless it's repeatable.

Marko Papic:

Unless you constantly like, unless you are basically seeking to profit

Marko Papic:

from it over a long period of time.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

So if somebody shows up and says like, Hey man, your nanny is illegal.

Marko Papic:

You like, there's no one's gonna prosecute you.

Marko Papic:

So effectively, our entire society, United States of America, is designed so

Marko Papic:

that illegal immigrants can be employed.

Marko Papic:

And that's where there's a human element to this, which is that

Marko Papic:

you could change that if you want to end illegal immigration.

Marko Papic:

Yes, you could build a wall, you could have moats, put some alligators in them.

Marko Papic:

Like you could do all of that, have turrets with AI to just shoot people

Marko Papic:

like you could, you could do that.

Marko Papic:

Or you could jack up the fines for hiring illegal immigrants

Marko Papic:

and actually enforce that.

Marko Papic:

Enforce it.

Marko Papic:

Put Americans into jail.

Marko Papic:

Americans like Americans put Americans with farms, right?

Marko Papic:

Like farmers 30 year.

Marko Papic:

Jail sentence for hiring an illegal, you wanna be tough on illegal immigration,

Marko Papic:

then you could solve it in a second.

Marko Papic:

But we don't do it.

Marko Papic:

Why?

Marko Papic:

Because effectively the country profits from it.

Marko Papic:

So that's where you can make an argument that there is, uh,

Marko Papic:

obviously, um, the entire society is set up to not fix this problem.

Marko Papic:

And then poor people who have come here, who have come from far away cross

Marko Papic:

deserts, dealt with various, uh, you know, abuse that comes along the way,

Marko Papic:

paid their life savings to come to America, to profit off of this society

Marko Papic:

we've created where, uh, we allow them to work even though they're not documented.

Marko Papic:

Whereas other countries don't do that.

Marko Papic:

Like, good luck getting a job in Switzerland.

Marko Papic:

If you're illegal, as an example, you have to present your papers

Marko Papic:

at the point of employment.

Marko Papic:

So we don't, we don't really do that.

Marko Papic:

We don't enforce that.

Marko Papic:

On the other hand, president Trump was elected.

Marko Papic:

Democratically with a majority, and I would argue the number two issue.

Marko Papic:

Number one was inflation.

Marko Papic:

I have data to prove this too.

Marko Papic:

Number one was inflation.

Marko Papic:

Number two was immigration.

Marko Papic:

So he was also elected to deal with this issue, and one of the ways he's going to

Marko Papic:

do it is to deport illegal immigrants.

Marko Papic:

And so it's a really tough situation, Jacob, because on one hand, the people

Marko Papic:

who are here illegally, the vast majority of them are clearly just responding to

Marko Papic:

a demand that we have in our society in the United States for their services.

Marko Papic:

We've invited them effectively to come here and work illegally,

Marko Papic:

and we don't enforce our own laws on employing illegal immigrants.

Marko Papic:

So you have a lot of compassion.

Marko Papic:

You're like, Hey, man, like they're here because we employ them.

Marko Papic:

On the other hand, president Trump is not breaking the law when he actually

Marko Papic:

enforces immigration laws in the country.

Marko Papic:

So can you really protest against it?

Marko Papic:

That's where, this is a conundrum and it's one that can really only be solved

Marko Papic:

with legislative acts in Congress where Republicans and Democrats have to sit

Marko Papic:

together and effectively they have to give the Republicans what, what they

Marko Papic:

want, which is a giant, beautiful wall.

Marko Papic:

I say whatever the Republicans ask for, make it bigger, make it shinier.

Marko Papic:

Like, no.

Marko Papic:

I mean, if you are sitting here in 2025 and you're still against the

Marko Papic:

wall, I'm sorry, I don't know what to tell you, but that's clearly

Marko Papic:

what's gonna have to happen.

Marko Papic:

Like just I would, I would just say like if Republicans want a 20 foot wall,

Marko Papic:

make it a 70 foot wall, like let's go.

Marko Papic:

On the other hand, the Republicans are going to have to accept the reality

Marko Papic:

of the society, which is that we don't punish people who hire illegal

Marko Papic:

immigrants because we kind of need them for various reasons, and we can get

Marko Papic:

into the socioeconomic reasons why.

Marko Papic:

But again, if the Republicans were serious about doing something on the demand side.

Marko Papic:

They would talk about it.

Marko Papic:

They would talk about how we can jack up jail sentences.

Marko Papic:

Instead of slapping a business with $600 per migrant, you've

Marko Papic:

hired $600 per migrant.

Marko Papic:

Come on.

Marko Papic:

You know, like you could just say, Hey, CEO of this chicken farm in Idaho, oh,

Marko Papic:

you donated all this money to Republicans.

Marko Papic:

Cool story, bro.

Marko Papic:

You're going to jail for 30 years.

Marko Papic:

Oh, your business is unviable.

Marko Papic:

'cause Americas don't wanna work in chicken farms or pick strawberries.

Marko Papic:

Like, yeah, too bad.

Marko Papic:

30 years.

Marko Papic:

Jail sentence, boom.

Marko Papic:

Done.

Marko Papic:

So this is where I, I think the only way to solve this issue is that it needs to

Marko Papic:

be legislated and both sides are kind of.

Marko Papic:

Wrong, because neither side is really solving the problem at any point.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, we might as well be waiting for Bigfoot to come,

Jacob Shapiro:

because if you look at poll after poll after poll since the late 1980s,

Jacob Shapiro:

a majority of Americans have said, yes, we want immigration law reform.

Jacob Shapiro:

And this is before you get into the super polarized days of the two.

Jacob Shapiro:

Thou, like, no, since like the 1980s, since like Ted Kennedy and John

Jacob Shapiro:

McCain and some of these others were wandering the halls like Americans have

Jacob Shapiro:

wanted that and they haven't got that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And it, it goes to show you, um, there's this concept called effective

Jacob Shapiro:

polarization where, um, I forget who, uh, I, I'll have to apologize

Jacob Shapiro:

to the researcher who did this.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm pretty sure he was at Yale.

Jacob Shapiro:

Anyway, the, the notion being that actually when it comes to the issues,

Jacob Shapiro:

Americans are not actually more or less polarized than they've ever been.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's just that we demonize the other side and then we put in the most

Jacob Shapiro:

polarizing voices and positions of power.

Jacob Shapiro:

And they get their power from being angrier and accusing the

Jacob Shapiro:

other side of other things.

Jacob Shapiro:

But before we, I, I want to get back to the immigration point, but I don't wanna

Jacob Shapiro:

leave the media thing just quite yet.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause But wait.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Go, go, go, go.

Jacob Shapiro:

Wait, go.

Marko Papic:

I just, if I can just, that's not entirely correct, right?

Marko Papic:

Like that we haven't had any, uh, legislative acts.

Marko Papic:

We did actually.

Marko Papic:

And here, here is where if you are a liberal critic of Donald Trump,

Marko Papic:

here is where you, you know, we do this podcast for just normal

Marko Papic:

people who are at a barbecue having a beer with an uncle, right?

Marko Papic:

Like, this is what it's about.

Marko Papic:

This is what we're arming you with.

Marko Papic:

Tools.

Marko Papic:

If you're a Republican, we'll argue with tools to make fun of your liberal friends.

Marko Papic:

If you're liberal, we'll arm you with the tools for your Republican uncle.

Marko Papic:

So, if you're liberal, here is where the argument ends.

Marko Papic:

Honestly.

Marko Papic:

This is where you, this is where you just end it.

Marko Papic:

Anybody who says anything, you just go and say, Hey, look up why the

Marko Papic:

bipartisan bill collapsed in early 2024.

Marko Papic:

There was one, and then Donald Trump did say to his allies in the Senate,

Marko Papic:

don't sign on to a comprehensive, bipartisan way to solve this issue

Marko Papic:

because I need it for the election.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Now again, he won the election fair and square.

Marko Papic:

He's a democratically elected president of the United States of America.

Marko Papic:

And if a Democratic collective president of the United States of

Marko Papic:

America wants to enforce federal law with federal law enforcement,

Marko Papic:

I don't know what to tell you.

Marko Papic:

You can't say it's illegal.

Marko Papic:

You might say, well, it's unfair, it's this and that, but sanctuary cities, that

Marko Papic:

is a figment of somebody's imagination.

Marko Papic:

Like you can't just declare a city, a sanctuary city, sorry.

Marko Papic:

Mayors like, you know, Karen Bass.

Marko Papic:

Like, Hey, maybe you should make sure we have water in our fire hydrants, you know?

Marko Papic:

But anyways, leaving that aside, the point is you can't, like

Marko Papic:

what does a sanctuary city needs?

Marko Papic:

It means that local law enforcement doesn't cooperate with federal

Marko Papic:

law enforcement, but federal law.

Marko Papic:

Immigration law and federal officials are going to enforce it.

Marko Papic:

So the truth is, president Trump can do what he's doing.

Marko Papic:

It's legal and protesting it is kind of meh, you know?

Marko Papic:

Well, well, but But again, but again, but again, sorry.

Marko Papic:

Sorry to interrupt.

Marko Papic:

But again, the original sin here, I mean the original, original sin is

Marko Papic:

that American economy and American voters and American businesses

Marko Papic:

definitely want the illegal immigrants.

Marko Papic:

That's the original sin.

Marko Papic:

But the second original sin is that when somebody tried to do something about it,

Marko Papic:

a bipartisan bill that you say is Bigfoot.

Marko Papic:

We had Bigfoot in early 2024, and President Trump told his allies

Marko Papic:

in the Senate, don't sign onto this bill, don't solve this issue.

Marko Papic:

I need it to be a problem so I can win the election.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And so that is something out of, in this timeline that I think

Marko Papic:

you forgot in the introduction.

Marko Papic:

It's a very important point.

Marko Papic:

We had a bipartisan solution.

Marko Papic:

Well, I, I'm not sure how good it was, but like at least

Marko Papic:

there was the beginning of it.

Marko Papic:

Yeah,

Jacob Shapiro:

there was an attempt because, because because Biden

Jacob Shapiro:

was an old school legislature and like his biggest skill, whatever

Jacob Shapiro:

you think about Joe Biden and Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

His, his loss of, you know, uh, faculties at the end there and things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

That was his superpower.

Jacob Shapiro:

His superpower.

Jacob Shapiro:

He was, he was one of the old guard, he was one of the only ones left that

Jacob Shapiro:

could build bipartisan legislation and he did some interesting things in 2021 and

Jacob Shapiro:

2022, and by 24 he was too long in the tooth and he didn't have the cash there.

Jacob Shapiro:

But if you look back at the history since the 1980s, I bet you would find multiple

Jacob Shapiro:

bills that died on the shoals of, you know, a presidential race or maybe new

Jacob Shapiro:

Gingrich gotten there, or like, you know, all, all the time like immigration.

Jacob Shapiro:

Is held up at the last minute, even though it's something that people agree on.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I I, I want to go back, 'cause this goes back to the media point a

Jacob Shapiro:

little bit, which is, is it legal?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because I'm, I'm with you up until a point, and I think the media helped

Jacob Shapiro:

create the story and Trump's response to the media, like it was almost like

Jacob Shapiro:

a self-reinforcing, um, you know, avalanche of things that happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I don't know that it is actually legal.

Jacob Shapiro:

And when I, I sat up in my chair a little bit when I, you know,

Jacob Shapiro:

read the first headline about the Marines, then I was like, okay, now

Jacob Shapiro:

we're sort of like National Guard.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I can sort of get on there.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's not, it's, it's not perfect.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the last time, um, um, the Insurrection Act was invoked was 1992 in

Jacob Shapiro:

Los Angeles for the Rodney King protest.

Jacob Shapiro:

The George HW Bush sent, you know, national Guard troops to Los Angeles.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, that was taken with the governor's request, but Trump isn't even using that.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's using something called section 1 2 4 0 6 of the US Code, which

Jacob Shapiro:

gives the president the authority to call members of the National Guard.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um.

Jacob Shapiro:

Of any state into federal service when quote, there is a rebellion or a danger

Jacob Shapiro:

of a rebellion against the authority of the government of the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the President can do whatever he wants to repel the invasion

Jacob Shapiro:

or suppress the rebellion.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is not an invasion or a rebellion.

Jacob Shapiro:

So we're already like on extremely shaky ground.

Jacob Shapiro:

And that's the National Guard, that's not the Marines.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you start talking about the Marines and I'm starting to think

Jacob Shapiro:

about the Rubicon, like literally the Rubicon and the deployment of Roman

Jacob Shapiro:

soldiers against Roman citizens and like, what the f is going on here.

Jacob Shapiro:

So go, go, go, go.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sorry.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

So, so two things.

Marko Papic:

Two things.

Marko Papic:

First of all, uh, to just clarify what is definitely not illegal, it

Marko Papic:

is definitely not illegal for law enforcement officers of the federal

Marko Papic:

government to enforce federal law.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

What I mean by that is that going around and picking illegal immigrants

Marko Papic:

and putting them in jail, like, sorry.

Marko Papic:

That is, that's legal.

Marko Papic:

The federal government, like again, why did America close

Marko Papic:

its eyes for 45 years to this?

Marko Papic:

Because everyone profited from it effectively.

Marko Papic:

This is how we've built this country.

Marko Papic:

And we don't have the laws really, we don't enforce the

Marko Papic:

laws against people who hire.

Marko Papic:

Again, you cannot in most countries in the world.

Marko Papic:

And I, one of the things I wanna do on this podcast in, because, uh,

Marko Papic:

I suspect our audience is going to be almost overwhelmingly American,

Marko Papic:

and, and hopefully that will change over time as, uh, we piss off enough

Marko Papic:

Americans that they don't listen to us.

Marko Papic:

Just kidding, just kidding.

Marko Papic:

Just kidding.

Marko Papic:

No, but like, I just really want to always use examples from the rest of the world.

Marko Papic:

You know, illegal immigration is an issue everywhere, but really only

Marko Papic:

in America does the society close.

Marko Papic:

Its eyes so much to this reality that it allows the country to

Marko Papic:

go on hiring illegal immigrants.

Marko Papic:

I can't tell you how many places in Europe.

Marko Papic:

You face seriously con, serious consequences for

Marko Papic:

employing an illegal immigrant.

Marko Papic:

Like you go to jail, you get fined significantly.

Marko Papic:

And, and that's just not the case here.

Marko Papic:

So that's the first issue.

Marko Papic:

Now that being said, there are laws in the books, and if the president gets

Marko Papic:

elected promising, he's gonna enforce them as President Trump clearly did.

Marko Papic:

That's not illegal.

Marko Papic:

So those ice raids are not illegal.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And if they wanna go into a school or a church, sorry, mayors of random,

Marko Papic:

democratically held cities, you have no authority to prevent the federal

Marko Papic:

government of the United States of America from enforcing federal law.

Marko Papic:

That's just a fact.

Marko Papic:

So I know that sounds like Fox News segment, but No.

Marko Papic:

Well, that's where Fox News is right now.

Marko Papic:

To your point, I. Deploying National Guard over, uh, you know, 14 people

Marko Papic:

calling in poor Waymo's and then torching them is obviously ridiculous.

Marko Papic:

The LAPD is probably the most competent law enforcement on the planet in

Marko Papic:

handling protests because as Tupac Shakur correctly surmised, we tend to blow

Marko Papic:

stuff up in Los Angeles quite often.

Marko Papic:

That's just how we celebrate national championships in basketball and so on.

Marko Papic:

You know, I mean, you wouldn't know anything about that.

Marko Papic:

No, I wouldn't.

Marko Papic:

Given that you were once an Atlanta Hawks fan and so hot, but

Jacob Shapiro:

thank you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Thank you for that.

Marko Papic:

And now it's how you're even more removed from this,

Marko Papic:

given that you're Pelicans fan.

Marko Papic:

But my point is that, so now we can discuss your point.

Marko Papic:

I just want to clarify that when I said that what happened was not illegal, I

Marko Papic:

mean that the president of the United States of America can ask his federal

Marko Papic:

law enforcement to go and enforce federal law, and that's where the

Marko Papic:

illegal immigration thing comes in.

Marko Papic:

Um, then the protests happen and then he calls the National Guard, you know.

Marko Papic:

It's, it's just incredible how far we've come.

Marko Papic:

So now I'm gonna sound like CNN, right?

Marko Papic:

We, we sound like Fox News a second ago.

Marko Papic:

Now we're gonna sound like CNN George W. Bush.

Marko Papic:

George W. Bush, right?

Marko Papic:

The guy who like invaded countries 'cause like they were there,

Jacob Shapiro:

or, or because they, they, uh, they didn't do it.

Jacob Shapiro:

His daddy told them to do.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Or yes.

Marko Papic:

So like George W. Bush.

Marko Papic:

So Katrina happens.

Marko Papic:

You are in New Orleans.

Marko Papic:

So this is part of, uh, you probably know this much better than me.

Marko Papic:

Katrina happens.

Marko Papic:

And, uh,

Jacob Shapiro:

oh, and by the way, uh, if anybody from FEMA is listening,

Jacob Shapiro:

Katrina was a hurricane that happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

And yes, hurricanes do happen in the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

Please get your ax together.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hurricanes

Marko Papic:

spin fast.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sorry, go on.

Marko Papic:

So, okay, so the Katrina happens and the governor of

Marko Papic:

Louisiana, for some bizarre reason doesn't call up the National Guard.

Marko Papic:

I forgot why, but.

Marko Papic:

There was a delay, and George W. Bush like really wanted to call up the

Marko Papic:

National Guard and overrule the governor.

Marko Papic:

And he struggled with this decision.

Marko Papic:

And one of the reasons that he didn't is because he did

Marko Papic:

not wanna cross the Rubicon.

Marko Papic:

Can you believe that?

Marko Papic:

Like, this wasn't like in 1953, president Eisenhower really

Marko Papic:

struggled with the morality?

Marko Papic:

No, no, no.

Marko Papic:

This was like 20 years ago.

Marko Papic:

It wasn't that long ago, and it was in the middle of Patriot Act.

Marko Papic:

It was in the middle of all sorts of ways in which the federal

Marko Papic:

government expanded its surveillance of Americans and all this stuff.

Marko Papic:

It's not like George W. Bush was some, you know, Pinco Communist

Marko Papic:

liberal, like no, no, no.

Marko Papic:

He was George W. Bush, a NeoCon.

Marko Papic:

Who did all sorts of things, but he had to reflect on this.

Marko Papic:

There's a hurricane, it hits Louisiana.

Marko Papic:

The governor doesn't call up the National Guard.

Marko Papic:

Should I call it up?

Marko Papic:

I don't know.

Marko Papic:

I don't think I should.

Marko Papic:

I, I don't think I have the legality to it.

Marko Papic:

And then you've got Donald Trump being like, yeah, let's go up.

Marko Papic:

Let's get the Marines, let's get the Osprey.

Marko Papic:

You know, they can repel down and we can like, yeah.

Marko Papic:

Like, well, and he, and that's, and that's where

Jacob Shapiro:

during his first administration, the George Floyd

Jacob Shapiro:

protest happened and he wanted to do this, and he had advisors around him

Jacob Shapiro:

push back and say, you can't do this.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you had the Pentagon push back and say, no, no, no.

Jacob Shapiro:

The US military is not a police force.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like we don't go and put down, uh, protests and things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he said on the campaign trail multiple times, that was a mistake.

Jacob Shapiro:

I wish I had done it.

Jacob Shapiro:

If I get a chance again, I'm going to do it.

Jacob Shapiro:

So there's part of that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And, you know, to your point about George WI mean, there's a very short

Jacob Shapiro:

list of times that a, a, a president has deployed the National Guard

Jacob Shapiro:

against the wishes of a governor or without a request from a governor.

Jacob Shapiro:

The, yeah, it's the last, the last time it happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

Was, uh, could we call him an Uber liberal, I dunno, 1965 LBJ.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he was doing it to protect Selma, the protestors in Selma, Alabama.

Jacob Shapiro:

Which, you know, that's interesting too, by the way, for the liberals,

Jacob Shapiro:

because it's like, okay, like a very liberal president doing liberal

Jacob Shapiro:

things like deployed National Guard into a conservative state in order

Jacob Shapiro:

to make sure that something happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like there's a weird, anyway, there's a reason that people were

Jacob Shapiro:

uncomfortable about that because the precedent sets is dangerous.

Jacob Shapiro:

And we haven't sort of flirted with that before.

Jacob Shapiro:

But it's LBJ and then it hadn't happened since the Civil War.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, that's, that's the list.

Jacob Shapiro:

So it's like, it's a very, I think there was one in,

Marko Papic:

I think it was 1950s as well for, uh, school segregation.

Jacob Shapiro:

Was that, I thought that was also in Alabama.

Jacob Shapiro:

I thought that was with the request of the governor, but maybe not.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I'll, I'll look it up real fast.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think.

Marko Papic:

Well, it doesn't matter.

Marko Papic:

The point is it's civil war.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And then like two times due to racial, uh, inequalities in America.

Marko Papic:

Fifties and sixties or maybe once.

Marko Papic:

The point is it, it has, it, it, it hasn't happened many times.

Marko Papic:

And the severity of these protests doesn't even come close to the 2020, by the way.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, and by the way, you're, you're right.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm sorry.

Jacob Shapiro:

So Selma is President Johnson, 1965, university of Alabama integration,

Jacob Shapiro:

1963, president Kennedy, and of course now President Kennedy's nephew.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh my bad.

Jacob Shapiro:

Six three nephew, RFK Jr. Also just firing entire boards of vaccine scientists.

Jacob Shapiro:

So there's a Kennedy running around too.

Jacob Shapiro:

Don't to talk.

Jacob Shapiro:

But yeah, we

Marko Papic:

don't have enough bandwidth to Jacob to deal

Marko Papic:

with all that's happening.

Marko Papic:

We'll have to leave the vaccine for later, later.

Marko Papic:

Hopefully none of our children die in the meantime.

Marko Papic:

Knock on wood.

Marko Papic:

Let's move on.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Alright.

Marko Papic:

So I've, I've already gotten

Jacob Shapiro:

some hate mail for, so for some very previous short

Jacob Shapiro:

vaccine takes here, so keep it coming.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm happy to, to absorb all of your vaccine hate if

Jacob Shapiro:

you're a, anyway, go on Marco.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sorry.

Marko Papic:

No, but like, okay, so, uh, I like your point.

Marko Papic:

Your point is there's this weird duality, dichotomy, you know, like

Marko Papic:

protesting, uh, protecting protestors.

Marko Papic:

And now, um, you know, uh, you know, standing aside, em, I will say the one

Marko Papic:

difference between 2020, the social justice protest that happened, is

Marko Papic:

that they weren't necess, I mean, not necessarily, they were not targeting

Marko Papic:

federal law enforcement officials.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Or federal, like federal government.

Marko Papic:

And what happened over the weekend in Los Angeles is that the protests started at

Marko Papic:

the detention center downtown Los Angeles, where basically the, the crowd suspected

Marko Papic:

ICE agents had taken, you know, um, uh, had taken some of the illegal immigrants

Marko Papic:

that were rounded up in ICE raid.

Marko Papic:

So you could make an argument if you're at the White House

Marko Papic:

that you're protecting federal.

Marko Papic:

Basically, uh, facilities that are literally under attack

Marko Papic:

because they're federal facilities and they're under attack for

Marko Papic:

basically enforcing federal law.

Marko Papic:

The problem here, where that breaks down is that, again, LAPD wasn't

Marko Papic:

standing aside and letting this happen.

Marko Papic:

They were intervening and intervening in, in force and with, uh, serious skill sets.

Marko Papic:

You know, this isn't like, I mean, you know, if there were protests

Marko Papic:

in like Vermont, I could see why the National Guard would be needed.

Marko Papic:

But this is Los Angeles and it's, if there's one place in America

Marko Papic:

that knows how to handle protests and to deal with the situation,

Marko Papic:

it's LAPD, it's Los Angeles.

Marko Papic:

And that's where I think the, the argument by the White House really

Marko Papic:

breaks down and it's a made for TV event.

Marko Papic:

Now, is it illegal?

Marko Papic:

Is it illegal for president of the United States of America

Marko Papic:

to call up a National Guard?

Marko Papic:

I mean, it's not, I would argue it isn't.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, but maybe you have a different take.

Jacob Shapiro:

Can you federalize the National Guard in order to police protests?

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't, I, I mean, I'm not a lawyer.

Jacob Shapiro:

We'd have to get a lawyer on here, but based on my reading of the

Jacob Shapiro:

insurrection, but he's not even invoking the Insurrection Act.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's invoking, he's invoking, he's not section 1 2 4 0 6 of the US code, which

Jacob Shapiro:

I hadn't heard of before until I was reading this on the plane yesterday.

Jacob Shapiro:

And again, I'll just quote it like he can call in members of the National

Jacob Shapiro:

Guard as many as he wants, but.

Jacob Shapiro:

When there is quote, a rebellion or a danger of a rebellion against the

Jacob Shapiro:

authority of the government of the United States, and then he can as

Jacob Shapiro:

many troops as he wants to repel the invasion or suppress the rebellion.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, there's definitely, there is no self-respecting court of law that is gonna

Jacob Shapiro:

call what is happening in Los Angeles, a rebellion against the federal government.

Jacob Shapiro:

Now, if California secedes like, then we have a very interesting

Jacob Shapiro:

like theoretical conversation.

Jacob Shapiro:

We're, we're going there man.

Jacob Shapiro:

We'll get there, but like this, we're going there, this,

Marko Papic:

we'll get there.

Marko Papic:

This is not that we're getting there.

Jacob Shapiro:

So maybe you could use the insurrection act like

Jacob Shapiro:

maybe you could paper it up.

Jacob Shapiro:

But this to this to me, is the thing that is disturbing and I think the media.

Jacob Shapiro:

Honestly shot at SWAT early because the thing that you cover here is the illegal

Jacob Shapiro:

deployment of US military force to police, uh, you know, us even violent protesters.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, no, like, that's not, that is illegal.

Jacob Shapiro:

That is not what is supposed to happen.

Jacob Shapiro:

And that is that slippery slope where Trump doesn't care.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's breaking norms left and right.

Jacob Shapiro:

All that matters to him is a, that he looks like a strong man,

Jacob Shapiro:

and b, that the precedent is set.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think we should also say, while all this is happening, it's perfect

Jacob Shapiro:

timing for him, which makes me even more suspicious because while all this

Jacob Shapiro:

is happening, yeah, the Chinese and the American negotiators are sitting

Jacob Shapiro:

there and I'm sure the US is basically bending over for the Chinese saying,

Jacob Shapiro:

we don't want the trade war anymore.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's take down the tariffs.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, and he gets to look tough.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's go there next.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Elon Trump thing is gone because Elon and Trump are now kissing faces at each

Jacob Shapiro:

other, and Trump is the man of action versus the pussy weenie liberals who are

Jacob Shapiro:

just like, yeah, we're gonna sue you.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's like, it's literally perfect.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the last thing I'll say before I let you say whatever you want is.

Jacob Shapiro:

I said this, I re-quoted this on, on XI dunno if you're an Andor fan.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm an Andor fan, but, uh oh.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Shout out to I am.

Jacob Shapiro:

I love it.

Jacob Shapiro:

Shout out to at, uh, MK tune.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm just gonna quote him.

Jacob Shapiro:

You remember that part in Andor when all those reporters on Gorman made it sound

Jacob Shapiro:

like the Gormans were very violent and the empire just had descendants, soldiers

Jacob Shapiro:

to stop things from getting out of hand.

Jacob Shapiro:

But in reality, the soldiers wanted things to get out of hand.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like starting to sound like a little bit of a false flag, isn't it?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because the worse it gets, the more he can deploy, the more he can be the man

Jacob Shapiro:

of action, the more he can pull the wool over the eyes of his supporters

Jacob Shapiro:

who could look at what's happening in London right now between the US and

Jacob Shapiro:

China and just see total capitulation.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's what I'm expecting anyway.

Jacob Shapiro:

So sorry.

Jacob Shapiro:

Go.

Marko Papic:

So, so, yeah, yeah.

Marko Papic:

No, no, no, no, no.

Marko Papic:

Thank you for that.

Marko Papic:

And I, I just wanna say one thing, to be fair to Trump, the National Guard

Marko Papic:

were not deployed to control protests.

Marko Papic:

You know, for the most part, they stayed protecting the

Marko Papic:

building, the federal building.

Marko Papic:

So, to be fair, you could argue he's augmenting, he's letting

Marko Papic:

the LAPD have more resources so they don't have to No, he's not.

Marko Papic:

Or, or he's like

Jacob Shapiro:

flirting with just how, what, just how far

Jacob Shapiro:

can I push the line here?

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, oh, obviously

Marko Papic:

no, obviously, obviously he's doing everything you're saying

Marko Papic:

and, and I don't wanna pivot to that.

Marko Papic:

I just wanted to like, give just that one defense.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

One defense is that the, the way that the National Guard has been used thus

Marko Papic:

far in literal ways on the streets of Los Angeles is that they have been

Marko Papic:

confined to this one detention center.

Marko Papic:

Uh, which means that, you know, the LAPD doesn't have to do

Marko Papic:

that, which is like slow clap.

Marko Papic:

Thank you.

Marko Papic:

That, that seems like a very measured way to use them.

Marko Papic:

And so you are getting the national news like, oh my God, the, the

Marko Papic:

Marines are in Los Angeles, but.

Marko Papic:

They have no role in actual crowd control.

Marko Papic:

Now moving on to your points of why the timing is perfect,

Marko Papic:

'cause we need to go there.

Marko Papic:

You and I, we were gonna spend all this time today talking about the Musk Trump,

Marko Papic:

you know, breakup, which is hilarious.

Marko Papic:

And it's just so, so amazing.

Marko Papic:

There's so many things we can talk about here.

Marko Papic:

Um, we can talk about, uh, you know, you mentioned the negotiations on tariffs.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Where the United States of America is going to make deals, as I've said for the

Marko Papic:

past six months, we're gonna get deals.

Marko Papic:

They're not what you think they are, they're made for TV deals.

Marko Papic:

And then a bunch of people are like, wait a minute, I thought we were going

Marko Papic:

to put up barriers and make everything in America from a water a, a bottle of water.

Marko Papic:

You know, like where secretary, uh, Lunik went on TV and said that we should

Marko Papic:

all drink Aquafina, not Fiji water.

Marko Papic:

Like what?

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

You

Marko Papic:

do realize like, what are you talking about, man?

Marko Papic:

Like, and, and, and

Jacob Shapiro:

that we should grow bananas in the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know that.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know that we're supposed to be objective on both sides.

Jacob Shapiro:

I can't with Lutnick.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's such a fricking moron.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sorry.

Jacob Shapiro:

Listen.

Jacob Shapiro:

You don't have to be, I'm gonna be objective.

Marko Papic:

Okay?

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna be objective because you know why?

Marko Papic:

The best take down of Secretary Lutnick is a Republican Louisiana

Marko Papic:

senator who I'm sure you're Yes,

Jacob Shapiro:

yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

I was just jumping out.

Jacob Shapiro:

Thank you for saying this.

Jacob Shapiro:

Great.

Jacob Shapiro:

Kennedy, it was great.

Marko Papic:

Senator, Senator.

Marko Papic:

Like you listen.

Marko Papic:

Just Google Senator Kennedy Lutnick.

Marko Papic:

If you're not aware of what I'm talking about, dear listeners, go

Marko Papic:

on YouTube, watch, we'll put it into show notes or whatever it is.

Marko Papic:

It is unbelievable.

Marko Papic:

He undresses him the way that you would a child.

Marko Papic:

Like, you know, like when my son walks up to me, he says, daddy, daddy, why

Marko Papic:

can't we live on the Saturn daddy?

Marko Papic:

And I'm like, well, lemme tell you son.

Marko Papic:

That's what he did to him.

Marko Papic:

He's son to him.

Marko Papic:

It was embarrassing.

Marko Papic:

It was, you're the Secretary of Commerce of the United States of

Marko Papic:

America, man, and you have no fucking idea what you're talking about.

Marko Papic:

And it was a Republican senator from the great state of Louisiana

Marko Papic:

who absolutely dismantles him.

Marko Papic:

So yes, that's what's the context of this protest?

Marko Papic:

The context of this protest is that the United States of America is in

Marko Papic:

the process of choosing the lubricant

Marko Papic:

in, in 90 trade wheels.

Marko Papic:

Number one, I'm, I'm gonna push for that to be the title

Jacob Shapiro:

right there.

Jacob Shapiro:

Choosing the lubricant.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't think it's gonna get through, but it's too

Marko Papic:

good.

Marko Papic:

Well, mean people are gonna, unfortunately people are then

Marko Papic:

gonna think it's about tariffs.

Marko Papic:

We're not talking about tariffs.

Marko Papic:

We're just saying like, look, president Trump makes deals.

Marko Papic:

He does.

Marko Papic:

I don't like the taco trade.

Marko Papic:

Trump always chickens out.

Marko Papic:

It's pejorative, it's liberal kind of way to poke at Trump.

Marko Papic:

Like he's not chickening out.

Marko Papic:

He's going to get deals.

Marko Papic:

That will be marginally positive for the United States of America.

Marko Papic:

But if you are in the Howard Lunik, Peter Navarro camp of isolationism,

Marko Papic:

you are gonna be disappointed.

Marko Papic:

You know, like, sorry, Ben Bannon, the Benon Knights are gonna lose.

Marko Papic:

Duh.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

So that's, that's number one.

Marko Papic:

Then your other point was, uh, wait, you mentioned the tariffs

Marko Papic:

and you mentioned Elon Musk.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Like, right?

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

This was supposed to be the administration.

Marko Papic:

Trump is empowered by the richest, smartest man alive,

Marko Papic:

who is kind of like, who?

Marko Papic:

But like, hey, he's cool.

Marko Papic:

Right?

Marko Papic:

So that's gone.

Marko Papic:

And then the final one that you didn't mention is that the one big beautiful

Marko Papic:

bill is kind of one marginally sized, but like, yet somehow effective.

Marko Papic:

You know, kind of a bill doesn't get you off the first time, you know, gotta go

Marko Papic:

to the shower, you know, but like, eh, it's like, it's, it's not bad, you know?

Marko Papic:

That's.

Marko Papic:

Appropriately sized bill.

Marko Papic:

It's now what President Trump promised during his campaign.

Marko Papic:

He said 10 to $15 trillion of additional deficit spending.

Marko Papic:

It's two, two and a half right now.

Marko Papic:

And it might actually not even be stimulative if you

Marko Papic:

account for the tar bie.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

You, you've said I, I'm, I'm, uh, like looking at the math, I'm less convinced

Jacob Shapiro:

of that more and more because it's obvious that he's gonna increase spending

Jacob Shapiro:

here over the next couple of years.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then all the reductions happen after he's gone from office and

Jacob Shapiro:

then somebody else is gonna come in.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I, I have the, this is probably the first and only time in my life where

Jacob Shapiro:

I get why Elon Musk is frustrated.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause Elon Musk was empowered with the Department of Government

Jacob Shapiro:

efficiency and this huge task, and he's gonna cut government spending.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he really like, I mean, he took it, you know, his businesses,

Jacob Shapiro:

his reputation, like he, he took a significant hit in order to

Jacob Shapiro:

push some of these things through.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then, you know, president Trump wakes up one day and is like, by the way, here's

Jacob Shapiro:

another two to 3 trillion of spending.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, I know, I know.

Jacob Shapiro:

You're also thinking from a.

Jacob Shapiro:

From a market perspective that the market is thinking that it was gonna be more,

Jacob Shapiro:

but I think there's some currency there.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I, I would push back against you saying it's gonna be smaller.

Jacob Shapiro:

That this, like, this is going to add significant amounts to a deficit

Jacob Shapiro:

that is already unsustainable.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think Musk is saying not

Marko Papic:

really.

Marko Papic:

Look, if, even if we take, uh, well, Musk is obviously mathematically correct.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And so are you, like, you are mathematically correct, they will increase

Marko Papic:

the deficit, but if you look at the chart of the deficit, what this bill does,

Marko Papic:

it takes it from 6.5% to 7.5 and then it stays there for the next 10 years.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

But, but yeah, if you look at it harmonized over 10 years, but if

Jacob Shapiro:

you look at the next three to four years, we're boosting more than that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then after Trump supposedly leaves office, then it's

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna dip down below that.

Jacob Shapiro:

So for the next couple of years, you're actually gonna get

Jacob Shapiro:

higher percentages than that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then you're in this mythical fairy world that the, the next

Jacob Shapiro:

president is gonna be like, yes, I will sign up for enforcing the Trump.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, you know, deficit reductions on entitlements and things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, couple things.

Marko Papic:

We could have a whole podcast on that.

Marko Papic:

And I don't think that's a fair world.

Marko Papic:

That's the world we're headed to.

Marko Papic:

Like the political zeitgeist of the country is moving

Marko Papic:

away from wanton spending.

Marko Papic:

But, but even in, in that interim, if we focus, it's like it goes to

Marko Papic:

like seven point a half, 8% debt.

Marko Papic:

It doesn't blow up.

Marko Papic:

And again, relative to what he promised, he promised a lot of things Jacob,

Marko Papic:

and he's not getting any of them.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

That's my point.

Marko Papic:

You know, he promised 10 to 15 trillion stuff just relative to his promises.

Marko Papic:

This bill is may.

Marko Papic:

And it includes cuts that he did not campaign on.

Marko Papic:

That's the point.

Marko Papic:

So you've got three issues right now where it's kind of like meh.

Marko Papic:

One, you just lost the text.

Marko Papic:

Putin of America, right?

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Gone, uh, is accusing you of being a pedophile on On X Yeah.

Marko Papic:

On the platform.

Marko Papic:

He, he owns for what?

Marko Papic:

Alright, so that's the first.

Marko Papic:

The second is that all the promises you made about how much taxes you're

Marko Papic:

gonna cut, none of that is happening.

Marko Papic:

You know, you went from 10 to $15 trillion worth of tax cuts to 600 billion.

Marko Papic:

'cause I don't count extending the 2017 tax cuts.

Marko Papic:

That's not, that's not cutting anyone's taxes.

Marko Papic:

So no one's gonna have their taxes cut effectively.

Marko Papic:

Like you, you are not delivering on your campaign promises.

Marko Papic:

And in fact, you made fun of Nikki Haley for wanting to cut entitlements and

Marko Papic:

you're kind of cutting entitlements.

Marko Papic:

You know, not as much as like I. Mosque wants or conservatives

Marko Papic:

want, but you're cutting.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And then finally the trade deal.

Marko Papic:

The trade deal where basically like the us you know, he did the Liberation

Marko Papic:

Day and a lot of his Bentonite fans were like, yeah baby, we're gonna

Marko Papic:

make bicycles in this country.

Marko Papic:

You know, we're have John, we're gonna have summer, and, and Oh,

Marko Papic:

what's, what's a really good name?

Marko Papic:

Summer And Finn are gonna start working and picking strawberries.

Marko Papic:

You know, like, that's not gonna happen.

Marko Papic:

Those things are not gonna happen.

Marko Papic:

America's still gonna trade because the irony, and I said this on our

Marko Papic:

last podcast, podcast, the irony of all of this is that if you want to

Marko Papic:

collect revenue from tariffs, you kind of need trade because tariffs

Marko Papic:

are attacks imposed on imports.

Marko Papic:

So America has to continue to trade with the rest of the world

Marko Papic:

if we're going to actually generate revenue to offset the deficits.

Marko Papic:

So the point is that this administration is starting to

Marko Papic:

look less and less populist.

Marko Papic:

And here's where I wanna say something.

Marko Papic:

I know we are.

Marko Papic:

How many minutes?

Marko Papic:

We're 42 minutes.

Marko Papic:

We're always at a 45.

Marko Papic:

We're always 40.

Marko Papic:

45 minute when I think the biggest takeaway comes, I'm sorry, listeners.

Marko Papic:

This is, you know, this is just how it is.

Marko Papic:

This, this is the, if you're an advertising, this is

Jacob Shapiro:

the smic structure of our podcast.

Jacob Shapiro:

Ooh.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's a

Marko Papic:

It is, it is.

Marko Papic:

And if you're, if you're at a, if you're a, if you're an

Marko Papic:

advertiser, it's a great thing.

Marko Papic:

'cause everybody's gotta like wait until the gym comes later.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

So here's what I'm getting at.

Marko Papic:

This is a playbook we've been watching in Europe for the last 15 years.

Marko Papic:

There is nothing new to what Trump is doing.

Marko Papic:

Nothing.

Marko Papic:

So for the past 15 years in Europe, anti-establishment populist, I don't like

Marko Papic:

the term right wing, but fine, right-wing.

Marko Papic:

Right wing, but it's not fair 'cause it's, there's a ton of left Wink.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Left wing populist parties in Europe.

Marko Papic:

True Fins, Swedish Democrats, Marine Lapin, Git Builders, uh,

Marko Papic:

Podemos, Vox, five star movement.

Marko Papic:

Fratelli, Talia, Leor, Lego, what?

Marko Papic:

Whatever.

Marko Papic:

There's a ton of them.

Marko Papic:

They've all followed the following model.

Marko Papic:

They start campaigning.

Marko Papic:

European Commission is a bunch of elitist, you know, bureaucrats.

Marko Papic:

They're not gonna tell me how much I'm gonna blow out the budget deficit.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna spend as much as I want.

Marko Papic:

Structural reforms on retirement.

Marko Papic:

That was evil.

Marko Papic:

Increasing retirement age.

Marko Papic:

We're gonna reverse all those policies that the elitist imposed on you.

Marko Papic:

Trade.

Marko Papic:

Trade relationships.

Marko Papic:

Less America, more Russia.

Marko Papic:

Right?

Marko Papic:

Lots of these guys love Russia.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And then Euro area.

Marko Papic:

We don't want the Euro, we wanna leave the Euro.

Marko Papic:

So those are kind of the socioeconomic policies that a

Marko Papic:

lot of these populists walk into.

Marko Papic:

And then they come to power, or they become part of a governing coalition.

Marko Papic:

And the bond market riots yields go up, borrowing costs go up, equities

Marko Papic:

go down, the economy slows down.

Marko Papic:

People start worrying about their retirement savings.

Marko Papic:

They start worrying about their jobs.

Marko Papic:

And suddenly, suddenly all these populists, anti-establishment,

Marko Papic:

far left trotskyite far right, neo fascists suddenly enjoy the soft

Marko Papic:

leather, hand stitched leather in their government issued a eight saloon.

Marko Papic:

Suddenly they like the way that their suit.

Marko Papic:

Crunches with that smooth journeying engineering, the soft

Marko Papic:

closing of the door sounds nice.

Marko Papic:

They start liking it.

Marko Papic:

They like the smell of power.

Marko Papic:

They like being in charge and they don't want the society to collapse

Marko Papic:

so that they can have their, you know, like anti-establishment

Marko Papic:

revolt, and then they start migrating to the middle on every issue.

Marko Papic:

That actually matters to the pocketbooks of the people who they now rule or are

Marko Papic:

part of a coalition to rule, except on one issue, which is immigration.

Marko Papic:

Boom.

Marko Papic:

Instead, not only do they keep their policy, they tripled down

Marko Papic:

on anti-immigrant policies.

Marko Papic:

Why?

Marko Papic:

Because immigrants don't vote.

Marko Papic:

You know what I mean?

Marko Papic:

They don't vote.

Marko Papic:

And some asylum policies have gone outta whack across the western world.

Marko Papic:

Like facts, you know, like, what are we supposed to do here?

Marko Papic:

This is a fact.

Marko Papic:

Um, and so it's an easy win.

Marko Papic:

So when you lose your credentials as a populist, as a man or woman of the people,

Marko Papic:

when you lose those credentials on every single issue, how do you maintain them?

Marko Papic:

Well, you maintain them by tripling down on anti-immigrant policies.

Marko Papic:

That's the way to do it.

Marko Papic:

For example, Italy just had a referendum on citizenship and the Prime Minister

Marko Papic:

Georgia Maloney, effectively didn't want to say how she was gonna vote.

Marko Papic:

She didn't even wanna vote.

Marko Papic:

She showed up at the voting booth and did not cast a vote.

Marko Papic:

And by the way, this was not something to give everyone

Marko Papic:

in Italy, like a citizenship.

Marko Papic:

It was just like reducing the number of years from 10 to five, like very

Marko Papic:

modest changes on citizenship in Italy.

Marko Papic:

And you know, like the.

Marko Papic:

By the way, this is not about illegal immigration, right?

Marko Papic:

These are people in Italy who are, who are like, who working

Marko Papic:

and speak Italian fluently.

Marko Papic:

And, uh, and, and she was still opposed to that referendum, but

Marko Papic:

George Maloney is not, I'm sorry for Trump fans who might like her.

Marko Papic:

She's a centrist as it gets, man.

Marko Papic:

Like she's maybe the most competent policymaker in the entire western

Marko Papic:

world in terms of like navigating the markets and being fiscally responsible.

Marko Papic:

And you know, like George Meloy, I mean, she's basically a member of

Marko Papic:

a neofascist party for tele deity.

Marko Papic:

No, it doesn't matter.

Marko Papic:

She has become completely establishment, completely 180 degree

Marko Papic:

turn for that party even on Ukraine.

Marko Papic:

Even on foreign policy.

Marko Papic:

Well, she, she's also,

Jacob Shapiro:

she's an interesting, she's more interesting than most of them because

Jacob Shapiro:

she's always been anti anti-Russia.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like she has taken, she's like a weird mix of all these different

Jacob Shapiro:

things, and she's always had more of a head on her shoulders, which, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, you said Fratelli Italia, like she's the sister in Fratelli Italia.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, she's the one who actually, like, she, she's always been a really,

Jacob Shapiro:

really compelling figure because she actually, I think, understand she is,

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I think most of the people you're talking about, it's instinctual.

Jacob Shapiro:

They sort of move that direction because they had, they have no other choice.

Jacob Shapiro:

Whereas my impression of Maloney is she is one of the few self-aware

Jacob Shapiro:

politicians who was like, no, no, no, no.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I know where I want to go and I know how I want to get from point A

Jacob Shapiro:

to point B, and I know which levers I have to pull and whose ass I have to

Jacob Shapiro:

kiss and where I have to be seen and the right balance of all these things.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, that's fair.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like she's a, she, she's a, a head the cream of the crop.

Marko Papic:

But, but, and at the same time on immigration variant immigrant.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And very successful in pursuing that.

Marko Papic:

So the, so I agree with you.

Marko Papic:

I, I, I think what we should do, by the way, for one of our next segments

Marko Papic:

is we should rank policy makers.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

We should.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Trade value.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, trade value.

Marko Papic:

Oh, trade value.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Jacob Shapiro:

I can't wait.

Jacob Shapiro:

If you

Marko Papic:

could trade your, your president for, for another, oh God.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's so good.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let, let's do that.

Jacob Shapiro:

We got it.

Marko Papic:

I mean, I'm taking, I'm gonna, I'm gonna announce

Marko Papic:

my first pick right now.

Marko Papic:

Georgia Maloney.

Marko Papic:

I think she is absolutely crushing it on every, like the way she plays Trump.

Marko Papic:

I mean, she's just like so good.

Marko Papic:

She's so good.

Marko Papic:

Now the point still stands though.

Marko Papic:

We've seen this for 15 years in Europe.

Marko Papic:

Like I work with investors and clients in finance and they come to me and

Marko Papic:

for 15 years I've had to answer this stupid question, will Europe collapse?

Marko Papic:

No, it won't.

Marko Papic:

It will not collapse.

Marko Papic:

They're all faux populists.

Marko Papic:

Faux.

Marko Papic:

They're faking it.

Marko Papic:

Except alternative for deland has not actually changed its policies

Marko Papic:

on a lot of this stuff, but a lot of these other parties have, and I

Marko Papic:

think that we might be witnessing it.

Marko Papic:

This is how the protests in LA might be profound.

Marko Papic:

Jacob, we might be witnessing actually.

Marko Papic:

A shift in the Trump administration.

Marko Papic:

This may allow, so you are making fun of the Trump administration when

Marko Papic:

you say like, Hey, all this chaos is going on and they're sending the

Marko Papic:

national guards to la What I, what I see it as almost as a positive because

Marko Papic:

it allows the big man to be big.

Marko Papic:

It allows the populist anti-establishment, you know, white House to pretend there's

Marko Papic:

still populist and anti-establishment, but actually they start cutting deals.

Marko Papic:

Yep.

Marko Papic:

That a lot of liberals are gonna make fun President Trump for.

Marko Papic:

But at the end of the day, like deals are fine, deals are good.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

He promised the moon, he's gonna get us to the roof of the house.

Marko Papic:

Who cares?

Marko Papic:

At the end of the day, he might be pivoting towards much more centrism.

Marko Papic:

Than, uh, that people think, tell me why I'm wrong.

Marko Papic:

No, take the other side.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, I'm not gonna take completely the other side, but I, I have

Jacob Shapiro:

sort of three things to throw in there.

Jacob Shapiro:

The first is just an aside, you're right about a FD but what's been

Jacob Shapiro:

interesting about the German context is that the C-D-U-C-S-U basically took,

Jacob Shapiro:

like, took that part of the a FD the part that would move to the center

Jacob Shapiro:

and was just like, okay, we're gonna take that for ourselves now so you

Jacob Shapiro:

can sit out there with the crazy shit.

Jacob Shapiro:

And now this E-D-U-C-S-U has rebranded, sort of more like, has taken those things.

Jacob Shapiro:

So it's like an interesting centrist party that is, and, and we'll see if it works.

Jacob Shapiro:

The other thing on the deals is, and this is, you know, one of those

Jacob Shapiro:

areas where things make sense up to a point and then it becomes farcical

Jacob Shapiro:

again because, you know, there are these US China trade talks coming.

Jacob Shapiro:

You and I have both been on this, that this is gonna be something that

Jacob Shapiro:

gets done sooner rather than later.

Jacob Shapiro:

Meanwhile, the US Japan trade talks continue to be absolutely abysmal.

Jacob Shapiro:

They just had their fifth round and the Japanese negotiator

Jacob Shapiro:

came out and said, we've agreed.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, let's see if I have the quote.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, uh, 'cause I want to get him exactly right because it

Jacob Shapiro:

was such an amazing quote.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, we have not found any point of agreement.

Jacob Shapiro:

On anything.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're not agreeing on absolutely anything.

Jacob Shapiro:

And that's like your closest ally there.

Jacob Shapiro:

So at the same, and you know, there was also that reporting about how they

Jacob Shapiro:

literally paused a trade negotiation because Lutnick and Cent, and I forget

Jacob Shapiro:

who the third one was in the room, but somebody else was in the room too,

Jacob Shapiro:

and they had to pause because none, uh, Jameson Greer, the US uh, trade

Jacob Shapiro:

representative, they were all in the room negotiating with the Japanese

Jacob Shapiro:

and they had different positions.

Jacob Shapiro:

So they had to tell the Japanese to stop for a second so the three of

Jacob Shapiro:

them could go like, figure out what they were actually talking about.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, there's just kind of an insanity there.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I, I want to go back to the, the point about immigration, and this is actually on

Jacob Shapiro:

my mind 'cause we haven't said this yet.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Willamette River is behind me.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm in Portland.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm speaking at a forestry event, timber event here in Portland,

Jacob Shapiro:

um, in just a couple of hours.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and as you might imagine, um, this is a big issue for them, not because

Jacob Shapiro:

immigrants are cutting down trees or anything like that, but because the

Jacob Shapiro:

timber industry is thinking about real estate and home construction

Jacob Shapiro:

over a 15, 20 year time horizon.

Jacob Shapiro:

And it's been a really good last 15, 20 years.

Jacob Shapiro:

In part because in the early 1990s, you had a lot of immigrants come to

Jacob Shapiro:

the United States and even the illegal ones, eventually they stay here and

Jacob Shapiro:

eventually they wanna live in houses.

Jacob Shapiro:

And so if you have population growth, which is us, which for, if you're pro

Jacob Shapiro:

these sort of cyclical things, you want to have lots of natural births, but you also

Jacob Shapiro:

want to have lot, lots of immigration.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you look at the early 1990s, mid 1990s, you could say, oh, well,

Jacob Shapiro:

natural births were falling a little bit, but still relatively high.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you had all these immigrants that were coming to the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

So you get this period where there's gonna be a lot of demand for

Jacob Shapiro:

lumber over the next 15, 20 years.

Jacob Shapiro:

Now I'm supposed to go to this audience and tell them, well, so they want to

Jacob Shapiro:

know over the next 15, 20 years, what are you thinking about these things?

Jacob Shapiro:

And most of, not all of 'em, I'm gonna make some contrarian arguments to them

Jacob Shapiro:

about why they should be optimistic.

Jacob Shapiro:

But most of the data.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sucks.

Jacob Shapiro:

And this data that really sucks is US demographics because US births have

Jacob Shapiro:

fallen off a cliff and we actually had a really high number of international

Jacob Shapiro:

arrivals last year, but it's making up for a couple years of none.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you can imagine after the travel ban and President Trump tripling

Jacob Shapiro:

down in immigration that these things are gonna go away in general.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I think it's easier for the Europeans to to crunch on.

Jacob Shapiro:

Immigration in part.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause you know, they have, it's the gift that keeps on giving

Jacob Shapiro:

Angela Merkel lecturing the rest of Europe on being moral because

Jacob Shapiro:

they aren't taking their migrants.

Jacob Shapiro:

And also the nature of those migrants.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, yes, some of them are just hard workers, but Europe's a lot more exposed

Jacob Shapiro:

to jihadists that are coming up through the Middle East or things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Or folks that are, you know, not bringing tangible skills but are literally

Jacob Shapiro:

just looking for anywhere to go.

Jacob Shapiro:

Whereas the US.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sorry to be crude about it is getting a higher class of migrant

Jacob Shapiro:

that is coming to the border.

Jacob Shapiro:

You're getting in, you know, countries in South America, whether it's Ecuador

Jacob Shapiro:

or Columbia or Venezuela, like people who are skilled and educated and very

Jacob Shapiro:

good at what they do and escaping regimes that have become authoritarian

Jacob Shapiro:

or they've lost their political position.

Jacob Shapiro:

And so they're coming to the United States and they can do like everything

Jacob Shapiro:

from your menial labor all the way up into, into some of these things.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I guess the point I'm just making is like, it seems to me that

Jacob Shapiro:

President Trump, it's, even with the deals that he's making, it's not

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna look good for the US economy.

Jacob Shapiro:

And if you're gonna triple down on immigration too, which has always been

Jacob Shapiro:

a US superpower, our ability to attract the best, our ability to integrate them.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and you're going to sort of knock that out too, like then all

Jacob Shapiro:

of the, the growth figures over the next 2, 3, 4 years and even longer.

Jacob Shapiro:

Look really bad.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I think that's the pushback.

Jacob Shapiro:

The pushback is not that the playbook is not gonna go the way that you think it is.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think that's exactly right.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think that President Trump pulled a rabbit out of his hat because he gets

Jacob Shapiro:

to be the law and order president now, and he is gonna go after immigration,

Jacob Shapiro:

and he is got lots of support for that.

Jacob Shapiro:

But in doing that, combined with all the other things that he's done, like, it just

Jacob Shapiro:

seems to me that like the US macro picture goes from worse to worse every single day.

Jacob Shapiro:

Because if you're not gonna fix this thing, and like you're gonna have interest

Jacob Shapiro:

rates going up and the dollar is gonna continue to decline and like, like you

Jacob Shapiro:

just put the picture, the macro picture together, it starts to look very grim.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I guess that's the pushback.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

I mean, uh, I mean, look, that that might be the case if President

Marko Papic:

Harris was in the White House too.

Jacob Shapiro:

Not on, I think that not, not necessarily on migration.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I mean the problem.

Marko Papic:

Migration.

Marko Papic:

Is that and not

Jacob Shapiro:

on

Marko Papic:

trade?

Marko Papic:

Well, I don't know.

Jacob Shapiro:

Not on trade and not on migration.

Jacob Shapiro:

I not, I'm not saying President Harris would've been great.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm sure she would've had her fair share of mistakes.

Jacob Shapiro:

They would've been entirely her own, but they wouldn't have

Jacob Shapiro:

been this cocktail of mistakes.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So, so I agree with that.

Marko Papic:

It's just that like, I think you're speaking of secular issues that, um,

Marko Papic:

like, you know, I think there's a lot of secular problems that the US has.

Marko Papic:

Uh, the number one being that the deficit is too high, that the public sector is

Marko Papic:

effectively crowding out the private.

Marko Papic:

And I think that that issue, uh, is truly bipartisan.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

If you are searching for a bipartisan, for a hope for bipartisanship,

Marko Papic:

it's in the fiscal deficit.

Marko Papic:

Like that's where it happened.

Marko Papic:

Um, but yes, no, I, um, what I would say is just that I think that when I

Marko Papic:

say that President Trump can move to the center and kind of shove under the

Marko Papic:

carpet some of his, uh, populism and anti-establishment rhetoric and trade, um.

Marko Papic:

I think that this issue will allow him to do that.

Marko Papic:

That's it.

Marko Papic:

Now, it, that pivot doesn't mean that you erase the scars that you produced

Marko Papic:

through the first three months of your presidency or six months now.

Marko Papic:

Um, so yeah, I mean, for sure.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, that's, and remember

Jacob Shapiro:

like he did a phase one US China trade deal in his first

Jacob Shapiro:

administration and the Chinese lived up to roughly, I have the number right here.

Jacob Shapiro:

58% of their commitment.

Jacob Shapiro:

Ak it wasn't a deal, to your point, it was a TV deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's, we sign a deal one day and we say there's gonna be X amount of trade

Jacob Shapiro:

and then there's not gonna be, and if you look at how China's doing things

Jacob Shapiro:

like, I don't think they're gonna like actually follow, they'll follow through

Jacob Shapiro:

on some things, but they're gonna vertically integrate and create domestic

Jacob Shapiro:

champions and have self-sufficiency.

Jacob Shapiro:

The other thing, listen, and I know you want to push back, but, um, Robin

Jacob Shapiro:

Brooks had a really good, he, he, he.

Jacob Shapiro:

He had some really good data that he put out just this week where

Jacob Shapiro:

he looked at US China trade, and it's down, if you look over the

Jacob Shapiro:

first like six months of the year.

Jacob Shapiro:

But you know where trade is up, like Chinese exports are up, they're up

Jacob Shapiro:

to Singapore, they're up to Thailand, to Thailand, they're up on Vietnam.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, like trade is like water.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like Chinese goods are actually probably still gonna

Jacob Shapiro:

get to the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're just gonna come through trans shipments markets.

Jacob Shapiro:

And unless you erect full bare, like the 70 foot tariff wall on

Jacob Shapiro:

all sides of the United States, like the stuff is gonna get in.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like, even there it's like, uh, but my point is just that, yeah, those

Jacob Shapiro:

scars, I think like China's gonna say one thing and then in the meantime it's

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna be like, oh, and we're creating our own semiconductor industry and

Jacob Shapiro:

we're creating our own biotech industry.

Jacob Shapiro:

And eventually once we have these things and we don't need you anymore,

Jacob Shapiro:

like you will encounter our Great wall and, and you'll enjoy it.

Marko Papic:

Well, so, okay.

Marko Papic:

Couple of things on that.

Marko Papic:

I think that phase one deal was called phase one because it was phase one

Marko Papic:

and I think that it could have been a great deal, but COVID happened.

Marko Papic:

Yes, COVID and, uh, I mean.

Marko Papic:

And I know I'm parroting what President Trump says, but I'm parroting it

Marko Papic:

because it is correct objectively.

Marko Papic:

And then Joe Biden took over and did not start any negotiations

Marko Papic:

with China over any trade.

Marko Papic:

In fact, he just kept putting tariffs.

Marko Papic:

So why would it, it's just not fair to President Trump and Robert Lighthizer.

Marko Papic:

What happened with that deal?

Marko Papic:

I mean, like they negotiated a deal.

Marko Papic:

China's not gonna keep buying soybeans and natural gas in the middle of a pandemic.

Marko Papic:

And then when the pandemic ends, there's a different president in

Marko Papic:

the White House who doesn't engage them in any conversations at all.

Marko Papic:

So why would they abide by the phase one deal?

Marko Papic:

And this is somehow, like, this is somehow put on President Trump's

Marko Papic:

balance sheet as his error.

Marko Papic:

But why It was the Joe Biden pre uh, presidency.

Marko Papic:

That refused to engage the Chinese with any negotiations.

Marko Papic:

Why?

Marko Papic:

Because they were afraid that the Chinese would say yes, this is

Marko Papic:

the irony of the Democratic party.

Marko Papic:

They cannot make a deal with China.

Marko Papic:

'cause if they do, any deal they make, even if it's incredibly good

Marko Papic:

for America, will be seen negatively domestically because they will be seen

Marko Papic:

as, you know, defeatists and you know, basically not good enough of a deal.

Marko Papic:

So what I'm getting at is that it was very difficult for the Chinese to abide by

Marko Papic:

the phase one deal because they expected there to be phase two, phase three.

Marko Papic:

And Joe Biden administration, they came in and they were like, nah, look, we can't,

Marko Papic:

domestically, we can't deal with you.

Marko Papic:

So I think it's an unfair, um, you know, it's an unfair

Marko Papic:

argument that phase one sucks.

Marko Papic:

And I hear this a lot, I hear this a lot from both conservatives who say that

Marko Papic:

you cannot make a deal with China, but you also hear it a lot with liberals who

Marko Papic:

both say that you cannot make a deal with China and that President Trump is weak.

Marko Papic:

The second thing I would say is that I think that this is where.

Marko Papic:

The Mennonites are going to eventually self emulate.

Marko Papic:

This is where, no, this is where eventually the reality of the planet

Marko Papic:

we live on is that you will absolutely have to continue to trade with China.

Marko Papic:

Like that's the reality of our debate that we had last time.

Marko Papic:

Like, you cannot stop trading with China because no matter what their

Marko Papic:

intentions are, because if you do, your own allies will come in and undercut you.

Marko Papic:

Like France is not gonna stop selling Airbus airplanes if you say China's evil.

Marko Papic:

And I don't wanna sell Boeing airplanes.

Marko Papic:

So America has to trade with China.

Marko Papic:

It has to, the question is, how is it going to do that?

Marko Papic:

And Donald Trump is quite frankly, the only hope that the US has to

Marko Papic:

negotiate with China because the rest of the Republican party is so full

Marko Papic:

of, uh, like national security hawks, but at an idiotic level, right, that

Marko Papic:

don't wanna engage with China at all.

Marko Papic:

So people who think that buying a bicycle from China.

Marko Papic:

Is a national security threat.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

So that's what I'm talking about.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And that the Democrats, the Democrats who understand the

Marko Papic:

mathematics, their problem is that they're politically extremely weak.

Marko Papic:

So they can't engage China in meaningful trade talks because they're

Marko Papic:

afraid of how to sell the deal they might make with China domestically.

Marko Papic:

So it's funny, but Donald Trump is actually the only human

Marko Papic:

being on the planet that can actually make a deal with China.

Marko Papic:

That's not halfway bad.

Marko Papic:

And the reason I see that is that it's perfectly fine for America

Marko Papic:

to keep buying Chinese goods.

Marko Papic:

And yeah, it's perfectly fine if those goods are, then you know that revenue

Marko Papic:

is taxed by the Chinese Communist Party and they build hypersonic cruise.

Marko Papic:

Miss sells with that revenue.

Marko Papic:

That's how the world works.

Marko Papic:

As long as America gets a fair deal where the Chinese are also buying US goods, and

Marko Papic:

that's what the Lighthizer approach was.

Marko Papic:

Phase one was like, Hey, buy some of our commodities.

Marko Papic:

I called it at the time, pejoratively a medieval trade

Jacob Shapiro:

deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

What did America get from China?

Marko Papic:

Like, oh, buy our soybeans.

Marko Papic:

Whoa, great.

Marko Papic:

But the phase two is about, Hey man, you do not import any services from the us.

Marko Papic:

That is where we have an advantage.

Marko Papic:

The US has an advantage in services.

Marko Papic:

You have an advantage in like widgets and consumer electronics.

Marko Papic:

Cool, we'll buy your consumer electronics, but you can't stop our,

Marko Papic:

you know, insurance companies coming in and doing an m and a with yours,

Marko Papic:

like Geico should, should be allowed to come to China, buy a bunch of, you

Marko Papic:

know, poorly run Chinese insurance companies and like, boom, there you go.

Marko Papic:

That would be beneficial.

Marko Papic:

So that's where I think that cracking China open could be very beneficial

Marko Papic:

to the US and to the relationship.

Marko Papic:

Um, and I think that that's where he's headed and that's why I

Marko Papic:

think what's interesting is that negotiating with China first is a

Marko Papic:

brilliant strategy and here's why.

Marko Papic:

Telling Vietnam that they're not allowed to take Chinese.

Marko Papic:

FDI.

Marko Papic:

That's stupid.

Marko Papic:

Vietnam is going to laugh at your face.

Marko Papic:

So is Indonesia, so is Malaysia.

Marko Papic:

This was the Stephen Iran approach.

Marko Papic:

Like people owe us for our liberty, so they're gonna have

Marko Papic:

to like, make a deal with us.

Marko Papic:

Nobody owes America pretty much anything unless you're South Korea.

Marko Papic:

Israel, Ukraine, maybe Estonia.

Marko Papic:

Who did I miss?

Marko Papic:

Uh, Japan, Taiwan, Germany, may, no, Japan is a nuclear power.

Marko Papic:

I'm not even like Yeah, if they wanted to they have nukes.

Marko Papic:

They're fine.

Marko Papic:

Look, my point is it's, there's very, very, very few countries in the world they

Marko Papic:

can actually like us, can actually bully.

Marko Papic:

And so what President Trump did, instead of going with the Howard Lutnick, Peter

Marko Papic:

Navarro approach, he was like, okay, cool.

Marko Papic:

You guys don't wanna make a deal with us to keep our Chinese FDI out.

Marko Papic:

They, i'll undercut you because I'll negotiate with China first.

Marko Papic:

I'll make a deal with China.

Marko Papic:

And so that's, I I do think that there's like, that is a smart approach.

Marko Papic:

Uh, now.

Marko Papic:

Does he have a lot of, uh, weapons against China?

Marko Papic:

No, I agree with you.

Marko Papic:

The US is gonna have to do a lot of bending over here, uh, or, or kowtowing,

Marko Papic:

however you wanna describe it.

Marko Papic:

Um, so that, that I agree with, uh, but I don't think that it's

Marko Papic:

stupid to make a deal with China.

Marko Papic:

No,

Jacob Shapiro:

but, but I think you're onto something with what you said about

Jacob Shapiro:

immigration because you know, if you had asked me even eight weeks ago, like

Jacob Shapiro:

the bipartisan issue that you could get both sides to agree on and which it

Jacob Shapiro:

has been a bipartisan issue now since roughly 2015, is that China is bad.

Jacob Shapiro:

And what we're talking about here is the Trump administration saying,

Jacob Shapiro:

uh, like maybe China's okay, can we take it from China being bad?

Jacob Shapiro:

And both sides hating China to, Hey, immigrants are bad and, and China's okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause we're gonna make a trade deal with them.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause we need to trade with them and don't look too closely, abandon

Jacob Shapiro:

all the other guys the problem.

Marko Papic:

No, I hear you.

Marko Papic:

I hear the problem is that China is bad is for a children's book

Marko Papic:

that's like seven years, like.

Marko Papic:

People in Washington DC who say that have a mental for, uh,

Marko Papic:

like aptitude of a 7-year-old.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, which I think also probably describes the median

Jacob Shapiro:

voter if, if you look back at Pew data, one of the really interesting

Jacob Shapiro:

things here, and this, this goes to a larger conversation about how like

Jacob Shapiro:

top-down political views eventually make their way to the median voter.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like if you go back 10, 12 years, um, older people were always suspicious

Jacob Shapiro:

of China 'cause they remembered the Cold War and China was communists

Jacob Shapiro:

and they remembered Mao or stories of MAO or things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

But younger gen, the younger generation in the United States actually liked

Jacob Shapiro:

China, like had no negative feelings about them, didn't remember the Cold

Jacob Shapiro:

War, weren't thinking about communism.

Jacob Shapiro:

And if you trust the data on the Chinese side, it was relatively true.

Jacob Shapiro:

That has changed over the last 10 years and it's changed, I

Jacob Shapiro:

don't think, because young people suddenly decided to hate China.

Jacob Shapiro:

But because they have been fed an unceasing diet, to your point

Jacob Shapiro:

of the 7-year-old point of view.

Jacob Shapiro:

And it's one of the only things that they get any kind of bipartisan agreement

Jacob Shapiro:

from, which is China's a threat.

Jacob Shapiro:

And this has been a, this has sort of been a, a refrain in US politics for

Jacob Shapiro:

a hundred plus years that China's a threat and they were the original, not

Jacob Shapiro:

the original immigrants, but like, you know, you think about what happened

Jacob Shapiro:

in the early 19 hundreds out west, um, with Chinese immigrants, um, and all

Jacob Shapiro:

of that sort of dynamic there as well.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, no, I, I hear you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

So

Marko Papic:

I hear you.

Marko Papic:

But I, but I would say two things.

Marko Papic:

First of all, um,

Marko Papic:

there can be a bipartisan consensus that, you know, we should all go to the moon

Marko Papic:

and live in its craters, but you cannot do anything about it 'cause it's insane.

Marko Papic:

And so what the United States of America has now found out over the

Marko Papic:

last eight years is that if we don't live in a bipolar world, if you don't

Marko Papic:

have your allies supporting you, then saying China bad is vacuous.

Marko Papic:

In the 19th century, people understood the reality of multipolarity, which is

Marko Papic:

you can have an adversary and you still have to trade with them because if you

Marko Papic:

don't, your own allies will undercut you.

Marko Papic:

This is a very important game theoretical dynamic that you know,

Marko Papic:

quite frankly, I described like six years ago, people thought I had

Marko Papic:

three heads when I described it.

Marko Papic:

It's been correct US has continued to trade with China.

Marko Papic:

Actually it's increased its trade with China over the last

Marko Papic:

five years despite a consensus.

Marko Papic:

Why?

Marko Papic:

Because you cannot unravel this relationship quickly.

Marko Papic:

In fact, in fact, you trade with your enemy in a multiple or ordering

Marko Papic:

of the world because the French, the South Koreans, the Japanese,

Marko Papic:

the Japanese who are right next to China, supposedly at risk of war with

Marko Papic:

them, the Japanese are not gonna stop selling goods and services to them.

Marko Papic:

And that's because geopolitical power is based on material wealth.

Marko Papic:

To accrue that material wealth, you need to actually trade with your adversary.

Marko Papic:

So I think that China is bad meme.

Marko Papic:

It's a meme, it means nothing.

Marko Papic:

And you cannot actually do foreign policy or trade policy based off of it.

Marko Papic:

Well, no.

Marko Papic:

If it meant, on the other hand, if

Jacob Shapiro:

it meant nothing, then he wouldn't have to do the pivot to

Jacob Shapiro:

immigration because like his base and a large swath of the American

Jacob Shapiro:

electorate does think China is bad.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he's been selling that since the first term.

Jacob Shapiro:

So he does have to do some, some like, um, some PR management around that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Because if he's gonna make a deal with Xi Jinping, he has to at least, and

Jacob Shapiro:

it doesn't have to be much like he has shown that he can do it fairly easily

Jacob Shapiro:

with the Magac crowd and his supporters.

Jacob Shapiro:

But he does have to just say like, Hey, you know, I got the deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like he kowtowed to me, like I'm the guy.

Jacob Shapiro:

China's with us now.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like they've made the deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like they have to make that move.

Marko Papic:

The second thing I would say to you, and this is more controversial.

Marko Papic:

But I think that the American view of China has peaked in

Marko Papic:

terms of how negative it is.

Marko Papic:

And actually the pure research, I'm looking at it right now, the pure

Marko Papic:

research study that you point out, uh, it basically negative view of

Marko Papic:

China was, uh, it was 50 negative, the 55 negative 35 positive in 2014.

Marko Papic:

And then right around when he started making those deals,

Marko Papic:

it kind of actually narrowed.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And then COVID just absolutely exploded to negativity.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

It's actually rolled over.

Marko Papic:

That's good.

Marko Papic:

Now it's still in the seventies, but it's gone from 83 to 77

Marko Papic:

over the last three years.

Marko Papic:

And the favorable view has gone from 14 to 21%.

Marko Papic:

So I think we've seen the peak.

Marko Papic:

I don't think it's gonna go down to 50 50, but it's interesting.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, it's interesting that there is a decline, like the number

Marko Papic:

of, uh, people who believe.

Marko Papic:

Who have a very unfavorable view of China in America was in 2024 was 43%.

Marko Papic:

The varies down to 33%.

Marko Papic:

So that's a significance decline.

Marko Papic:

Um, and I think part of that, by the way, part of that is

Marko Papic:

that Trump is the president.

Marko Papic:

And I think part of that is that Trump understands this multipolar dynamic

Marko Papic:

that in a multipolar world, China's clearly an adversary of the US.

Marko Papic:

And to be fair to the Chinese America is clearly an adversary of China.

Marko Papic:

But that doesn't mean that you can decouple.

Marko Papic:

It's just impossible to do that

Jacob Shapiro:

Well,

Marko Papic:

and, and, and it's impossible because of the multipolar

Marko Papic:

world, unless of course the rest of the world decides to follow America on this.

Marko Papic:

But it would require China to do something like invade Taiwan or be

Marko Papic:

extremely negative in some way, or like to change the dynamic of the planet.

Marko Papic:

And so that's where I think the deal is inevitable.

Marko Papic:

And the weird thing that most of our liberal listeners don't want to hear.

Marko Papic:

The truth is that only really Trump can make a deal with China, just

Marko Papic:

like only Nixon could go to China.

Marko Papic:

As the old adage goes,

Jacob Shapiro:

yeah, the the Democrats.

Jacob Shapiro:

Have been stuck on China as an issue literally since FDR, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, sort of picked the wrong side.

Jacob Shapiro:

And, and, uh, Truman picked the wrong side on the Chinese Civil War, and it's been

Jacob Shapiro:

a bugaboo for the Democrats ever since.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, you could tie the decisions in Vietnam to the Democrats, insecurity

Jacob Shapiro:

about their decisions about China in the Korean War, and they just,

Jacob Shapiro:

they have not been able to clean out the skeletons in their closet.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, one other thing I want to, I wanna say, and then we can either

Jacob Shapiro:

go here or then we should talk about California secession, which is this

Jacob Shapiro:

also what you just said underscores why it's so important maybe for the

Jacob Shapiro:

Trump administration to get a deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

Now.

Jacob Shapiro:

I reject the notion that he thinks the world is multipolar.

Jacob Shapiro:

I will, I will go with you.

Jacob Shapiro:

That he has an instinct for where power is and that he could see that China is a big

Jacob Shapiro:

power that he needs to interact with them.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I, I don't think it's like intellectually codified that way.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think it's just instinctual.

Jacob Shapiro:

But you're right in the sense that US and China, they're

Jacob Shapiro:

trading more in an absolute sense.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's going much.

Jacob Shapiro:

And that China's actually a bigger share of US exports in a lot of different

Jacob Shapiro:

areas than it was even five years ago.

Jacob Shapiro:

But.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's not true for China.

Jacob Shapiro:

China's been reducing its dependence on the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

So even as it imports more, the US share of some of those things has gone down.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you're looking sort of since 2008 mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

The United States has become more, dependent is the wrong word, but more

Jacob Shapiro:

exposed to exports and trade with China.

Jacob Shapiro:

And China.

Jacob Shapiro:

While it's still huge, it's still a huge vulnerability enough that

Jacob Shapiro:

they have to make the deals like they have to be at the table.

Jacob Shapiro:

They have to make a deal here too, for the things that are going on in

Jacob Shapiro:

their economy, but the graph is going in the opposite direction for them.

Jacob Shapiro:

They have been successful at very slowly diversifying from the United

Jacob Shapiro:

States, finding other export markets, building up vertical champions.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you keep going, if you like extrapolate out, the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

is gonna become more dependent and China will become less dependent.

Jacob Shapiro:

Which to your point is maybe why the United States really has to say, look

Jacob Shapiro:

like this is our last, it's, it's not so much about, you know, it's only

Jacob Shapiro:

Trump can do it, but this is the last moment where maybe you have enough

Jacob Shapiro:

leverage to make the Chinese take you seriously in a trade negotiation.

Jacob Shapiro:

Literation like this might be the last chance, but that's 'cause if you don't

Jacob Shapiro:

do it now, five, 10 years from now, yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's probably not a deal that you like that is gonna be, is gonna be had.

Marko Papic:

Just to be clear though, um, when you look at the data, a lot

Marko Papic:

of their FDI is going into Vietnam and Mexico so it can access us.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So it goes both ways.

Marko Papic:

It does, it goes both ways, right?

Marko Papic:

US trade imbalance with China has massively corrected, but it's trade

Marko Papic:

balance with the rest of the world continues to be negative because this

Marko Papic:

is all Chinese trade going from Vietnam.

Marko Papic:

So like, but that, that means also for China, that final demand

Marko Papic:

for China is not changing yet the final demand remains in the US and

Marko Papic:

Europe for their goods and Japan.

Marko Papic:

So, you know, like, and, and especially because they have not done

Marko Papic:

anything to boost their consumption.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

True geopolitical sovereignty.

Marko Papic:

Like if Xi Jinping is listening, turn the TikTok camera on.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

And very appropriate that it's TikTok camera.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Very.

Marko Papic:

Um, president Xi, you want to be independent, you wanna be sovereign,

Marko Papic:

then you need to do what you don't want to do, which is boost consumption

Marko Papic:

in your own country, over capacity, over production, the stuff that

Marko Papic:

rankles the west, the fact that you don't import enough Western goods.

Marko Papic:

This is all a product of an unbalanced macroeconomic feature of China, which

Marko Papic:

is that people don't consume enough.

Marko Papic:

So what I would say to you, Jacob, is that, uh, China hasn't

Marko Papic:

really, really shifted where the final demand is coming from.

Marko Papic:

It's still America and Europe.

Marko Papic:

They have just kind of like diverted it, but the final demand is still there.

Marko Papic:

And also their own demand in internally hasn't been supported.

Marko Papic:

Now, the irony here is that as China boosts its consumption, which I

Marko Papic:

think it will have to just because of macroeconomic amount as it does that

Marko Papic:

you might say, aha, they're gonna buy more Chinese goods and so on.

Marko Papic:

But like, nah, I think they'll still buy more.

Marko Papic:

Like if they boost their consumption as much as I think they need to in order

Marko Papic:

to become truly sovereign, they'll still import more from the US and Europe.

Marko Papic:

Now they'll.

Marko Papic:

They'll buy a ton more Chinese goods for sure, but the trading balances will

Marko Papic:

actually correct in a positive way where everybody can kind of sink kumbaya.

Marko Papic:

Uh, nonetheless, we kinda like went off, uh, from immigration

Marko Papic:

to trade because, you know why?

Marko Papic:

Because that's where the geopolitical, I think, uh, gravity takes us

Marko Papic:

in every conversation we have.

Marko Papic:

We end up going back to these trade negotiations and the

Marko Papic:

rebalancing of the world.

Marko Papic:

And I think that it, it's just, you can't escape it.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

We started talking about immigration, what was going on in la but we

Marko Papic:

can't escape talking about this issue 'cause it's so important.

Marko Papic:

Well,

Jacob Shapiro:

and this is the great, I mean, geopolitics has plenty

Jacob Shapiro:

of blind spots and if you only.

Jacob Shapiro:

Use geopolitical analysis, you will get some things wrong, but this

Jacob Shapiro:

is the great virtue of geopolitics and the way that it cuts across

Jacob Shapiro:

disciplines and connects things that on the surface don't seem connected.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like there is absolutely an inextricable.

Jacob Shapiro:

Have you seen has, I would challenge, uh, listeners, if anybody has seen anyone

Jacob Shapiro:

analytically tying what's happening in Los Angeles to the US China trade

Jacob Shapiro:

deal, like deal making that's happening.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like that is the first place my brain went and all I'm seeing from the media is, oh

Jacob Shapiro:

my God, it's the end of Los Angeles as we know it in the United States coming apart.

Jacob Shapiro:

This seems like, no, no, the.

Jacob Shapiro:

All of these things are interconnected, and you have to be a very interconnected,

Jacob Shapiro:

you have to be a deep generalist and have enough, it's this weird combination

Jacob Shapiro:

of humility and arrogance to say like, you know what, like, I know enough

Jacob Shapiro:

about all of these different things to try and create this map of connections.

Jacob Shapiro:

And maybe I can start ascribing causality to some of these things could, because

Jacob Shapiro:

most people will just stay in their lane.

Jacob Shapiro:

The immigration expert will stay in their lane and the trade expert will stay in

Jacob Shapiro:

their lane and the California politic, like, you know, you have to connect

Jacob Shapiro:

all these different things together.

Jacob Shapiro:

But let's close on this, um, with, with our last 15 minutes here.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, you sent me some stuff about California potentially seceding.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I don't think this is gonna happen anytime soon, but they are trying to

Jacob Shapiro:

get a question on the 2028 ballot, which would be, should California leave

Jacob Shapiro:

the United States and become a free and independent country if at least.

Jacob Shapiro:

First they have to get half a million signatures.

Jacob Shapiro:

If 50% of registered California voters cast ballots and it passes

Jacob Shapiro:

by 50%, then there can be a study about whether that's gonna happen.

Jacob Shapiro:

So it's not like these things are gonna happen like imminently or in

Jacob Shapiro:

real time, but we should talk about the notion of California secession and

Jacob Shapiro:

about the idea of secession in general.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't think it's a zero, and I think you were right to send it to me.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, so I think, uh, you know, this is, you know, I can defend

Marko Papic:

President Trump with a lot of different things, but I think that where, uh, and

Marko Papic:

this is not just his fault, obviously it's fault of the left and the right,

Marko Papic:

but I think that if you want to think about the greatest danger to the United

Marko Papic:

States of America, it's not the deficit.

Marko Papic:

You know, it's not China, it's not any of these issues.

Marko Papic:

It's really itself.

Marko Papic:

And so, uh, the last time, as you said, national Guard was, I. Invoked

Marko Papic:

by the, uh, called up by the president against the wishes of the state

Marko Papic:

was the issue of segregation, which fundamentally was what the Civil

Marko Papic:

War was about as well on some level.

Marko Papic:

And now also also by the way, about

Jacob Shapiro:

low class labor that was paid nothing that everybody

Jacob Shapiro:

utilized, including the north.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like there's a nice little throughput there too.

Marko Papic:

Oh yeah, that's, that's a very good point.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

And underclass, right, uh, uh, in the labor market.

Marko Papic:

Uh, great tie in.

Marko Papic:

Um, and so, yeah, I think that, uh, this is another example, another example where

Marko Papic:

the US federal government is trying to do something that the states don't like.

Marko Papic:

And in this particular case, it's about immigration, but

Marko Papic:

it could be about anything.

Marko Papic:

You know, it could be about the, uh, other issues.

Marko Papic:

And don't forget, don't forget one of the things that launched this whole thing on

Marko Papic:

Friday, last Friday before the protest started against ice, there was this, uh,

Marko Papic:

news item that we now forgo, forgot, which is that the White House was seriously

Marko Papic:

discussing withholding federal funds.

Marko Papic:

From California because of the transgendered athlete who competed,

Marko Papic:

and I think she won some, uh, athletics championships in California.

Marko Papic:

And then Governor Newsom retorted, I don't know if you saw this on Friday.

Marko Papic:

It was like, it, it flashed across the news on Friday and was quickly

Marko Papic:

forgotten because LA got it.

Marko Papic:

It went into this, um, whole situation, but covering, Newsom returned it

Marko Papic:

by saying that he's gonna withhold some 70 odd billion dollars that

Marko Papic:

the California pays into the IRS when it collects federal taxes.

Marko Papic:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

So California, in other words, is definitely what we would

Marko Papic:

call a, uh, uh, what is it?

Marko Papic:

Um.

Marko Papic:

A have, there's have nots and have states, right?

Marko Papic:

California's a have state, and I, I know people love to make fun of California,

Marko Papic:

but boy, do we make money here.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, not, not just California.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, Los Angeles is, I had this data pulled for this for exactly for this.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's the second largest city in the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's the 24th largest city in the world just ahead of Moscow.

Jacob Shapiro:

The greater Los Angeles area has a GDP of over a trillion dollars.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's larger than the GDP of Switzerland or of Poland, or even Argentina.

Jacob Shapiro:

So just the Los Angeles area that you're picking a fight with, with right

Jacob Shapiro:

now would be on the menu of global powers in a truly multipolar world.

Marko Papic:

Right?

Marko Papic:

So, so this is where I think, you know, why do I say that?

Marko Papic:

I, I say this because forget the National Guard.

Marko Papic:

Forget the Marines.

Marko Papic:

There was a news item on Friday that was actually worse, which is that

Marko Papic:

President Trump says, I don't like that a transgendered athlete competed in one.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna withhold federal funds.

Marko Papic:

Governor Newsom says that I would hold the money we pay into the treasury,

Marko Papic:

forget ice, forget National LA Guard, forget the protest.

Marko Papic:

This happened without any of that.

Marko Papic:

It happened because one transgendered athlete competed and won some stuff.

Marko Papic:

So the threshold for people to lose their shit is very, very low.

Marko Papic:

You know, it's like a couple, you know, like a healthy couple has fights all

Marko Papic:

the time, but an unhealthy couple like fights over really dumb things and

Marko Papic:

endos fights escalate right away within like five minutes to like divorce.

Marko Papic:

And that's what this was like.

Marko Papic:

One human being who happens to be transgendered wants some stuff.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna withhold federal funding.

Marko Papic:

Well, no, I'm gonna like pull the plug on California financing

Marko Papic:

the United States of America.

Marko Papic:

What?

Marko Papic:

You know, so.

Marko Papic:

So I think that this is very unhealthy and so when you made fun of my Canada pick.

Marko Papic:

In the top 10.

Marko Papic:

What did I say to you?

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I don't remember.

Marko Papic:

It was a hedge.

Marko Papic:

It was a hedge.

Marko Papic:

It was a hedge.

Marko Papic:

Because my view is that the probability of this stuff getting really bad

Marko Papic:

in the US is very, very elevated.

Marko Papic:

And I can tell you that the people that are the happiest, other than the media

Marko Papic:

will love this stuff other than the media.

Marko Papic:

I think that the happiest people in the world are in Beijing and Moscow

Marko Papic:

and, and and elsewhere because these kind of fights are real.

Marko Papic:

And I think it's very dangerous.

Marko Papic:

And, and if the US were to kind of start on this path, like that is a redrawing

Marko Papic:

of geopolitics at a level that I think most people can't comprehend mentally.

Marko Papic:

Now, how does it get resolved?

Marko Papic:

Well, I think that it's just in the world we live in today.

Marko Papic:

Perhaps what needs to happen is some form of canonization, and this is a

Marko Papic:

very Republican conservative view.

Marko Papic:

Uh, traditionally, traditionally it was a Republican conservative view, but I think

Marko Papic:

President Trump has obviously become, uh, far less about state's rights because

Marko Papic:

he controls the federal government.

Marko Papic:

But in Switzerland, the cantons have massive power, massive power.

Marko Papic:

In fact, the federal government has very little power and cantons, even to the

Marko Papic:

point where they, they enforce immigration laws and citizenship laws of the country.

Marko Papic:

So, for example, the federal government has minimum requirements

Marko Papic:

for you to become a Swiss citizen.

Marko Papic:

Like you need to do X, Y, and Z to become Swiss.

Marko Papic:

A Canton will come in and say, no, no, no, you need to do X, y, z,

Marko Papic:

alpha, omega, and beta as well.

Marko Papic:

Like you need to do these three things.

Marko Papic:

In addition, in this Canton, you know, and cantons in Switzerland are states,

Marko Papic:

but some of them have population of like 30,000, you know, so it's not

Marko Papic:

like these are not large entities.

Marko Papic:

And I think that the United States of America may have to.

Marko Papic:

Over the next 30, 40 years, adopt that kind of a state's rights, cantonal

Marko Papic:

canonization view of the world.

Marko Papic:

Because if one human being competing as a transgender athlete causes us

Marko Papic:

to get to a point where we're talking about withholding financing of the US

Marko Papic:

government, I think like that's not a healthy situation that the US is in.

Marko Papic:

And so I, I can see this happening more and more.

Marko Papic:

In other words, I think we're finally at a point where both Republicans and

Marko Papic:

conservatives and liberals and Democrats may be ready to accept what we call in

Marko Papic:

the US context, states rights, and which I call in the global context canonization.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, it reminds me of that episode in the West Wing where Martin Sheen

Jacob Shapiro:

is debating the guy from Florida.

Jacob Shapiro:

I can't remember the exact, uh, phrase phraseology that he uses, but he's

Jacob Shapiro:

basically like the, you know, the Florida governor who he's running against is like

Jacob Shapiro:

complaining about all the things that the federal government does, and Martin Sheen,

Jacob Shapiro:

president Bartlett is like, okay, great.

Jacob Shapiro:

So we'd like our tax dollars back, please, if, if you're gonna complain

Jacob Shapiro:

about all these other different things.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, once again, the West Wing and Aaron Sorkin predicting some of these things,

Marko Papic:

I mean, that takes Yes, but the problem with that Jacob.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

But the problem with that, Jacob, is I'm not sure that makes any, any sense.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

In Florida's case, or Texas's case or California's case, there's, there are

Marko Papic:

many states in the United States that are wealthier without the federal government.

Marko Papic:

Now you might say, well, wait a minute, Marco, like, the state

Marko Papic:

of California is in a deficit.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

And just to be clear, I am not at all advocating for any of this.

Marko Papic:

I'm analyzing.

Marko Papic:

I personally, I can tell you my personal view, like I do not want to

Marko Papic:

live in an independent California.

Marko Papic:

Because lemme tell you, there's gonna be some growing pains.

Marko Papic:

For the first 10 years or so, this is a one party state, and the one

Marko Papic:

party that runs this state has gotten very comfortable running it poorly.

Marko Papic:

So no, like I'm not advocating for that, but I am seeing like, look, if

Marko Papic:

the, if the relationship was redrawn, there'll be a whole lot more money

Marko Papic:

for California to keep to itself.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And same with Texas, and same with Florida.

Marko Papic:

I, I, I haven't looked at the data, so I might not fully know what I'm talking

Marko Papic:

about, but I know I'm talking what I'm talking about in terms of California.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, California will be fine.

Marko Papic:

The rest of America less so.

Marko Papic:

So this is where I'm not sure the Martin Sheen in that, in that

Marko Papic:

exchange is actually correct.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Like would Florida suffer if it was independent?

Marko Papic:

Would they have more or less money?

Marko Papic:

I don't know.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I mean, your Canada pick.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I'm still gonna go after your Canada pick because it's ironic the way that

Jacob Shapiro:

Trump is treating Canada has led to this like, creation of Canadian nationalism.

Jacob Shapiro:

But like Canada has the same issues internally, uh, in, in some sense, some

Jacob Shapiro:

of them further, further developed.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, but maybe the way that the United States is much further to develop is

Jacob Shapiro:

like doing these things, things actually actually creating a stronger Canada.

Jacob Shapiro:

But

Marko Papic:

my point was, my point was like, the reason that I want to

Marko Papic:

have Canada as a pick, the reason why I wanna halt Canadian assets in some way,

Marko Papic:

shape, or form, is it's a hedge against some apocalyptic decline of American,

Marko Papic:

uh, stability due to, um, polarization.

Marko Papic:

And if, if the United States of America were to split up, Canada is

Marko Papic:

the most powerful country in North America by default, automatically.

Marko Papic:

A like, it's the end of, end of story, you know?

Marko Papic:

And, and that's why I think that that's literally how I defended the pick.

Marko Papic:

I use, I use the term it's a hedge.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

But, but, but forget about that issue for now.

Marko Papic:

The bigger point is that, I know it's difficult to do this after an

Marko Papic:

hour and a half of talking about LA riots, but forget LA riots.

Marko Papic:

Forget them.

Marko Papic:

I, I wish they hadn't happened because we would still be talking about this.

Marko Papic:

Jacob, you and I would still have spent an hour and a half today talking about

Marko Papic:

this issue because one human being who happens to be transgendered, she competes

Marko Papic:

in a athletic meeting, wins some awards.

Marko Papic:

Whether you agree with that or not is not the point.

Marko Papic:

If you're very passionate and you disagree with it, God bless you.

Marko Papic:

It's fine.

Marko Papic:

Not, I'm not, I'm not criticizing, I'm just saying it's one human being and it

Marko Papic:

leads to the governor of California and the president of the United States of

Marko Papic:

America basically talking about divorce.

Marko Papic:

You know, that's like, that's like two parents talking about divorcing

Marko Papic:

themselves because one of their kids.

Marko Papic:

Came home and said they wanted to do bed instead of soccer.

Marko Papic:

And the dad is like, fuck no.

Marko Papic:

And the mom is like, no.

Marko Papic:

You have to let them express themselves.

Marko Papic:

And they, and in five minutes they're talking, let's divide up the assets.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Well, I'm gonna take the house.

Marko Papic:

You know, like, I mean, that's, that's unhealthy.

Marko Papic:

That's un that's unhealthy.

Marko Papic:

If I am objective and, and I, I, you know, we used to do this at

Marko Papic:

Strat for, uh, you know, something would happen and you pretend you are

Marko Papic:

like a journalist writing about it.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Writing about an emerging market country.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

If you are just writing an objective analysis of this issue that happened on

Marko Papic:

Friday pre-writing, you would say this is an unhealthy level of polarization

Marko Papic:

over a, over a issue that's not relevant at all to the future of America.

Marko Papic:

Sorry.

Marko Papic:

Both liberals and conservatives, 'cause both of you are not gonna self

Marko Papic:

emulate because the liberals are like, yeah, transgendered rights matter.

Marko Papic:

The conservatives are like, this is terrible.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna tell you as a geopolitical strategist who works in finance,

Marko Papic:

that no, this will not determine the fate of the United States of America

Marko Papic:

at all, no matter which size wins.

Marko Papic:

And yet it led to a talk of divorce.

Marko Papic:

That's unhealthy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, that's bad.

Marko Papic:

That's a bad sign.

Marko Papic:

It

Jacob Shapiro:

is bad.

Jacob Shapiro:

And to your point, uh, you don't even have to pretend to do that exercise.

Jacob Shapiro:

The way I do this now is I just go to the People's Daily and I look at

Jacob Shapiro:

how the People's Daily summarizes these articles in English about what's

Jacob Shapiro:

going on in the United States, and it's exactly what you would expect.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're just very coldly, dissecting exactly what happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

And when you get this like Chinese Communist party view that is

Jacob Shapiro:

translated into English of what's happening in the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, it's very sobering.

Jacob Shapiro:

And to your point, like Xi Jinping, like while his negotiators are there in

Jacob Shapiro:

London, even if you're right, and even if like China has less leverage than I

Jacob Shapiro:

think it does in Beijing, everything is going according, not to the plan, but to

Jacob Shapiro:

the way that they think about the world.

Jacob Shapiro:

If you're a materialist, if you're a Marxist, if you're like the way that

Jacob Shapiro:

the Chinese leadership has been educated for generations, everything is happening

Jacob Shapiro:

the way it's supposed to happen.

Jacob Shapiro:

And maybe that leads to hubris eventually, but like all of the things that they

Jacob Shapiro:

were expecting to happen always does.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

But like right now, in this moment, oh my gosh.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're like, oh my God, it's happening.

Jacob Shapiro:

The the capitalist hegemon is eating itself alive.

Jacob Shapiro:

Wow.

Jacob Shapiro:

What.

Marko Papic:

And just, and just, you know, like I, I know we're,

Marko Papic:

we're pushing one and a half hours.

Marko Papic:

So like, I do like to tie everything with a sports analogy.

Marko Papic:

Yes, do it.

Marko Papic:

But, uh, our, uh, our Lord and Savior, the one to whom we bestow

Marko Papic:

all of our gifts and prayers.

Marko Papic:

Bill Simmons, the great, he often talks about body language, right?

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

He's the body language doc.

Marko Papic:

He calls himself the body language doctor, for those of you who don't know

Marko Papic:

what I'm talking about, bill Simmons podcaster, historian of basketball.

Marko Papic:

Uh, we're modeling our, our, our analysis of geopolitics to

Marko Papic:

his analysis of, of basketball.

Marko Papic:

And he will often say, I watch the bench when I go watch the game live.

Marko Papic:

I'll watch the bench and I'll watch during timeouts are, are all the players engaged?

Marko Papic:

Are they high fiving?

Marko Papic:

Are they talking, do they have side passionate side conversations

Marko Papic:

about what happened in the game?

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And, and it's so funny, it's such a qualitative analysis, has

Marko Papic:

nothing to do with data empirics.

Marko Papic:

It, it goes against the grain of sports analytics.

Marko Papic:

But he, he says like, look, this really matters.

Marko Papic:

Chemistry really matters.

Marko Papic:

And, and there's nothing better than body language.

Marko Papic:

You know, a bunch of dudes playing a sport, man, like body language

Marko Papic:

is going to come into it, you know, and that's what we're doing here.

Marko Papic:

Like, yeah, we can talk about National Guard.

Marko Papic:

Is it legal?

Marko Papic:

Is it not history?

Marko Papic:

We can talk about trade tariffs policy, there's multipolarity, blah, blah, blah.

Marko Papic:

At the end of the day, like it's a really bad sign that the body

Marko Papic:

language of the United States of America is where it is today.

Marko Papic:

And you, if you are, and if you're sitting here listening to this and saying, that's

Marko Papic:

Donald Trump's fault, you know what?

Marko Papic:

You got your head up your ass.

Marko Papic:

It absolutely is not his fault.

Marko Papic:

He is a symptom Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Of the fact that that's already there, right?

Marko Papic:

So like, it's not, it's not his fault if he, you know why that's important to say?

Marko Papic:

Because.

Marko Papic:

Whether you love him or hate him, once he's gone, it's not gonna get better.

Marko Papic:

And I think that that's very dangerous.

Marko Papic:

And it's dangerous for investors.

Marko Papic:

It's dangerous for people in the US And I would say it's also dangerous

Marko Papic:

for countries around the world.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I, I say it's actually dangerous for China.

Marko Papic:

It's dangerous for Russia.

Marko Papic:

It is dangerous for a, it's, it's just there's very few things

Marko Papic:

that I, a truly devoted nihilist believes is just universally bad.

Marko Papic:

But the idea that the United States of America dissolves or there's a federal,

Marko Papic:

state sort of fight, I think that's universally bad, is gonna create a vacuum.

Marko Papic:

It's gonna create, uh, potential jingoism and Rev. And it's just

Marko Papic:

gen, genuinely a bad place to go.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well on that, Rosie, an optimistic note.

Jacob Shapiro:

Anything else you wanna tell the listeners before we get outta here?

Jacob Shapiro:

Mark?

Jacob Shapiro:

We'll come back next time with our Trade Value Leaders, uh,

Jacob Shapiro:

our, our trade value leaderboard.

Jacob Shapiro:

That sounds really fun.

Marko Papic:

Should we do that next for next week?

Marko Papic:

Yeah,

Jacob Shapiro:

let's do that for next week.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm, I'm ready to roll on

Marko Papic:

that.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

We have enough time.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, of course.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Alright.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I'm, I'm ready.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, you already had your first pick, which I'm, I'm fine.

Jacob Shapiro:

You can have Georgia.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's fine with me.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'll, I'll get

Marko Papic:

through it.

Marko Papic:

Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.

Marko Papic:

Wait, wait.

Marko Papic:

Right, right.

Marko Papic:

I, I flag that in a press conference.

Marko Papic:

Maybe.

Marko Papic:

Maybe.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Maybe.

Marko Papic:

Let's see.

Marko Papic:

I just want some time.

Marko Papic:

I just want some time to go over it and, and see, but yes.

Marko Papic:

In the That's awesome.

Jacob Shapiro:

In the meantime, Marco, stay safe.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know, I know.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's very difficult.

Jacob Shapiro:

Thank you.

Jacob Shapiro:

I appreciate it.