Hello listeners.
Jacob Shapiro:Welcome to another episode of Geopolitical Cousins.
Jacob Shapiro:Marco and I are back at it.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, if you are looking for the geopolitical power draft, that is gonna
Jacob Shapiro:happen in the backend of the podcast.
Jacob Shapiro:We spend the first 40, 45 minutes or so talking about some things happening
Jacob Shapiro:in the world, the Middle East, India, Pakistan, Russia, Ukraine, uh,
Jacob Shapiro:and then in the latter half of the podcast we do a geopolitical draft.
Jacob Shapiro:We're picking the most powerful countries in the world over the next 30 years.
Jacob Shapiro:We need your input.
Jacob Shapiro:We didn't finish the draft.
Jacob Shapiro:We're probably gonna have, we'll complete the draft and have some, uh, some feedback
Jacob Shapiro:on it and argue about different placements and things like that in the next one.
Jacob Shapiro:So, um, if you have any questions, comments, concerns, you can email
Jacob Shapiro:me at jacob@jacobshapiro.com.
Jacob Shapiro:For now, we need to get a, an email address just for the podcast
Jacob Shapiro:itself, but in the meantime, if you send an email there, it will get
Jacob Shapiro:to both me and Marco, I promise.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, otherwise.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, hope you are all staying well out there.
Jacob Shapiro:Enjoy cousins.
Jacob Shapiro:We'll see you soon.
Jacob Shapiro:Alright, cousin, before we start, um, I think we have to start with the travesty
Jacob Shapiro:that is geopolitical analysts being forced to fly commercial in this day and age.
Jacob Shapiro:I think when we look back 50, 70 years from now, it would be like NBA players,
Jacob Shapiro:you know, today they wouldn't fly commercial at all, but you know, they used
Jacob Shapiro:to have to go on buses and things like that, all of which is a wind up to say why
Jacob Shapiro:has the nation of gutter not provided an airplane for you and I to fly around the
Jacob Shapiro:world and give our geopolitical briefings?
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, like, I think we're just as important as President
Jacob Shapiro:Trump, don't you think?
Marko:I would, I would, I would say in many ways, perhaps we're more important.
Marko:I mean, first of all, we both, uh, pride ourselves in our objectivity.
Marko:I am a nihilist, bathed in aloof indifference and therefore if you want
Marko:me to say nice things about you, you should provide me with a plane as well.
Marko:Although I guess that would like.
Marko:Take away that aloof indifference.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:You see, I'm the opposite side of this.
Jacob Shapiro:Like I'm a, I'm like a true Socratic student here, which is I will
Jacob Shapiro:continue to say bad things about you.
Jacob Shapiro:And because I say these bad things about you, I deserve all of the things
Jacob Shapiro:that you're supposed to give me.
Jacob Shapiro:So you Cutter should give me this plane because I will be a truth teller and
Jacob Shapiro:tell you about how you're just a random,
Marko:what's just another plane.
Marko:Come on.
Marko:You know, like you have, by the way, uh, no country in the world has
Marko:more oversupply than Qatar, and I say that, uh, because they've built
Marko:too many stadiums, too many office buildings, too much of l and g supply.
Marko:There's literally too much of everything.
Marko:So just give us an office building and an airplane, and I think
Marko:that, you know, we'll, we'll bring the demand to the region.
Marko:There you go.
Marko:Yeah, exactly.
Marko:By the way, can I, can I go off for a second?
Marko:Can I go off?
Marko:Please
Jacob Shapiro:go.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:So that's why we have a podcast.
Marko:That's right.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:I'll link this whole hand wringing over, uh, the United States
Marko:of America accepting a gift.
Marko:Like, first and foremost, let's be very clear.
Marko:Is it a gift to President Trump?
Marko:I mean, no, it's not, it's not his personal plane.
Marko:It's a gift to America.
Marko:Well,
Jacob Shapiro:it, it will be in four years.
Jacob Shapiro:His personal plane.
Marko:Will it?
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:It, it reverts to the Trump Foundation after Trump leaves office.
Marko:Oh, okay.
Marko:Well, I was about to go off and now I have nothing to, okay.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:And,
Jacob Shapiro:and prob probably the, probably the Trump Presidential Library
Jacob Shapiro:will be built in Doha for all I know.
Jacob Shapiro:It seems like a good place to put Zens.
Jacob Shapiro:No,
Marko:listen, uh, I mean, I agree.
Marko:I agree.
Marko:We are.
Marko:The hay rigging is appropriate.
Marko:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't know.
Jacob Shapiro:I, I I think it's still, uh, not inappropriate.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, it, it's, um, yeah, I'm, I'm just double checking myself,
Jacob Shapiro:but what were you going to say?
Marko:Well, I mean, I was gonna say like, you know, countries do
Marko:accept gifts from other countries, and it's perfectly appropriate.
Marko:I mean, it can be a favor, it can be a diplomatic favor, it
Marko:can be a, a, a material gift.
Marko:It's, it's not inappropriate for a country to try to curry favor
Marko:with another one with a gift.
Marko:That's perfectly fine.
Marko:Uh, the United States of America has donated billions, hundreds of billions
Marko:of dollars worth of weapons to its allies around the world through either vendor
Marko:financing or simply through grants.
Marko:Um, you know, there was like a helicopter, uh, gift to the Philippines,
Marko:so they wouldn't buy, I think Russian ones like this does happen.
Marko:So, uh, but if it's gonna revert to a President Trump's
Marko:personal plane, then hmm.
Marko:More difficult to defend.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:So, so I, I, I'm glad I double check myself.
Jacob Shapiro:So, a, b, C News, this is the original report and, you know, a, b, c News,
Jacob Shapiro:who knows May, and they're, they're citing sources who have, uh, you
Jacob Shapiro:know, a window into the agreement.
Jacob Shapiro:But so the idea is that Trump, the Trump administration will accept the Boeing 7
Jacob Shapiro:47 jumbo jet, which can be used in media as Air Force One until shortly before he
Jacob Shapiro:leaves office, at which time ownership of the plane will be transferred to the
Jacob Shapiro:Trump Presidential Library Foundation.
Jacob Shapiro:Sources familiar with the proposed arrangement, told a, b, c news.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, but I, I was gonna double down here.
Jacob Shapiro:Like I, I'm, um, 'cause even, like even my, uh, my evil nemes twin nemesis, Ben
Jacob Shapiro:Shapiro was out there being like, okay, president Trump, like this is not okay.
Jacob Shapiro:And I don't get the pearl clutching like, okay, so grab him by the pussy.
Jacob Shapiro:Didn't matter to you.
Jacob Shapiro:And January 6th didn't matter to you.
Jacob Shapiro:And all of the odious and gross and corrupt things
Jacob Shapiro:that happen in all politics.
Jacob Shapiro:I think Trump is just a little more open about it than most.
Jacob Shapiro:But like all the gross things that happen, this is the one.
Jacob Shapiro:This is the one where, oh my God, like this is absolutely unacceptable
Jacob Shapiro:that you're accepting this plane to be used for a couple of years.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, and Trump knows it.
Jacob Shapiro:Like he has the measure of his base because his base is gonna look
Jacob Shapiro:at this and be like, he's a boss.
Jacob Shapiro:He got the Middle Eastern guys to give him a fucking plane.
Jacob Shapiro:That's awesome.
Jacob Shapiro:I also wanna play, and that was my initial reaction too, while the Democrats are
Jacob Shapiro:like, aha, proof that he's truly evil, this will be the thing that convinces
Jacob Shapiro:the US electorate that he's really bad.
Jacob Shapiro:Like my God guys.
Jacob Shapiro:Come on.
Jacob Shapiro:Well,
Marko:you know, first of all, I think we just have to get you and Ben on
Marko:the show and call it the Shapiros.
Marko:That's it.
Marko:That's like, that's like, why are you here with me?
Marko:I'm, I'm, I'm a nobody.
Marko:You should be with Ben, first and foremost.
Marko:That would be amazing.
Marko:Second of all, I think what's interesting about this is that it reveals a level
Marko:of discrimination, and quite frankly, not like racism, but Islamophobia.
Marko:So it's basically okay if there's graft, but if it comes from Qatar,
Marko:which you know, like supposedly supports terrorism, which it really doesn't.
Marko:I mean, it's offered a forum for negotiations and for peace for a number
Marko:of different, uh, you know, parties.
Marko:It doesn't like, and by the way, who does the finance terrorism?
Marko:Come on.
Marko:Give him a break.
Marko:But when it's cut, they're giving you a plane.
Marko:Yeah, but
Jacob Shapiro:like the head, they have the headquarters of Hama.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, you know, it's a little,
Marko:you know,
Jacob Shapiro:like, I, I get you, but on the spec, like it's a spectrum.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:It, it's a spectrum, but they're a little more, they're a little more on
Jacob Shapiro:the terrorism spectrum than others.
Jacob Shapiro:See, I, I just lost my plane privileges.
Marko:You, you definitely lost your plane, but please note Doha.
Marko:I still keep my plain privileges.
Marko:Look, here's the point though.
Marko:Like, I think what, what differentiates this from like, uh,
Marko:the crypto coins or everything else?
Marko:I think what differentiate is differentiates it is that in the mind
Marko:of many Indian American public, it comes from a Middle Eastern country.
Marko:Uh, that's on the spectrum of supporting or hosting.
Marko:Some odious actors and I think that that's kind of, uh, interesting to me that that
Marko:was what triggered the, uh, criticism from both the left and the right.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, you know, also CENTCOM is like based in gutter, so it's like, uh, like
Jacob Shapiro:the US military is also there, there too.
Jacob Shapiro:Everybody's there together.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, well we could go on for a long time here, but I think this is a good way
Jacob Shapiro:maybe to back in Marco jokes aside to some serious stuff to talk about before
Jacob Shapiro:we get into the main reason people are here, which is another geopolitical draft.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, and I think there's a couple ways to skin this cat, but you know, I
Jacob Shapiro:think we were prescient to talk about the Middle East and the last podcast
Jacob Shapiro:and there has been some development there, um, in the past couple of days.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from Israel, basically saying that
Jacob Shapiro:Israel is willing to go alone to defend itself after the US Houthis deal.
Jacob Shapiro:Um.
Jacob Shapiro:Sources suggesting from the White House that President Trump is
Jacob Shapiro:frustrated with Netanyahu, like, insert Biden into that sentence.
Jacob Shapiro:And it could have been exactly the same.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, and there's also, I, I've been very struck by, you know, the Trump visit and
Jacob Shapiro:this huge visit to Saudi Arabia where you just were like, Sam Altman is there.
Jacob Shapiro:And, um, CEO of Nvidia is there.
Jacob Shapiro:The United States, um, just yesterday announced that it was getting
Jacob Shapiro:rid of some export controls on AI chips and imposing completely new
Jacob Shapiro:restrictions on Huawei's AI chips.
Jacob Shapiro:You've got people telling local media aha, while investors are gonna
Jacob Shapiro:have to choose between a Chinese led AI world and a US AI led world.
Jacob Shapiro:And I was also just struck, like I saw a picture of Trump standing with
Jacob Shapiro:all these world leaders and then all these Saudi shakes and all of these
Jacob Shapiro:like tech bros and things like that.
Jacob Shapiro:And I'm like.
Jacob Shapiro:There is such cognitive dissonance for me because like who in geopolitics could have
Jacob Shapiro:predicted in the year of our Lord 2025, that the most powerful people in the world
Jacob Shapiro:would gather in the middle of the Arabian desert and pay homage to the Saudi Arabian
Jacob Shapiro:King in order to make the decisions that will decide the future of technology and
Jacob Shapiro:AI and all these other different things.
Jacob Shapiro:Like it doesn't, like something does not compute there, seeing like the
Jacob Shapiro:CEO of Nvidia, like, and Sam Altman like trying to like ingratiate
Jacob Shapiro:themselves to Prince Mohammad bin Salman and Trump standing next to him.
Jacob Shapiro:Like all that was missing was Toby Keith, uh, may he rest in peace coming
Jacob Shapiro:back to like do a, a another con concert from the Dead for the audience.
Jacob Shapiro:So take that whatever direction you want.
Jacob Shapiro:But I, I have some dissonance this morning about all this.
Marko:So first of all, I just wanna say that that was a really
Marko:prescient, uh, podcast that you and I did together, right?
Marko:So like, first of all, I think you called the American Pope.
Marko:I think that was the same one right?
Jacob Shapiro:That was, that was the previous one.
Jacob Shapiro:So we're on a roll.
Jacob Shapiro:Oh, my roll.
Jacob Shapiro:We're like two, two.
Jacob Shapiro:Oh, my bad.
Jacob Shapiro:We're good.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Marko:Okay, cool.
Marko:So you called, uh, the Ameri, uh, the American Pope, which was awesome.
Marko:This is why you should be listening to this podcast.
Marko:I mean, like, who else would've done that?
Marko:And then the second thing is that in the other broadcast, uh, episode we talked
Marko:about like, Bibi is playing with fire.
Marko:Donald Trump is not pro-ISIS Israel.
Marko:And what's beautiful about that statement is that I made everybody mad right now.
Marko:Right?
Marko:If you're on the right, you're like, no, he is, you know, he
Marko:moved the capital to Jerusalem.
Marko:I'm like, eh, like nobody cares about that.
Marko:Guys.
Marko:Like, uh, people who care about that don't matter.
Marko:Lemme just put it that way on both sides.
Marko:Sorry.
Marko:And then the second thing is like, obviously if you're on the left and
Marko:liberal, you're like, of course he does.
Marko:He let Israel do whatever they want.
Marko:And the truth is that Donald Trump is pro Donald Trump.
Marko:I think if you support Donald Trump and you give him a lot of benefit of
Marko:the doubt he's pro-America, if you are a little bit more nihilist than
Marko:maybe objective, you're just saying like, look, he's pro Donald Trump.
Marko:And the problem with Benjamin Netanyahu is that his domestic constraints are forcing
Marko:him to be extremely aggressive against Palestinians, whether in GA and West Bank.
Marko:And Donald Trump wants peace and equilibrium.
Marko:And so, yeah, like this is what we talked about last podcast.
Marko:I really don't have anything to add to that.
Marko:Bibi is playing with fire if he thinks that, you know, uh, the Israel lobby
Marko:in the United States of America.
Marko:If he thinks that his relationship with Trump, if he thinks that some idiotic
Marko:notion of American long-term strategic interests in backing Israel are going to
Marko:save him and his relationship with the United States, he is absolutely wrong.
Marko:And this could go sideways, very badly for Israel over the next 12 months.
Marko:Uh, so that's the first thing I think.
Marko:I mean, you don't wanna, you wanna pick a fight with the US president, like
Marko:whoever you are, it's just, it's not something you want to do, but especially
Marko:if you're a country of 10 million, you know, like why would you do that?
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:I I, before we move on to the Saudi Arabia stuff, 'cause I really do want to get your
Jacob Shapiro:take on that, 'cause you've been there and, and you've been ahead of this on
Jacob Shapiro:me and have a different view than I do.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, I think you're right about, um, Netanyahu and I, I wanna make two points.
Jacob Shapiro:The first is that I think Netanyahu was guilty of what a lot of foreign leaders
Jacob Shapiro:are, and even some policy makers in the United States, which is thinking
Jacob Shapiro:of President Trump as a useful idiot.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think he's many things, but he's not gonna be your monkey.
Jacob Shapiro:You're not gonna pull the strings.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think it was in Trump's interest in the first term, and you also
Jacob Shapiro:had Kushner very deeply inside the administration to where, and you know,
Jacob Shapiro:Trump had made promises about Iran.
Jacob Shapiro:Israel was gonna be a partner there, like Israel was useful to
Jacob Shapiro:him and that was all useful to his base and he pushed it forward.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think I. My hunch is that Netanyahu thought, oh, I have
Jacob Shapiro:this good standing relationship.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm just gonna say nice things.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm gonna be the one that's in his corner.
Jacob Shapiro:You might remember Israel was like one of the first countries to say
Jacob Shapiro:zero tariffs, like, we're good.
Jacob Shapiro:Like please no tariffs.
Jacob Shapiro:And then the Israelis were shocked when they were on the penguin tariff
Jacob Shapiro:list because they thought that they had headed it off at the past.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, so to your point, like President Trump cares for better and for worse
Jacob Shapiro:about President Trump, and so he will do whatever is in his interest and
Jacob Shapiro:he's not a moron as much as people may want to think he's a moron.
Jacob Shapiro:Howard Lutnick, I think the discussion about whether he's a moron is
Jacob Shapiro:actually a much more pertinent one.
Jacob Shapiro:The second thing though, and I, and I want to tie this in before you take, take it.
Jacob Shapiro:Before we get to Saudi Arabia, says, I wonder if there's a little bit of a
Jacob Shapiro:metaphor here also on what's happened with India and Pakistan because
Jacob Shapiro:the last time we spoke, India and Pakistan were going back and forth.
Jacob Shapiro:Things were ratcheting up.
Jacob Shapiro:You and I were both getting questions on Twitter.
Jacob Shapiro:Thank you.
Jacob Shapiro:Or X or whatever.
Jacob Shapiro:Thank everyone for asking you.
Jacob Shapiro:What do you guys think about this as an investment perspective?
Jacob Shapiro:Is it World War II or things spiraling outta control and then we have a
Jacob Shapiro:ceasefire, but we have the United States and President Trump in particular
Jacob Shapiro:claiming credit for the ceasefire and not really taking a Proin Indian stance.
Jacob Shapiro:Like Narendra.
Jacob Shapiro:Modi's not happy about the way that the US has intervened here.
Jacob Shapiro:He didn't even say that the US had done anything as part of the ceasefire
Jacob Shapiro:in his official comments yesterday.
Jacob Shapiro:And it, it was a lot of, what about is like, Trump's quote was basically
Jacob Shapiro:like, stop trading bombs, trade the nice things that you make with each other.
Jacob Shapiro:Can't you guys get along?
Jacob Shapiro:Rather than being like, no, India has a right to defend itself against terrorism.
Jacob Shapiro:India is the rightful holder of Kashmir.
Jacob Shapiro:India is all the things that India wants to be.
Jacob Shapiro:So I wonder like, you know, we can talk about Israel until we're blue in the face.
Jacob Shapiro:It's honestly not that geopolitically important in the end.
Jacob Shapiro:But I think the same thing just happened with India, which is India and Ra.
Jacob Shapiro:Modi thought, Hey, Trump is in our corner, so if we have to go after Pakistan or
Jacob Shapiro:Kashmir these other things, they're gonna support us a hundred percent.
Jacob Shapiro:JD Vance was just here, probably told us something like that, and yet you get
Jacob Shapiro:this little breakout of war and Trump is like, please stop bombing each other.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't want any of this.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm not gonna support you.
Jacob Shapiro:I just want you guys to stop bombing each other and I wanna take
Jacob Shapiro:credit for it 'cause I'm building my resume for a Nobel Peace Prize.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:Sorry, you go.
Marko:I have nothing to add to what you said.
Marko:I think that, uh, this goes back to the argument we had, not argument, but the,
Marko:the point I made in the last, uh, episode where I said that, you know, you can,
Marko:you can compare American geopolitical benevolence influence, uh, to QE to
Marko:just want the liquidity in the markets, which creates distortions and libria.
Marko:And the United States of America is withdrawing that benevolence.
Marko:It's changing its outlook.
Marko:It's acting like the most powerful country in a world, in a multipolar world.
Marko:It's not acting as a provider of hegemonic stability.
Marko:Um, and President Trump said something yesterday that quite frankly is the
Marko:most profound statement by any American legislator legislature on foreign
Marko:policy, maybe this entire century, if not even since World War ii.
Marko:Um.
Marko:Hillary Clinton famously said, America doesn't recognize fears
Marko:of influence, which as I joke, is like a ridiculous statement.
Marko:It's like, okay, cool.
Marko:Um, what does that mean?
Marko:You know?
Marko:But what President Trump said is the diametrically opposite of that,
Marko:which is, and I'm gonna quote it, is, it is God's job to sit in judgment.
Marko:It is my job to defend America.
Marko:I will never hesitate to wield American power to defend the United States.
Marko:But the point is that it's actually a really like profound statement.
Marko:Uh, the US is not going to judge.
Marko:It's not going to be making moralistic, normative, moralistic,
Marko:or normative calls or claims.
Marko:It's not gonna pursue a moralistic or normative foreign policy.
Marko:It's going to focus on the American interests.
Marko:And I think that in a way that is far easier for the rest of the
Marko:world to deal with because it's cleaner, it's more objective, and it
Marko:doesn't change with who's in charge.
Marko:You know, presumably, unless of course somebody replaces President
Marko:Trump who says, no, no, no, actually we will sit in judgment.
Marko:Um, so I thought that was very important in dovetail with everything you're saying.
Marko:I mean, that is the change that's happened.
Marko:And so that's why President Trump is open to making deals and being
Marko:a peacemaker in an objective way.
Marko:In a way.
Marko:Um, so it's going to rankle.
Marko:It's going to rankle and it's going to frustrate a lot of countries that thoughts
Marko:that they were morally superior, that they were on the right side of history,
Marko:that they were, uh, fighting with America against evil and tyranny around the world.
Marko:You know, that's who's gonna rankle.
Marko:But I think from a just purely.
Marko:Objective perspective.
Marko:It's also going to make it easier for the US to actually act as a peacemaker
Marko:and create libria around the world.
Marko:Not a popular take, especially with a lot of our listeners who
Marko:lean more progressive and liberal.
Marko:But in a multipolar world, I think it's very dangerous for the United
Marko:States to pursue normative judgment calls because it doesn't have the
Marko:wanton power to effectively prosecute.
Marko:Moral judgment.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, I, um, I, you, I wanna say that you're right about
Jacob Shapiro:the macro, but wrong about the micro here, but, so this was something else
Jacob Shapiro:I wanted to juxtapose the, the, the meetings in Saudi Arabia and all these
Jacob Shapiro:pictures that have been creating this dissonance for me at the same time
Jacob Shapiro:and much less covered, but covered.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm not, I don't wanna say that nobody is covering this.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, the, um, the Clac summit.
Jacob Shapiro:So the community of Latin American, Caribbean states is
Jacob Shapiro:happening in China right now.
Jacob Shapiro:And, um.
Jacob Shapiro:One of the things that Chinese President Xi Jinping said in his
Jacob Shapiro:opening address to the Clac Summit was China's and the countries of
Jacob Shapiro:Latin America and the Caribbean are important members of the global South.
Jacob Shapiro:Independence is our glorious tradition.
Jacob Shapiro:Development and revitalization, our natural right and fairness
Jacob Shapiro:and justice are common pursuit.
Jacob Shapiro:And as part of that, president Xi has opened up a new $66
Jacob Shapiro:billion Yuan credit line.
Jacob Shapiro:That's about $9 billion.
Jacob Shapiro:Has talked about all the different sources of funding that he wants to do there.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, president Lula from Brazil had some very strong things to say
Jacob Shapiro:about President Trump, basically lashing out at everybody else on
Jacob Shapiro:planet Earth that China is the one.
Jacob Shapiro:That has been treated like an enemy, except it's the one that is quote,
Jacob Shapiro:behaving like an example of a country that is trying to do business with countries
Jacob Shapiro:which have been forgotten by others.
Jacob Shapiro:End quote.
Jacob Shapiro:So like more shots fired at the United States.
Jacob Shapiro:So while you have Trump and scent and the Nvidia CEO and all, and you know,
Jacob Shapiro:Mohammad bin Salman sitting there in, in Saudi Arabia and announcing
Jacob Shapiro:all these investments and plans and multipolarity and great deep things,
Jacob Shapiro:you ironically have Xi Jinping taking up the mantle of, I won't call it
Jacob Shapiro:liberalism, but using some of the vocabulary of lib liberalism, using China
Jacob Shapiro:to say, we will be the force for good.
Jacob Shapiro:We will be the force for development for a better future.
Jacob Shapiro:And by the way, all these countries that are in America's backyard that
Jacob Shapiro:America has ignored, they're off gallivanting around the Arabian desert.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, you, Brazil, you Chile, you Columbia.
Jacob Shapiro:Come to China, take our yuan credit, swap lines, trade with us.
Jacob Shapiro:We're interested in closer relations.
Jacob Shapiro:The, the juxtaposition couldn't be sharper to me.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:But I, I don't think that you're correct in that it's a moral normative play.
Marko:It's merely saying like, we will help you with your economic development.
Marko:So in other words, president Xi invited Latin American leaders to basically
Marko:make the same pitch as President Trump is making in the Middle East, which
Marko:is that look work with us and we will bring economic development to you.
Marko:We're not gonna bring normative, moralistic, you know, policies.
Marko:We're not going to give you a lecture.
Marko:We will give you a loan.
Marko:And I think that that's, so it kind of dovetails with what I'm saying.
Marko:I think it's, China's always done what you just described, I think over the
Marko:past 20 years at least, uh, with a belt and road initiative with, um, I.
Marko:Rebuilding supply chains around the world.
Marko:I think it's the US that's catching up to Chinese foreign policy.
Marko:In other words, both sides are kind of pursuing the same thing.
Marko:By the way, I apologize for my dog.
Marko:I dunno what's going on, but you know, hopefully he's not
Marko:gonna tear someone apart.
Marko:I'm,
Jacob Shapiro:I'm sure he's keeping you safe and I'm, I'm so glad
Jacob Shapiro:to have a real disagreement with you because I think you're wrong.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, I think that, um.
Jacob Shapiro:China is, is not saying what you're saying, which is, yes, it's about economic
Jacob Shapiro:development, but it's economic economic development that is driven by openness.
Jacob Shapiro:They are making a normative claim that the way to growth is no trade barriers.
Jacob Shapiro:The way to growth is China needs to be able to import commodities from Latin
Jacob Shapiro:America for as cheaply as possible.
Jacob Shapiro:And in return you get access to the Chinese market.
Jacob Shapiro:And if you raise protections against these commodities, if you raise tariffs
Jacob Shapiro:because the United States told you to do so, if you say bad things about
Jacob Shapiro:China, or if you embrace Taiwan, uh, you know, some of these countries, the
Jacob Shapiro:countries that are remaining in the world that still recognize Taiwan over the
Jacob Shapiro:United States, most of them in, uh, uh, Latin America, really Central America.
Jacob Shapiro:And those have been sort of falling by the wayside.
Jacob Shapiro:So Xi Jinping is, he's saying, no, we are the country of openness.
Jacob Shapiro:We want free trade.
Jacob Shapiro:We want everything to go together, and we have these needs.
Jacob Shapiro:And if you get these needs, like you'll get access to the Chinese market, you'll,
Jacob Shapiro:you'll get your things going forward.
Jacob Shapiro:And, and as for Trump, like, um.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't know, like you're saying, like, I, I hear you in, in, in trying to make
Jacob Shapiro:something out of that speech, and I, I saw, I saw that speech making the rounds
Jacob Shapiro:and about defending, um, the United States, but it's a particular view of
Jacob Shapiro:the United States, and it's about closing the United States off to some countries.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, he's picking a battle with China in the long term.
Jacob Shapiro:There's something normative about picking China as this adversary, although of
Jacob Shapiro:course tariffs have gone away now.
Jacob Shapiro:So he's like sort of capitulated.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't know, but I, I, the, the only thing I'm trying to say is I think
Jacob Shapiro:there is something normative about China being the force for openness,
Jacob Shapiro:trade openness, and the United States saying, no, it's a protectionist world.
Jacob Shapiro:There are spheres of influence.
Jacob Shapiro:If you, if you, if we don't like you, you don't get our ships.
Jacob Shapiro:And if you're a company that does bad things, like we're gonna sanction you.
Jacob Shapiro:Whereas China doesn't want any of that.
Jacob Shapiro:But I think push back if you want.
Marko:No, I, I mean, I would just say I think we need to wait like six,
Marko:12 months to see where, uh, you know, the trade conflict settles, right?
Marko:Because if it settles with America, basically just getting some deals and
Marko:ultimately trade continuing, I think then.
Marko:We're at the same, you know, nothing really changed.
Marko:So I think we just need to see where it settles.
Marko:Uh, but yeah, no, it's, it's very interesting and I think that, uh, uh,
Marko:going back to your original point, you know about, you know, your shock,
Marko:that like Saudi Arabia is at the epicenter of a lot of these things.
Marko:What I would say is, so to, to take the other side of that, you know, I've been
Marko:going to Saudi Arabia for 10 years.
Marko:Uh, I grew up part of my life in the Middle East.
Marko:And so, um, been on the ground in Saudi Arabia since probably
Marko:2014, uh, once a year except for Covid and a subsequent couple of
Marko:years when nobody really traveled.
Marko:But, uh, no country has changed more on the planet than Saudi Arabia.
Marko:And I compare what's going on there to the Maji restoration.
Marko:Like that's how profound I think it is.
Marko:Uh, I think Saudi Arabia has been beset by a lot of, uh, existential risks
Marko:over the last five years, 10 years.
Marko:I. And, uh, I think that their pivot is 180 degree turn.
Marko:And the reason that they're able to do the 180 degree turn, and this is where I think
Marko:Western analysts and just commentators, I think what they don't realize is
Marko:how, uh, you know, how absolutely unnecessary, not, not unnecessary, but
Marko:how arbitrary the conservative tilt in Saudi Arabia was in 1979, Saudi
Marko:Arabia had very low state capacity.
Marko:What does state capacity mean?
Marko:It like ability to, like collect revenue, build an army, defend
Marko:itself, pursue a foreign policy.
Marko:In 1979, Saudi Arabia had really no state capacity.
Marko:Um, it had existed as a modern state for like 15 years at
Marko:that point, quite frankly.
Marko:And so in 19 79, 2 things happened that really threatened the
Marko:very existence of this country.
Marko:One was the Islamic Revolution in neighboring Iran.
Marko:It brought a dramatic shift to the region.
Marko:And the other ones was the attack on the Grand Mosque in 1979 in Riyadh, um, which
Marko:Saudi Arabia couldn't resolve by itself.
Marko:It had to bring in French intelligence and French special
Marko:forces to liberate the Grand Mosque.
Marko:So these two things accelerated Saudi Arabia stern towards conservatism.
Marko:This idea that there's some sort of a wahabi link with the origin of Saudi
Marko:Arabia, that would be like saying Americans have a link with Puritanism.
Marko:You know what I mean?
Marko:Like relax, like the alliance between the wahabi in the bin South
Marko:family is freaking 300 years old.
Marko:What happened was in 1979, the leadership in Saudi Arabia had to
Marko:fight against like this global threat, which suddenly shows up in Mecca.
Marko:And so they make a decision, which ultimately was a wrong one, uh, to,
Marko:you know, effectively make a deal with, uh, religious conservative.
Marko:Part of society.
Marko:Um, and, uh, they spend the next 30 years building state capacity thanks
Marko:to massive oil wealth and material.
Marko:Wealth is the foundation of geopolitical power.
Marko:And nowhere can you really see that more than in Saudi Arabia.
Marko:They become more competent in defending their interests abroad and at home.
Marko:And I think that the turn in Saudi Arabia over the last five, uh,
Marko:five, 10 years is really a product of that buildup of state capacity.
Marko:Saudi Arabia does not have to have this alliance, uh, anymore with, uh,
Marko:social and religious conservatives.
Marko:And so it's discarded them massively.
Marko:And I think that nobody understands just how thorough this discarding is.
Marko:And also I think most people don't understand how arbitrary and non
Marko:culturally correct or religiously correct the alliance was in the first place.
Marko:Uh, so yeah, I will, I will say that Saudi Arabia by 2050.
Marko:Will be more or as liberal as Israel in 2050.
Marko:There's my profound and uh, controversial statement.
Marko:I think this is an inexorable move and I think that, um, it's the reason why Saudi
Marko:Arabia has become a factor of stability.
Marko:I mean, you've got Iranian and Israeli cruise Miss cells flying over
Marko:Saudi Arabia, and it hasn't impacted the country at all economically
Marko:from an investment perspective.
Marko:I mean, what's impacting the country more is price of oil as it always is, right?
Marko:So this isn't, this isn't some argument you should go and buy Saudi stocks.
Marko:That's not what I'm saying.
Marko:I. I'm just saying that you should probably get on a plane and go to Saudi
Marko:Arabia and see what I'm talking about.
Marko:But even when people do that, the problem is that if they don't have the frame of
Marko:reference or if they haven't been visiting Saudi Arabia, they don't have the data
Marko:points in which to actually understand just how profound, uh, the changes happen.
Marko:I.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, there's two different things in, in what you're saying.
Jacob Shapiro:And by the way, you might be right about that controversial take with Israel.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause Israel's rapidly moving in a reactionary direction.
Jacob Shapiro:So Saudi Arabia moves this way and Israel moves the opposite direction they
Jacob Shapiro:might meet in the middle of somewhere.
Jacob Shapiro:Such is life.
Jacob Shapiro:Such is life.
Jacob Shapiro:But, um, you know, there's the point on Saudi Arabia and then there's the
Jacob Shapiro:larger point that even if you're right, and I, I'm not sure, like I'll take the
Jacob Shapiro:opposite side of that, like the idea that they're gonna transform oil wealth
Jacob Shapiro:into a glittering liberal democracy in the heart of the Middle East, or
Jacob Shapiro:glittering liberal constitutional monarchy, whatever you wanna call it.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't know, like, okay, Dutch disease is no longer real then if they were able to
Jacob Shapiro:take the oil wealth and change centuries of entrenched interests and all these
Jacob Shapiro:other things, I, I would take the other side of it, but fine, leave that aside.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, it still doesn't make sense to me that the most powerful people in the
Jacob Shapiro:world, or some of the most powerful people in the world are going to, to
Jacob Shapiro:Saudi Arabia to make these decisions.
Jacob Shapiro:That this is the epicenter of where things are happening.
Jacob Shapiro:Because even if I grant everything that you just said.
Jacob Shapiro:How is the future of like AI and things like that being announced
Jacob Shapiro:in, in this country right now?
Jacob Shapiro:Like, why is President, president Trump?
Jacob Shapiro:Well, to be so drawn to it rather than some of the other places in the
Jacob Shapiro:world that are more geographically and geopolitically significant?
Marko:So actually, uh, the future of AI will definitely
Marko:not be decided by Saudi Arabia.
Marko:I mean, it's, I think, uh, the region is why they're all there, you know?
Marko:And look, capital is important.
Marko:Material wealth is the foundation of geopolitical power.
Marko:It's not demographics, it's not geography.
Marko:Oh my God, for god's sakes.
Marko:You know, the United Kingdom, what's its population?
Marko:Okay, what's its geography?
Marko:What's its climate?
Marko:What are their natural resources?
Marko:None.
Marko:None, none, none.
Marko:And yet it conquered the entire planet.
Marko:The empire ne the sun never sat on the British empire.
Marko:So the reason I say this is because there's a concentration of wealth and
Marko:capital, and there's a tabula rasa approach to innovation in these countries.
Marko:UAE, Oman, Qatar.
Marko:Uh, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the tabula rasa is very important.
Marko:This idea that you can have like basically a blank slate.
Marko:You have capital, let's do something with it.
Marko:Now Saudi Arabia is actually not taking the tech approach.
Marko:To be clear, you're not.
Marko:This is the first time that I've actually really seen like emphasis on
Marko:tech bros in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia is doing, I think what's very intelligent.
Marko:They basically fired order McKinsey consultants 'cause they realized
Marko:that they're taking them for a ride.
Marko:Well done and they've start done and they're called
Jacob Shapiro:well done.
Jacob Shapiro:And now, and now please call the geopolitical cousins and
Jacob Shapiro:get us, get us the plane.
Marko:We could do it.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:Uh, otherwise Qatar will, and you know how that goes, like
Marko:can you really be behind cut?
Marko:Like yeah, let's make a pin war.
Marko:Who's gonna give us a plane Watch when a plane gets delivered
Marko:on my street in Santa Monica.
Marko:Like that will be awkward.
Marko:You know?
Marko:Um, I. I'll get a ticket for sure.
Marko:But look, what I'm trying to say is that Saudi Arabia's actually
Marko:adopted industrialization.
Marko:They're focusing on actually kind of dirty, like, you know, they're
Marko:trying to employ 22 million Saudis.
Marko:So they're much different from the other countries.
Marko:They're actually a real country.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:With like social stratification.
Marko:Not every Saudi is a millionaire, you know?
Marko:Uh, and this is something a lot of people don't understand.
Marko:It's a country that needs a service sector, industrial
Marko:sector, and they're doing it very, very correctly, I would say.
Marko:But yes.
Marko:Are they gonna get de link from oil price?
Marko:No, it's gonna take time.
Marko:Or maybe never happen, but UAE.
Marko:However, Jacob, I would say think about that country as a country that does have
Marko:some advantages when it comes to ai.
Marko:Okay.
Marko:What are they, well, first of all, what's the biggest downside risk to ai?
Marko:It's job losses.
Marko:I mean, we all know this.
Marko:Well, guess who doesn't care at all?
Jacob Shapiro:I, I thought, wait.
Jacob Shapiro:I thought the biggest risk of AI was that it would decide we're all
Jacob Shapiro:stupid and take over and kill us.
Marko:I mean, fine, fine, but in the process it would lead
Jacob Shapiro:to job loss.
Jacob Shapiro:We would lose jobs in that scenario too.
Marko:Well, I mean, I think, I think, look, go it pretty clear,
Marko:the biggest risk to AI is that its deployment will be slowed down by
Marko:vent vested interests of unions.
Marko:You know, like people say, look, oh no man, all the truckers will lose their job.
Marko:Well, but will they, or will we say something like, trucks can be driverless,
Marko:but there has to be human supervision so that 3 million American men who work
Marko:in transportation don't lose their job.
Marko:See, that's something that Saudi Arabia doesn't have.
Marko:Uh, sorry, not Saudi Arabia.
Marko:UAE does not have a problem with.
Marko:One of the interesting advantages that United Arab Emirates has is that
Marko:their biggest sort of social problem, socioeconomic problem, national
Marko:security problem, is that they have to rely on expats for everything.
Marko:From accountants to doctors, to nurses, to hotel staff, to
Marko:Uber drivers to housekeepers.
Marko:And wouldn't it be great if you didn't have to do that?
Marko:And so what are the vested interests?
Marko:What vested interests exist in UAE that will prevent the deployment of ai?
Marko:And the answer is kind of fewer than exist in the rest of the world.
Marko:And so I would say that there is an interesting link there.
Marko:But overall all I would say is that I think that the Middle East
Marko:is moving in the right direction.
Marko:I think it's gonna become a financial capital for global south flows.
Marko:So south to south connectivity, I think what Abu Dhabi is doing with financial
Marko:like capital is really interesting.
Marko:And I think what Saudi Arabia is doing with its industrialization
Marko:is interesting too.
Marko:Too many Westerners over index on the line nail 'em.
Marko:Hero projects, you know, like Yeah, I think, I think that's
Jacob Shapiro:the dis the, the dismemberment of Khashoggi.
Marko:I mean, well, yeah, but that happened like how many years ago.
Marko:And also, let's not forget the United States of it happened,
Jacob Shapiro:it happened after 2014,
Marko:but the United States of America killed a Jazeera journalists in Iraq.
Marko:Okay,
Jacob Shapiro:sure.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, I, I don't know that, but if you say that, sure.
Jacob Shapiro:That doesn't to defeat the point.
Jacob Shapiro:No, it's,
Marko:it's a fact.
Marko:United States of America shot a missile into Al Jazeera headquarters
Marko:in Baghdad or somewhere in Iraq.
Marko:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:If you say so, fine.
Jacob Shapiro:The Saudi, the Saudis are still dismembering journalists, like in,
Jacob Shapiro:in, during this time p period, that they've embraced liberalization.
Marko:Well, the plural, the plural is, is awkward in that statement, right?
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:Number one, the plural is, is awkward.
Marko:And the second thing is, you know, uh, Moham bins actually accepted.
Marko:That that happens and that that was the fault of the state.
Marko:Think about that for a second.
Marko:When the United States of America killed several journalists for Al Jazeera during
Marko:the Iraqi counterinsurgency, it was like, oops, sorry, like raw building.
Marko:Like, oh, okay.
Marko:All, all, all I would say is that, you know, uh, if the worst that Saudi Arabia
Marko:has done is the death of one single journalist, I would say like, let's not
Marko:start comparing the ledger on crimes against journalism of other countries.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:We
Jacob Shapiro:can also, we can also talk about the support, like the soft support
Jacob Shapiro:of Jihadist Group, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Jacob Shapiro:But yes, I, I'd say your point, but that
Marko:Okay.
Marko:But we should talk about that because I would say the transformation
Marko:of Saudi Arabia is based on that.
Marko:It is not the soft support, it's the hard support for SUNY Islamists mm-hmm.
Marko:That caused what you would call an intelligence a, uh.
Marko:Wait, I forgot the term backlash.
Marko:Hmm.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, that works.
Jacob Shapiro:I think, I think that's what you're trying to say.
Marko:Yeah, that's what, no, there's a, there's a different term though,
Marko:but anyways, by brain thought.
Marko:But yeah, that's exactly why they've transformed the country, because the
Marko:country has clearly realized that they were the ones that were gonna
Marko:actually hurt the most because of their support for Sunni Islamists.
Marko:And I think that the moment when that really came home to roost
Marko:to Saudi Arabia was when Baghdadi proclaimed the caliphate out of Mosul.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:You know, because caliphate doesn't mean that you're gonna
Marko:go to Rome or Paris or New York.
Marko:It means you need Mecca.
Marko:And I think that was the moment when Saudi Arabia, it was precisely because
Marko:of its overt support for Sunni Islamism, that it has changed today so profound.
Marko:So, and yes, it's not gonna be a smooth sailing, it's not gonna be a straight
Marko:line, and you have all sorts of, you know, you are always gonna have empirical data
Marko:points to prove that it isn't working or that there's like illiberalism.
Marko:But I think that, again, you gotta go to Saudi Arabia physically,
Marko:I think, to see the changes.
Marko:Otherwise, you know, is just not gonna stick.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, I, I'm reminded of, um, early House of Cards when
Jacob Shapiro:House of Cards was actually good, where Remy is running around lobbying
Jacob Shapiro:things like that, and Frank Underwood turns to the camera and is like,
Jacob Shapiro:Remy mistakes money with power.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, and I had that running through my head when you were
Jacob Shapiro:talking about material wealth.
Jacob Shapiro:And I also have the fact that due to low oil prices, Saudi Arabia's
Jacob Shapiro:already hit its budget deficit target for the year and we're on, we're
Jacob Shapiro:not even halfway through the year.
Jacob Shapiro:Well, that's fine, fine.
Jacob Shapiro:Now they have big coffers and all these other things.
Jacob Shapiro:Like I get that they have material wealth, but it can't go there.
Jacob Shapiro:But I think that, um, the, the points we were making about the UAE and the
Jacob Shapiro:power of city states relative to big states, it actually plays very well
Jacob Shapiro:into our power geopolitical draft.
Jacob Shapiro:But before I hand over the mc duties to you, I think we should
Jacob Shapiro:spend literally max two minutes, 30 seconds on what's going on.
Jacob Shapiro:A little update on Russia, Ukraine.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause there's supposed to be negotiations in Istanbul tomorrow.
Jacob Shapiro:Will they happen?
Jacob Shapiro:Won't they happen?
Jacob Shapiro:Is there a ceasefire?
Jacob Shapiro:Is there not a ceasefire?
Jacob Shapiro:So give me your 60 seconds and maybe I'll do 60 seconds and
Jacob Shapiro:then let's get to the fun part.
Marko:Uh, well, I think that we're getting to a point where, I mean, it's
Marko:pretty clear that just like Benjamin Netanyahu, uh, Vladimir Putin is
Marko:risking drawing the ire of Donald Trump.
Marko:You know, and again, this is where liberal critics of President Trump are gonna
Marko:have to eat a lot of crow because he was supposed to be pro-Russian, you know?
Marko:Well, mm. Doesn't look like it.
Marko:And if Putin makes a mistake here, like if I was Putin's advisor, I'd be
Marko:like, listen bro, you gotta cut your losses and proclaim victory ASAP.
Marko:Now I know what the problem for Putin is.
Marko:He hasn't conquered them yet, which is part of, right.
Marko:So he needs to bring all of Donbas home or else a lot of right wing
Marko:nationalist bloggers are gonna like, you know, go after him.
Marko:He just needs to cut his losses, sharpen the bone, saw since you're obsessed
Marko:with that point, and start putting some of those bloggers, uh, in jail.
Marko:Because the truth is you're gonna have to swallow a deal.
Marko:You're gonna have to swallow a deal, uh, that maybe some nationalist right
Marko:wing lunatics in Russia don't like.
Marko:But you know what, who cares about borders?
Marko:Don, I'll tell you who, who does not give a fuck?
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, that nihilist, Jay Trump does not kill that.
Jacob Shapiro:That.
Jacob Shapiro:Nihilist Colon is really wafting today.
Jacob Shapiro:The only thing I want to add to what you were saying is that I don't
Jacob Shapiro:know if it was intentional or not.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't have the receipts to prove it one way or another, but I did put myself
Jacob Shapiro:out there when the Zelensky Oval Office incident happened and said, I think
Jacob Shapiro:actually Zelensky got the better of that.
Jacob Shapiro:I think he actually understood the moment better than anybody else.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think that's true today because like what was the first things that
Jacob Shapiro:Zelensky said when the US was talking about peace negotiations and Istanbul?
Jacob Shapiro:He said, I'll be there as soon as Putin is there.
Jacob Shapiro:Like he has been Yes sir. Every step of the way.
Jacob Shapiro:And he's also gotten the Europeans squarely in his corner
Jacob Shapiro:because they're afraid of the big Donald in the White House.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause you've had Macron, Germany both come out and say, if Russia does not show
Jacob Shapiro:up to the summit, additional sanctions for Russia, we're gonna get tougher.
Jacob Shapiro:So I think Zelensky actually like pushed back against Trump a little bit.
Jacob Shapiro:Got the Europeans on board.
Jacob Shapiro:Looks like he's the one that's actually playing ball in the aftermath, whereas
Jacob Shapiro:Putin is now the one sitting there.
Jacob Shapiro:But he wasn't though, like not quite figuring it out.
Marko:I think.
Marko:I think you, you, yes, that's correct.
Marko:But he wasn't playing ball and he was obsessed with normative value statements.
Marko:Remember when Zelensky, I think, yeah,
Jacob Shapiro:I think, I think that was for the cameras.
Jacob Shapiro:I think that was all about, oh, if I position myself here correctly, if
Jacob Shapiro:I show myself pushing back against Trump, I get support at home.
Jacob Shapiro:I get support from the Europeans.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't really care.
Jacob Shapiro:I just wanna make sure that everybody's on my side.
Jacob Shapiro:And you remember when Trump, you were the one who brought this up, that Trump turns
Jacob Shapiro:to the TV and says, wasn't that good tv?
Jacob Shapiro:I think Zelensky knew that was good TV too.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think he used that net meeting to shore up some domestic support
Jacob Shapiro:home, get the Europeans freaked out so that they would support him more.
Jacob Shapiro:And now like he walked it back.
Jacob Shapiro:So when negotiations got a little further down the road, he's the one
Jacob Shapiro:that's meeting Trump in the back.
Jacob Shapiro:Well, that's important.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:He's the one who's saying, I will show up in Istanbul immediately.
Jacob Shapiro:You tell me where, when, how high to jump, how many rare earth minerals Fine.
Jacob Shapiro:And it's Putin is now the one that looks recalcitrant.
Jacob Shapiro:I think he played it right.
Marko:I mean, I don't think Zelensky played five D chess.
Marko:I think I have a more of an Occam's raise view on this.
Marko:You know, and it's fine.
Marko:We, we disagree, but like, I think he walked in there intoxicated
Marko:with the normative moralistic bullshit of the Biden administration
Marko:that elevated him into a saint.
Marko:And he was shocked, shocked by denialism of the Trump administration
Marko:when Trump basically said, look, you're both the same to me.
Marko:You know?
Marko:And uh, but to his credit and where we do agree is that he is smart enough to know.
Marko:Oh.
Marko:Oh, okay.
Marko:Oh, okay.
Marko:So that's what you want.
Marko:You want me to show?
Marko:I'm willing to negotiate.
Marko:Alright.
Marko:Balls in Putin's court then.
Marko:And look, I mean, again, I think that the big risk for both Netanyahu
Marko:and Putin is to assume is to read New York Times, you know.
Marko:Don't read mainstream media and become intoxicated with this view
Marko:that Trump is somehow pro your side.
Marko:You better start dancing when he plays the tune or else you're gonna feel
Marko:the full wrath of the US And if us and Europe get on the same page and they
Marko:get those secondary sanctions on, on, on Russia, I think that's kind of game over.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:Alright.
Jacob Shapiro:We have 45 minutes to do a geopolitical draft.
Jacob Shapiro:Take the mic away, my friend.
Marko:Alright, cool.
Marko:So, uh, this is gonna be on the title of the podcast.
Marko:So if you sort of, uh, expected this, uh, you know, you might have fast forwarded
Marko:through the first 45 minutes or not, but what Jacob and I are gonna do is
Marko:we're going to pick 10 countries each.
Marko:So it's from one to 20, and we're gonna try to make a case for,
Marko:you know, what are the 20 most powerful countries in the world.
Marko:And of course, since our Lord and Savior is Bill Simmons
Marko:of the, uh, bill Simmons podcast network.
Marko:And the ringer.
Marko:He has this thing for basketball, which is the, I think, trade value draft, right?
Marko:Jacob
Jacob Shapiro:trade value column.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, it's a trade value column, but yes.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:So basically what what he does is, uh, he picks players not based of just their
Marko:skill or their abilities today, but it's their progression in the future
Marko:relative to how much they're paid.
Marko:Right?
Marko:So some rookie who looks like Victor Mbma, who is an absolute freak of
Marko:nature in the San Antonio Spurs, he's obviously top two, right?
Marko:Because he is seven foot 12 or whatever the hell he is.
Marko:He's incredible.
Marko:And he's on a rookie contract.
Marko:So what we wanna do is we wanna do the same thing.
Marko:We wanna think about the next, uh, I think 30 years.
Marko:Jacob.
Marko:Let's, let's look, look at, that's fine.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:Like, so not a hundred year time horizon.
Marko:'cause that's insane.
Marko:We don't know what technologies are gonna be out there.
Marko:We wanna really focus on the next 30 year time horizon.
Marko:And we wanna think about countries that are, um, going to be, you know.
Marko:The most powerful country geopolitically.
Marko:Now, in terms of what, um, what sort of rubrics we're gonna use, what
Marko:sort of, um, variables, what sort of attributes one would use for this?
Marko:We're gonna probably have different views on this.
Marko:So, uh, there's something called a National Capability Index.
Marko:It was created by the Correlates of War Project in 1963.
Marko:Um, this is an extremely outdated way to measure geopolitical power.
Marko:It has things like military personnel, like how many men with weapons,
Marko:you have iron and steel production.
Marko:Um, it has, uh, although, you know, somebody like Donald Trump might
Marko:be overindexed on this since he's obsessed about iron and steel, but
Marko:it's a very Cold War era index.
Marko:You can go and you can take a look at it.
Marko:Um, the political scientist who created it back during the,
Marko:uh, cold War was David Singer.
Marko:He was the founder.
Marko:He's a political scientist, university of Michigan.
Marko:You can download it online.
Marko:China's actually number one on this, and I think that it's because it's outdated.
Marko:You know, it looks at demographics in a very one-to-one basis.
Marko:Uh, in my own research, I've created something, um, that I
Marko:call the Geopolitical Power Index.
Marko:And it, uh, looks at, uh, a little bit of different four
Marko:variables, uh, on population.
Marko:Uh, I adapt the original population, me measure by penalizing countries with
Marko:large dependency ratios, so old to youth.
Marko:Um, and so, uh, I make make the argument that it's not just the
Marko:size of your population, it's also the demographic, uh, pyramid.
Marko:Uh, the second is global economic relevance.
Marko:So the original index really failed to capture a relevance
Marko:for the global economy.
Marko:So there was no globalist future.
Marko:So what I look at is contribution to the global final demand.
Marko:The more an economy imports, I argue the greater its bargaining power in terms
Marko:of trade vis-a-vis geopolitical rivals.
Marko:So what matters to me is imports as percent of uh, GDP.
Marko:And then for the military, I don't really look at things
Marko:like, uh, maned wood weapons.
Marko:I look at whether you have technological cap capacity.
Marko:Uh, so I have this quantitative measure.
Marko:There's a couple of other things as well, r and d. Um, I look at that as well.
Marko:That's part of the index.
Marko:I'm not actually going to use this index.
Marko:I'm gonna deviate from it because we're thinking about the future.
Marko:But I'm just saying that there's a quantitative basis for some of my picks.
Marko:Did you wanna say anything before we start, Jacob?
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:I do wanna say something about, uh, before we start, and by you and I,
Jacob Shapiro:we haven't talked about this when I was still at GPF with George, we, uh,
Jacob Shapiro:when we were trying to sell GPF for to institutions for subscriptions,
Jacob Shapiro:we created the GPI, the Geopolitical Power Index, which I have not gone back
Jacob Shapiro:to since I left, uh, George in 2019.
Jacob Shapiro:But we did a similar, uh, sort of exercise, so that's really funny.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, I was actually, I, I, I'm actually reminded of something that, um,
Jacob Shapiro:I, I don't know if Roger trained, trained you, Marco, but when I was
Jacob Shapiro:a, an intern at, at Stratford, Roger was the one who was like overseeing
Jacob Shapiro:Roger Baker development program.
Jacob Shapiro:He's still
Marko:a Stratford, I believe.
Marko:Roger.
Jacob Shapiro:Yep.
Jacob Shapiro:He is.
Jacob Shapiro:He is.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, don't take this the wrong way, Roger, queen of the ashes, if you will.
Jacob Shapiro:Um.
Jacob Shapiro:So, uh, a little Game of Thrones, denars, storm born reference there.
Jacob Shapiro:So, but, um, he, I, I remember many of the things that Roger taught, and
Jacob Shapiro:Roger's been on my podcast too, so if you wanna know who Roger Baker is, he
Jacob Shapiro:doesn't have a big, um, he does not have a big following, I don't think.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause he never really wanted that.
Jacob Shapiro:But in some ways he like trained.
Jacob Shapiro:He was the one actually training a lot of us in the brass tacks,
Jacob Shapiro:but he always told me, geopolitics is not a science, it's an art.
Jacob Shapiro:Agreed.
Jacob Shapiro:It's more like agreed making pottery than it is about, you know, figuring out
Jacob Shapiro:statistics and quantitative measures.
Jacob Shapiro:And I've always remembered that.
Jacob Shapiro:It was always super helpful for me when going into really quantitative spaces
Jacob Shapiro:and having the confidence to be like, okay, like, great, you have statistics.
Jacob Shapiro:I also have statistics, like I have a very nice index here.
Jacob Shapiro:I can make the index say whatever I want.
Jacob Shapiro:I can find a chart or a piece of data that will support any viewpoint.
Jacob Shapiro:In the end, the more important thing is to qualitatively say, what do I think?
Jacob Shapiro:This is gonna happen.
Jacob Shapiro:And so when I think about power, for me it boils down to really one key question.
Jacob Shapiro:Can this country make you do something you don't wanna do?
Jacob Shapiro:And to the extent that a country can do that to you, I will add
Jacob Shapiro:checks in in the power basis.
Jacob Shapiro:So it's not like I'm just throwing darts at the wall here.
Jacob Shapiro:Then we have to think about things like, like you said, population.
Jacob Shapiro:I think nuclear weapons is a really tough one here.
Jacob Shapiro:And one I really struggled with, is it all the nuclear countries first
Jacob Shapiro:and then non-nuclear countries?
Jacob Shapiro:Below are are, if you're like a middling nuclear power, like in Israel or a
Jacob Shapiro:Pakistan, okay, you have nukes, but does that mean you're more powerful than in
Jacob Shapiro:Japan who doesn't technically have nukes but has all these other, like that was
Jacob Shapiro:one thing that I really struggled with.
Jacob Shapiro:But yeah, for me it's all about we can have all these indicators, we can
Jacob Shapiro:look at all these different things, but comes back to the question, can
Jacob Shapiro:this country make another country do something that it doesn't wanna
Jacob Shapiro:do more than other countries?
Jacob Shapiro:And that was my ultimate sort of rubric.
Marko:Uh, brilliant.
Marko:And I absolutely agree with you.
Marko:It's not a science at all.
Marko:So I wanna just start off by saying that yes, I have a quantitative index
Marko:and I'm gonna deviate from it quite significantly, just to be clear.
Marko:Um, yeah, that's it.
Marko:Um, I, I
Jacob Shapiro:do too, and I will, and I will deviate from it.
Jacob Shapiro:Everybody has a quantitative index and chat.
Jacob Shapiro:GPT probably has quantitative in disease better than any of ours.
Jacob Shapiro:But the thing that will keep us relevant for the next 30 years
Jacob Shapiro:is like, it's not that easy.
Jacob Shapiro:Like, that's what keeps us in business.
Marko:Well, yeah, and, and I think the point is like, let's, let's really
Marko:think about some non-linearity here.
Marko:Like, uh, given the technology and given where we're going, you know,
Marko:what are some of the countries that I think are going to be, uh, interesting
Marko:Now, nuclear power is interesting.
Marko:I think it's absolutely critical.
Marko:Um, I, I would answer that question to you, Jacob, by saying
Marko:that there are countries out there that are nuclear powers.
Marko:You know, like Japan, let's not joke here.
Marko:If Japan wants a nuclear weapon, it's, it has one.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:The other one that, that I think is interesting is population.
Marko:Uh, I think that you will notice that I will, uh, completely and
Marko:utterly dismiss demographics.
Marko:I think that, I think that we are way too obsessed with it.
Marko:Um, probably because anyone can download data from the UN and then be an expert.
Marko:And the truth is that we're getting a ton of innovation in AI and automation
Marko:that literally makes humans irrelevant.
Marko:And so not irrelevant, but like I. Population size.
Marko:And I still hear this nonsense about Russia not being able to feel the
Marko:military 'cause his population is declining or China having a problem
Marko:'cause it has not enough men.
Marko:What are people talking about Jacob?
Marko:We're not fighting wars with millions of men.
Marko:Right?
Marko:Like
Jacob Shapiro:I'll, I'll be, I'll be less diplomatic than you are.
Jacob Shapiro:Peter Zhan is talking about things on his YouTube channel in
Jacob Shapiro:order to get clicks and listen.
Jacob Shapiro:And also if you wanna talk about demographics, you can go read the fourth
Jacob Shapiro:turning or whatever else, which I famously take shots at whenever I have the chance.
Marko:And, and for good reason.
Marko:I mean, look, India supposedly has great demographics.
Marko:Really.
Marko:I think I used this on this podcast before, like India, there was recently
Marko:a Indian railways like job application.
Marko:For like 900 a job openings, 2 million people applied.
Marko:Like it's more difficult to get a job in Indian railways than to get
Marko:into Harvard, uh, Northern Africa.
Marko:The countries of Northern Africa that started Arab Spring had gorgeous
Marko:population pyramids for God's sakes.
Marko:You know, just having a lot of young people doesn't mean
Marko:that you're gonna be fine.
Marko:In fact, in many ways you're not gonna be fine because you have too many
Marko:young people that you can't employ.
Marko:So anyways,
Jacob Shapiro:yeah, no, and thing I would just to make the point the
Jacob Shapiro:most in India's gdp, d per capita, you'll see that in my, is just
Jacob Shapiro:above that of the Republic of Congo.
Jacob Shapiro:So like, population can be a curse if you have too much and you're not wealthy
Jacob Shapiro:enough to spread the wealth around.
Jacob Shapiro:Yes.
Jacob Shapiro:Go on.
Jacob Shapiro:Sorry.
Marko:Yeah, yeah.
Marko:No, so I'm just saying like, you will see that in my, uh, deviation.
Marko:I, I think given technology and given that demographics is a, a double-edged sword.
Marko:Think of it as a double-edged sword.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:It can cut both ways.
Marko:Alright, so let's start, I'm gonna start this time around because, um, you
Marko:know, I've spent a lot of this, uh, uh, podcast relationship with you, Jacob,
Marko:uh, kind of bashing the idea of American, uh, unipolarity and hegemony and, uh,
Marko:you know, I've been talking about the multipolar world longer than Xi Jinping
Marko:and Vladimir Putin, for God's sakes.
Marko:You know, so I'm gonna start off by picking the United
Marko:States of America as number one.
Marko:Of course.
Marko:I think, you know, I think we all agree, um, and this is very important
Marko:for those who listen to this.
Marko:America is not a hegemon.
Marko:It does not have preponderance of power.
Marko:It cannot force you to do things with a phone call, as it did famously in
Marko:the Sue crisis is 19 56, 57, I believe.
Marko:Uh, but it's still the most powerful country in the world.
Marko:And I wanna, this is about the next 30 years, and I just think that,
Marko:um, I. Not to be glib, but in this particular case, I think it does
Marko:help that geography is what it is.
Marko:Uh, to give Peter Zion the point, you know, it is surrounded by two oceans.
Marko:That is absolutely correct, and it's really far from everywhere.
Marko:Um, technology is narrowing that geographical gap,
Marko:cybersecurity, other issues.
Marko:Obviously we all agree with that, but he has a lot of natural resources, and
Marko:most importantly, even at its darkest moments, it does rediscover itself.
Marko:That is kind of the beauty of the American Democratic experiment.
Marko:Uh, many people who are losing their mind about Donald Trump today should
Marko:just read more about 1971, honestly, and see how dark that period of time was.
Marko:Or just watch some movies that were made in that period.
Marko:I mean, they're all dark and rainy and depressed and everybody's sad and,
Marko:you know, like doesn't wear deodorant and like, you know, just lots of like.
Marko:Bad cars and dark, dark themes.
Marko:And so what I would say is that, yeah, I would pick United States of America.
Marko:I don't even think we'd really talk about it, but US is the most
Marko:powerful country in the world.
Marko:Uh, it's head and shoulders above everyone else.
Marko:And as I always say, that doesn't make you a hegemon.
Marko:To be a hegemon.
Marko:To be unipolar, you have to be head, shoulder, torso, hips.
Marko:That's not the case anymore.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:But it may be in the future.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, I, I'm with you.
Jacob Shapiro:I, I, it's not just that the United States can't do things, uh, make people
Jacob Shapiro:do things with a phone call anymore.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, we talked about the Houthis at the very beginning.
Jacob Shapiro:Apparently the Houthis shot down drones.
Jacob Shapiro:They got close to shooting down an F 35, if you believe some of the reporting.
Jacob Shapiro:So like part of the, the sea change in, in, you know, us, uh, posture
Jacob Shapiro:towards the Houthis was about not even being able to do what, you know, the
Jacob Shapiro:US did to the Houthis under, or excuse me, not to the Houthis, but to a, an
Jacob Shapiro:Iranian threat to Persian Gulf shipping in the late 19, I believe it was.
Jacob Shapiro:Was that Reagan or Bush?
Jacob Shapiro:I can't remember which one it was, but the late Reagan 1980s.
Jacob Shapiro:But to your point, operat, I als I also praying.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:So sorry, praying Mantis.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:But I also had the US number one, even, even though I say all the things that
Jacob Shapiro:you do, um, and I, my guess is that our first two picks will be the same
Jacob Shapiro:and then things might get interesting.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, but my second pick is gonna be, um, I'll, I'll take
Jacob Shapiro:China number two on the board.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, I think that's also pretty clear.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, and I think the greatest threat to our multipolar thesis, and I say
Jacob Shapiro:that all the time, is that it we're really headed towards another bipolar
Jacob Shapiro:world where it's the US on the one side and China on the other side.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, China has huge problems.
Jacob Shapiro:It has structural economic problems.
Jacob Shapiro:It has hundreds of millions of, you know, impoverished peasants that
Jacob Shapiro:need to enjoy enrichment that the coastal cities have enjoyed thus far.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, it has resource constraints, so it, for the first time in Chinese history,
Jacob Shapiro:it can't feed its own population.
Jacob Shapiro:It has to go out and import, you know, food and energy and capital and technology
Jacob Shapiro:and all these other different things.
Jacob Shapiro:So there's lots of different challenges that China has, but, uh, you know,
Jacob Shapiro:don't put me in the category of any of these people who have been, you
Jacob Shapiro:know, your Gordon Changs or your Peter Hans who have been predicting the
Jacob Shapiro:imminent collapse of China for decades.
Jacob Shapiro:Which is to your point, like, you know, if you, if you're worried about the
Jacob Shapiro:United States, go back, watch the 1970s, could say the same thing about China.
Jacob Shapiro:Go back to like the um.
Jacob Shapiro:The cultural revolution, or go back to the, the famines that Mao caused with
Jacob Shapiro:some of his, uh, disastrous policies.
Jacob Shapiro:Even go back to the demographic decline that people were predicting
Jacob Shapiro:for China in the 1980s, 1990s.
Jacob Shapiro:This is the country in the world that makes things.
Jacob Shapiro:It's the manufacturing heart of the world.
Jacob Shapiro:All of that expertise, all of that human capital.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, it's positioned geographically like it's going to be here for the long haul.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, maybe it's not the Chinese Communist Party, like it could be a
Jacob Shapiro:soft sort of revolution and some, some other sort of regime gets ushered in.
Jacob Shapiro:Like, I'm not wedded to it being necessarily the current regime.
Jacob Shapiro:I think it will be the current regime, but I'm not currently wedded to that.
Jacob Shapiro:But I don't think we're gonna go back to like a warring states period where
Jacob Shapiro:the different regions of China will be fighting each other and different
Jacob Shapiro:regions around, or different countries around it will go take points.
Jacob Shapiro:Like I think China is very clearly the number two and probably, you know, 30
Jacob Shapiro:years from now, probably nipping on the heels of, of US power as, as being
Jacob Shapiro:the first in that multipolar world.
Marko:I think the technological innovation that's happening
Marko:in China is endogenous today.
Marko:It's not copied anymore.
Marko:I think that was the nineties.
Marko:That was the early two thousands.
Marko:They are now creating new innovative things.
Marko:And so, and you know, by the way, it's not just military dual use stuff.
Marko:It's like stuff like payment systems here in America.
Marko:I mean, I still write physical checks, you know, like, and, and I
Marko:remember, uh, uh, my good friend who worked with me, um, at my previous
Marko:job, he would always like joke.
Marko:He was like, he had to write a check 'cause he lived here in Santa Monica.
Marko:He was like, what is this?
Marko:You guys don't have like instant payment solutions.
Marko:Like, this is America, you know?
Marko:So, uh, I agree with you.
Marko:I think China is second.
Marko:This is the one of those where demographics is real problem.
Marko:You know, like, yes.
Marko:Chinese demographics are not great.
Marko:The problem is that it could stall their GDP per capita, but it could also actually
Marko:help maintain some upward trajectory.
Marko:If GDP continues to grow at even a three to 5% pace as the per capita part
Marko:narrows, your wealth could actually Yeah,
Jacob Shapiro:just to keep it And, and I'm glad you say that 'cause because I
Jacob Shapiro:have two rejoinder to the demographic, uh, argument on China if you think
Jacob Shapiro:the demographic argument is operative.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay, but then Japan is gonna collapse first and so is South Korea and
Jacob Shapiro:so are a bunch of European states.
Jacob Shapiro:So it doesn't make sense to say China's got the bad demographics, but
Jacob Shapiro:all these others are gonna be okay.
Jacob Shapiro:No.
Jacob Shapiro:Like these other countries are gonna hit the, the bug that are
Jacob Shapiro:gonna hit the windshield first.
Jacob Shapiro:The other thing is that China has hundreds of millions of people, I
Jacob Shapiro:already referenced them, who are impoverished living in the interior.
Jacob Shapiro:So most countries don't have hundreds of millions of people that they could
Jacob Shapiro:bring into the middle class to increase consumption and things like that.
Jacob Shapiro:So are you gonna get a baby boom in China over the next 10 years?
Jacob Shapiro:No.
Jacob Shapiro:But if you could redistribute income to those hundreds of millions of poor
Jacob Shapiro:people and have them buying made in China, air conditioners and everything
Jacob Shapiro:else, then you get the equivalent of that consumption boost as a result.
Jacob Shapiro:So if they handle the macro correctly, it's not like Japan has an interior where
Jacob Shapiro:it can go find 200 million poor people that it can get to consume things like
Jacob Shapiro:most countries don't have that relevance.
Jacob Shapiro:And the other thing I wanna say here is that demographics, you said
Jacob Shapiro:it's a double-edged sword, it's also a static present indicator.
Jacob Shapiro:Like, you know, we're fighting linearity.
Jacob Shapiro:You have, we have no clue what decisions Chinese families are gonna
Jacob Shapiro:make and how many babies they're gonna have 15 and 20 years from now.
Jacob Shapiro:If the Chinese government comes out and says, there is now a three child policy.
Jacob Shapiro:Maybe they'll have a huge demographic boom, 20 years from now, maybe
Jacob Shapiro:the Chinese people will get more optimistic and start having more kids
Jacob Shapiro:may, you know, there's a whole bunch of different opportunities there.
Jacob Shapiro:So I think we can point to demographics as saying this is a big issue and it requires
Jacob Shapiro:focusing on everything from robotics to internet of things, to enriching
Jacob Shapiro:the interior of China, et cetera.
Jacob Shapiro:But the idea that we're gonna project the decisions that a billion people
Jacob Shapiro:are gonna make about how many children they're gonna have, like, I don't
Jacob Shapiro:have the hubris to, to make that call.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think we've seen that, you know, there are ways around it and
Jacob Shapiro:more ways around it for China than there are for other countries.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:Sorry.
Marko:No, it's all good.
Marko:Okay, so, uh, I'm gonna do something now that's unfair.
Marko:I'm gonna take basically 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5 countries off the board.
Jacob Shapiro:I was wondering.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay, go ahead.
Marko:I'm gonna take the EMU five.
Marko:So this is the top five countries in the European Monetary Union.
Marko:Uh, just let's call it Western Europe.
Marko:Uh, I don't wanna call it the EU 'cause it's not, uh, that will be also unfair.
Marko:So I'm gonna take Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and the Netherlands.
Marko:Off the board.
Marko:We are talking about the next 30 years.
Marko:I believe, I conviction view that Europe will become a
Marko:confederation, not a federation.
Marko:United States of Europe will never happen.
Marko:If that is your mark of success, then you will disagree with me.
Marko:But I do think there are alternatives to a federal union,
Marko:and one of them is Switzerland.
Marko:You know, it's, it's a confederation.
Marko:Um, the first iteration of the United States of America, the
Marko:articles of Confederation was going to be something similar.
Marko:Uh, obviously the United States at the time was a very weak, weak
Marko:country, afraid that the United Kingdom would come back, which it did.
Marko:And so it needed a federal entity.
Marko:Instead of a confederal.
Marko:I don't think Europe needs that.
Marko:Um, several things that are going for Europe.
Marko:First demographics again.
Marko:Everybody thinks Europe has terrible demographics.
Marko:This is false, and no, not because of Syria.
Marko:Asylum seekers, for God's sake, stop watching YouTube videos.
Marko:Europe is fine because it has one of the greatest.
Marko:Western Europe has one of the greatest heists in geopolitics.
Marko:It's called the EU labor market.
Marko:It allows somebody from Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, to move to any
Marko:place in the EU and get a job, which means that Western Europe gets
Marko:educated, ready to work families to just show up and start working.
Marko:Now, the problem was that United Kingdom stole most of these immigrants
Marko:because Eastern Europeans speak English.
Marko:They don't speak French or German.
Marko:But now that the UK has decided to pull out a revolver and shoot itself
Marko:in the foot and depart the EU precisely because of this one advantage.
Marko:Um, it can have fun trying to find immigrants somewhere else.
Marko:Western Europe doesn't.
Marko:It has ready-made, educated, hardworking eastern Europeans to suck
Marko:like a vampire from Eastern Europe.
Marko:So if you wanna pick Poland, if you wanna pick an Eastern European country,
Marko:just beware that they are going to struggle to keep their demographics,
Marko:which are already bad, stable.
Marko:Uh, so that takes care of the usual reason people hate in
Marko:Europe, which is demographics.
Marko:The other one is technology.
Marko:Yes, China is obviously challenging, uh, European manufacturing, but one
Marko:of the things I would never discount is German ability to reinvent itself.
Marko:Germany reinvented itself numerous times.
Marko:It's not gonna de industrialize.
Marko:Uh, there's a lot of mythological technological innovation that
Marko:only Germany has and uh, so I'm gonna pick Western Europe.
Marko:I think that the reason the world will remain multipolar.
Marko:Is because what?
Marko:Because Donald Trump has bestowed upon Europe and also Vladimir Putin,
Marko:a reason to finally integrate.
Marko:As we talked before, you know Jacob, I don't think
Marko:countries are born out of love.
Marko:I think countries are born out of fear.
Marko:And finally, I think Europeans have sufficient fear to integrate further.
Marko:So I'm picking Western Europe.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, you gotta have a little bit of both.
Jacob Shapiro:You gotta have love of one's own, and you do have to have, uh, fear of what
Jacob Shapiro:somebody else might do to your own.
Jacob Shapiro:In some sense, fear might actually be the secondary because you're
Jacob Shapiro:afraid of what somebody might do to the people that you truly do love.
Jacob Shapiro:So I think I would take the more romantic, uh, sense there.
Jacob Shapiro:I want you to know, uh, I was really struggling with what to do with
Jacob Shapiro:Europe and I, I disciplined myself by saying I can't pick a block.
Jacob Shapiro:I, I have to have a single country.
Jacob Shapiro:And if, um, I would've had France as my number three.
Jacob Shapiro:Oh, wow.
Jacob Shapiro:My number three choice was France, just by itself.
Marko:Wow.
Jacob Shapiro:Trade value.
Jacob Shapiro:So like,
Marko:this is one of those you're buying low.
Marko:Well done, well done.
Marko:Okay.
Marko:Well then well buying
Jacob Shapiro:low, they've got nukes, they've got the military, they've got
Jacob Shapiro:the, but you know, you, you've taken them.
Jacob Shapiro:But I just want listeners to know, like, even, even without the other four Wow.
Jacob Shapiro:Like I would've had France number three.
Jacob Shapiro:Wow.
Jacob Shapiro:Soft power and
Marko:wow.
Marko:I, I mean, I feel so much, listen, just to.
Marko:Yes, I kind of cheated, but this is about the next 30 years and
Marko:I have a high conviction view that I'm picking for the future.
Marko:They will integrate further.
Marko:And the other thing I would say is it makes it more fun.
Marko:'cause like you pick France, I pick Germany, then we pick
Marko:Spain in Italy at some point.
Marko:Come on.
Marko:Like me, you know, let's go.
Marko:No, and it's right.
Jacob Shapiro:No, and and cheating would've been taking
Jacob Shapiro:the EU 27, which you didn't do.
Jacob Shapiro:You took the EMU five and said, confederation.
Jacob Shapiro:Strong word.
Jacob Shapiro:It's this block that you're saying that it's, you're not like
Jacob Shapiro:extrapolating linearly from here.
Jacob Shapiro:So I think you're totally good.
Jacob Shapiro:But I just wanted to say that if, if we had kept going just country
Jacob Shapiro:basis, like I would've, France even by itself would've been my number
Jacob Shapiro:three, which I think would've been a little controversial with those.
Jacob Shapiro:Off the board though, this is where it starts to get really
Jacob Shapiro:interesting, like beyond these blocks.
Jacob Shapiro:Like, okay, what's next?
Jacob Shapiro:And I know, is it nukes versus this thing?
Marko:So you get the first pick of the non-obvious.
Marko:I, although, I don't know, I think it's pretty obvious.
Marko:And I, I know you Jacob, I think I know who you're gonna pick.
Marko:But go ahead.
Jacob Shapiro:You think you do?
Jacob Shapiro:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:I, I'm taking Turkey.
Marko:Oh, boom.
Marko:Nevermind.
Jacob Shapiro:It's nevermind.
Jacob Shapiro:All right.
Jacob Shapiro:Harrison,
Marko:Nico Harrison.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't think it's the Nico Harrison move of the draft at all.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause precisely to your point, if Western Europe does unify a little bit
Jacob Shapiro:more like that, if Russian power recedes over the next 30 years as I expect it to,
Jacob Shapiro:if China and some of these other powers do have problems, Iran is gonna spend
Jacob Shapiro:the next 30 years trying to catch up.
Jacob Shapiro:Who is the country at the center of this Middle East that you're talking about?
Jacob Shapiro:Who is the one who's gonna have the Navy that actually controls access to the
Jacob Shapiro:Mediterranean and to the Persian Gulf?
Jacob Shapiro:Who is the one that is already stealing market share from the
Jacob Shapiro:Europeans on manufacturing?
Jacob Shapiro:Who is going to dominate the Black Sea Basin and your
Jacob Shapiro:Balkan homelands in the future?
Jacob Shapiro:This is Turkey.
Jacob Shapiro:This is not any other country.
Jacob Shapiro:This is the rise of the Neo Ottoman Empire over the next 30 years.
Jacob Shapiro:Probably the strongest military in NATO outside of the us.
Jacob Shapiro:Like maybe France has something to say because of nukes, but if you're
Jacob Shapiro:just thinking about military spending and capability and deployments and
Jacob Shapiro:things like that, I'll take the new Ottoman Empire at the heart of the
Jacob Shapiro:Mediterranean in this multipolar world.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause this Mediterranean powers do very well when they're controlling these
Jacob Shapiro:trading lanes at the center of the world.
Marko:Yeah, I think one of the things, uh, that's a knock on Turkey is, uh,
Marko:you know, complete and utter lack of, uh, endogenous energy production.
Marko:But I think technological innovation is important.
Marko:There's nuclear power, there's, uh, alternatives, there's
Marko:all sorts of other things.
Marko:Uh, it's also, uh, and
Jacob Shapiro:there's a lot and, and there's an awful lot of gas offshore, and
Jacob Shapiro:the Black Sea Basin is also open to them.
Jacob Shapiro:So,
Marko:and there's a awful lot of potential for Iraq to boost
Marko:its oil consumption if somebody bestows it with stability, which
Marko:is what you're getting at you.
Marko:No, no, no.
Marko:I, I think, but that's a knock.
Marko:You know, that's a knock on Turkey.
Marko:The other knock on Turkey was always like, domestic technological
Marko:innovation is kind of terrible and trash, quite frankly, but not anymore.
Marko:We know the turkeys, for example, world Leader in Drone Technology.
Marko:Uh, everybody talks about Iran.
Marko:No, no, it's Turkey.
Marko:Russia just has access to the Iranian drones, but those are trash.
Marko:Turkey has actually, um, you know, I follow military spending a lot
Marko:'cause I think it's a great indicator.
Marko:As I said, uh, it's, it's a sign of geopolitical power and Turkey, along
Marko:with South Korea, is one of the world's largest, uh, movers up the, the chain.
Marko:So I think this is a surprising pick, but it's about the next 30 years.
Marko:And I think that, uh, you know, I respect this, I respect this pick.
Marko:It's, it's got, I, I mean, how do I push back on it?
Marko:I mean, you know, I don't really want to push back on it
Marko:because I think it's, it's cool.
Marko:It's a great pick.
Marko:And by the way, we didn't get a chance to talk about PKK and the government.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:You know, uh, that's, that's a really positive development for Turkey from
Marko:a domestic stability perspective.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:So, you know, it's
Jacob Shapiro:like, yeah, and, and, and, and Syria too.
Jacob Shapiro:Like it's the combo of the SDF basically agreeing to be part of the Syrian
Jacob Shapiro:state, the PKK laying down its arms, and you've got Syria at this Riyadh
Jacob Shapiro:summit or hanging out with Saudi Arabia like President Trump, basically
Jacob Shapiro:accepting the Syrian government saying you need better ties with Israel.
Jacob Shapiro:Like all of this is going a according to plan to Turkey.
Jacob Shapiro:The less they can worry about the Kurds in their backyard, the more they can project
Jacob Shapiro:power into the Black Sea, into North Africa, down the horn, into the Balkans.
Jacob Shapiro:Like, I like the way the map looks for them.
Jacob Shapiro:I think the biggest shot to the argument is, um, Erdogan's power base and what
Jacob Shapiro:happens when Erdogan is no longer there.
Jacob Shapiro:And does Turkish politics revert to this secular versus religious clash?
Jacob Shapiro:And like, does it get mired in this own domestic politics inflation
Jacob Shapiro:trap that hap that has happened to Turkey several times over the past 40
Marko:years.
Marko:But listen, listen, I think macroeconomics we're picking for the 30 years, you know,
Marko:like eventually, eventually, macroeconomic policy tends to move towards, uh, sanity.
Marko:Uh, it just does and part of the reason is that voters go, go ahead.
Marko:Sorry.
Jacob Shapiro:No, no, no, no.
Jacob Shapiro:Sorry.
Jacob Shapiro:You, you finish it up.
Marko:No, just voters.
Marko:Voters eventually learn what's stupid, you know?
Marko:So, um, but yeah, go ahead
Jacob Shapiro:and just to say, remember my ultimate indicator
Jacob Shapiro:was can this country make other countries do what it wants them to do?
Jacob Shapiro:And I think by that metric, Turkey can do lots of things, whether it's
Jacob Shapiro:with migrants, whether it's with closing different sea lanes around
Jacob Shapiro:it, whether controlling things in the Middle East, like I, I think that
Jacob Shapiro:Turkey has, has a lot going for there.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:Your pick.
Marko:Okay.
Marko:So, uh, I mean, I wanna pick someone else, but I think we can't ignore this country.
Marko:Um, I thought you were gonna pick this one because I always
Marko:think of you as a Indian no file.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:Okay.
Marko:So I don't wanna let it slip beyond top five.
Marko:'cause first and foremost, we're gonna get so much hate mail.
Marko:There's a lot of people in India and I. You know, they're gonna, they're
Marko:gonna send us hate bail, and I just don't wanna deal with it, number one.
Marko:Number two, it is like the largest population in the world,
Marko:which is not like insignificant.
Marko:And also, even if there's some sort of an economic crisis because of its
Marko:demographics, which everybody just louds, is a positive, it is not a positive.
Marko:Um, I think that ultimately policy in India will strive towards
Marko:competence even if there's a crisis.
Marko:Uh, I worry about AI replacing its service sector.
Marko:I think AI is going to impact India extremely negatively.
Marko:Um, a lot of its service sector is geared towards, um, the kind of technological
Marko:services that AI could re replace.
Marko:Uh, but what we're starting to see is manufacturing start to
Marko:slowly, very slowly move to India.
Marko:And I do think that it, it will be a country that can't really be ignored.
Marko:Um, so I'm gonna take it as fifth.
Marko:Now.
Marko:Please note it has fallen to fifth.
Marko:I think most people would've clearly thought it's top three.
Marko:It's the best performing market over the last five years.
Marko:I'm picking it because I think it cannot be ignored over the next 30, 30 years.
Marko:I don't want us to be too controversial.
Marko:I think I'm playing the role of Reow here saying you can't
Marko:ignore size, you know, come on.
Marko:Like, I think this is a seven foot five giant that can, uh, potentially
Marko:develop a three point shot.
Marko:And I just think we have to give it, you know, that
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:Quantity has a quality all of its own.
Jacob Shapiro:But is it Victor Wema or is it Man Bowl?
Jacob Shapiro:Like It could, it could be either one.
Jacob Shapiro:There might be Rick.
Jacob Shapiro:There's a large Delta it,
Marko:listen, I think it might be Rick Smith, you know, and Rick
Marko:Smiths took the Indiana Pacers to the finals and he lost the six games
Marko:to one of the greatest teams ever.
Marko:But like, so, you know, like I just think that we would get too
Marko:fancy by dropping it below fifth.
Marko:I have somebody I like more.
Marko:Has a higher delta than India over the next five.
Marko:Mm. But because you didn't take it, I had to take it, you know, I thought
Marko:you would take it at four and I, and
Jacob Shapiro:I had no, I had it at five.
Jacob Shapiro:Like I was really hanging and hawing between India and, and Turkey.
Jacob Shapiro:And, and I really, it came down to that question of will this country make
Jacob Shapiro:other countries do what it wants to do?
Jacob Shapiro:And I think this is the thing that India doesn't have, and you've seen
Jacob Shapiro:this with this India, Pakistan war.
Jacob Shapiro:It can't even get people on its side with Kashmir.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, India has so many internal problems that it needs to flesh out.
Jacob Shapiro:And it might start, it might take 30 years to do so, and in 30 year, like if
Jacob Shapiro:this has been a 50 year time horizon, it might have been a different question.
Jacob Shapiro:But if we're just thinking about 30 and all the things India has to fix
Jacob Shapiro:that it hasn't fixed yet, and its ability to project power beyond the
Jacob Shapiro:subcontinent, like all plus there's other things with climate change and
Jacob Shapiro:wa like all that stuff sort of says to me, okay, like they're not gonna be
Jacob Shapiro:able to force people, um, to do things.
Jacob Shapiro:Um.
Jacob Shapiro:This, I hate, I hate having to make this next pick.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause you're sort of caught between the declining powers of
Jacob Shapiro:like your Russias and your UKs.
Jacob Shapiro:So they've got some of the fancy things that we would say are
Jacob Shapiro:good indicators for power today.
Jacob Shapiro:But will they really be there in 30 years?
Jacob Shapiro:Will they even exist in their current form in 30 years?
Jacob Shapiro:But then you've got like your Brazils, which okay, like Dugal said, or Dugal
Jacob Shapiro:has reported to have said, I don't think he actually said it, that Brazil is the
Jacob Shapiro:country of the future and always will be.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:So I'll probably be picking Brazil 30 years from now for the exact same reasons.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, and I, I even want, you know, Japan also in that declining power maybe,
Jacob Shapiro:I don't know, is it sort of in there?
Jacob Shapiro:Um, just to say I really struggled.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think that ultimately if we go down to like forcing action, I,
Jacob Shapiro:I think I, I don't like this pick, but I think I'm picking Russia.
Jacob Shapiro:I think I have to have Russia there.
Jacob Shapiro:Wow.
Marko:I'm surprised by that.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, I mean, I, I, I'm struggling, but I'm thinking
Jacob Shapiro:about they're the second biggest nuclear power in the world.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, they're gonna still be able to exert influence.
Jacob Shapiro:I, I don't feel great about the pick, so please, uh, tell me why.
Jacob Shapiro:I think that's more of a Nico pick than Turkey.
Marko:No, uh, uh, I would not have picked it.
Marko:I would've picked it in the top, uh, 10, maybe 15.
Marko:But, uh, this is where I agree with, uh, our former colleague in Fi, Peter Zion.
Marko:I think they have a lot of problems.
Marko:Demographics is not necessarily one of them.
Marko:Um, I think it's a very large country.
Marko:I think that it needs to consolidate much, much more.
Marko:I think that this is the one country where I do worry about, um, centrifugal forces.
Marko:Right.
Marko:Is that correct?
Marko:Like, you know Yep.
Marko:Kind of.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:Tearing the place apart.
Marko:Without strong leadership, I think you're gonna have, um, problems in the future.
Marko:I'm also, uh, concerned about technological innovation.
Marko:I. Um, a lot of things that Russians are very good at, like military
Marko:technology, other countries are starting to nip at their heels.
Marko:Um, I think they need to have a period of peace and security so they can
Marko:recenter on technological innovation, on education, things like that.
Marko:And that hasn't happened.
Marko:In fact, there's been a brain train outta Russia to places like Georgia
Marko:or Serbia or Armenia, and that's a really big problem for the country and
Marko:I don't like it for the next 30 years.
Marko:Um, so this isn't a pure demographic play at all.
Marko:Um, you know, we're willing to deviate from that, but yeah.
Marko:Uh, I've got, I've got concerns about Russia.
Marko:Um, so who am I gonna pick?
Marko:Um, so actually the country that comes next on my list, I'm gonna skip it.
Marko:This is the quantitative one.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:And I'm gonna pick South Korea.
Marko:Hmm.
Marko:So South Korea may have the
Jacob Shapiro:interesting,
Marko:yeah.
Marko:South Korea may have the worst demographics in the world.
Marko:Um.
Marko:Facts.
Marko:But what I like about South Korea is a couple of things.
Marko:First of all, technological innovation is clearly there.
Marko:Um, they are one of the world's leaders in things that matter,
Marko:like chips, like semiconductors.
Marko:Um, they also do have an endogenous military industry, and I've been noticing
Marko:more and more countries rely on South Korea, specifically in Southeast Asia.
Marko:Um, so that's something Japan doesn't really have, not to the same extent as
Marko:South Korea, mainly for political reasons.
Marko:Um, they're effectively a nuclear power.
Marko:If they wanted to, boom, it's done.
Marko:Like don't worry about it.
Marko:Um, and I like the fact that they are, uh, fit.
Marko:I think the problem, the difference between Japan and South Korea,
Marko:obviously Japan has doubled the population, larger economy and so on.
Marko:The thing is though, I think Japan's gotten a little bit lazy and I, I, I say
Marko:that because I think that South Korea has been in much more of a, uh, antagonistic.
Marko:I. National security environment, uh, and that's made them fitter.
Marko:They've been preparing for a war a lot longer than Japan has.
Marko:Um, I also find that it's, uh, you know, soft power is interesting.
Marko:It's not part of my rubric at all, but I like it.
Marko:I like when countries have the ability to make fun of themselves,
Marko:to create art that crosses cultures.
Marko:And no country has punched above South Korea's ability to do that.
Marko:I mean, South Korea has absolutely like crushed soft power.
Marko:So, um, on all of those, I, I really like South Korea.
Marko:I think that innovation in robotics, automation and AI are going to allow
Marko:them to overcome that demographic burden.
Marko:And so, yeah, I absolutely love South Korea.
Marko:I think that they're going to be, uh, one of the top 10 countries,
Marko:uh, in terms of geopolitics.
Marko:And so I actually picked them, uh, three spots above my quantitative, uh, number.
Marko:They're actually 10 already.
Jacob Shapiro:Amazing.
Jacob Shapiro:I think the other thing that they have on a 30 year time horizon is the potential
Jacob Shapiro:for reunification with the north.
Jacob Shapiro:Oh, I talked about China demographics and hundreds of
Jacob Shapiro:millions of people in the interior.
Jacob Shapiro:Wow.
Jacob Shapiro:Like, yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:South Korea as it is today, can't compete with Japan.
Jacob Shapiro:I'd take Japan today, but if you're thinking about, oh, you reunify with the
Jacob Shapiro:north and and south on South Korea terms, and South Korea gets to use that labor
Jacob Shapiro:base to do all these other sorts of, okay.
Jacob Shapiro:Like now I'm, I'm listening.
Jacob Shapiro:I think it's a speculative play.
Jacob Shapiro:I think it, it's a, it's either a hundred or, or maybe a zero.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:I mean, you're talking 80 million people at that point, so that's,
Marko:that's a really good point.
Marko:All right.
Marko:Go ahead.
Marko:Number eight.
Jacob Shapiro:Alright.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause I have a hard stop in 11 minutes.
Jacob Shapiro:So May, should we do top 10, Marco and do another 10, or should we
Jacob Shapiro:blitz through, uh, this next?
Jacob Shapiro:I think we can blitz through
Marko:and then maybe we do, uh, take you think we can
Jacob Shapiro:blitz through?
Marko:I think so.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay.
Jacob Shapiro:Well, I'm not leaving Brazil off the board any longer, so I'll take Brazil here.
Jacob Shapiro:I will project that Brazil replaces the United States as a low cost producer
Jacob Shapiro:for a lot of the different agricultural exports that are out there in the world.
Jacob Shapiro:I think from a food security basis, people will be looking towards Brazil.
Jacob Shapiro:I think Brazil has, um, a lot of innovation.
Jacob Shapiro:I mean, they're very early on in this, but green shoots of innovation,
Jacob Shapiro:manufacturing capacity and also like the United States oceans away from
Jacob Shapiro:enemies, has a, has a nice little hemispheric and maybe dominate and push
Jacob Shapiro:back against the United States with, I'll, I'll take Brazil at this point.
Jacob Shapiro:Off the board.
Marko:Alright, so my, my controversial, uh, pick that I'll be accused of being a
Marko:homer, uh, is gonna be number nine Canada.
Marko:Oh, how nice.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:I like Canada because it's uh, good
Jacob Shapiro:for Canada.
Marko:It's a hedge against the us quite frankly.
Marko:Um, any hiccup by the US will be a benefit for Canada.
Marko:From a brain, uh, drain perspective, innovation, technology, um, it has
Marko:the most favorable actually geography, especially as climate change becomes more
Marko:of an issue over the next th 30 years.
Marko:If you believe in climate change, then it's also a hedge
Marko:against that because its growing.
Marko:Seasons are going to expand.
Marko:Yes, forest fires will happen more, but you know, this is about big picture stuff.
Marko:Um, also I think that the population growth is shocking.
Marko:Immigration has been huge.
Marko:Uh, now there's been a backlash against it.
Marko:But, uh, as Canada builds out infrastructure, you know, it has
Marko:an ability to basically accept an endless amount of human beings.
Marko:This is a country with one of the largest freshwater basins.
Marko:It can grow food for the entire planet if it wanted to.
Marko:Um, and it has, you know, all the kind of governance issues, like, think of Canada
Marko:as almost like a superpower with, you just have, it's a turnkey superpower.
Marko:It has everything you need.
Marko:From sort of the Western developer perspective, um, you
Marko:just need to put humans into it.
Marko:And so I think that Canada is going to be a top, top 10
Marko:player over the next 10 years,
Jacob Shapiro:was not in my top 20.
Jacob Shapiro:So you can have them, uh, which says everything.
Jacob Shapiro:Sorry, sorry.
Jacob Shapiro:Canada.
Jacob Shapiro:Um.
Jacob Shapiro:Coming in at number 10, who I'll take off the board and
Jacob Shapiro:I'm gonna get shipped for this.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, I will take Iran off the board now.
Jacob Shapiro:Wow.
Jacob Shapiro:Again, thinking on a 30 year time horizon, a country that basically already
Jacob Shapiro:has nuclear weapons, uh, strategic access to the Persian Gulf, lots of
Jacob Shapiro:different oil resources, uh, history of projecting power into Central Asia, into
Jacob Shapiro:these other Shiite parts of the world.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, like maybe not your typical power, but if we're thinking about a country
Jacob Shapiro:that can make other countries do things like Iran has already shown, it can
Jacob Shapiro:be a focal point of decision making even in its poultry state right now.
Jacob Shapiro:What happens 30 years from now when there's a leadership transition,
Jacob Shapiro:when Iran is welcomed into the family of nations once again,
Jacob Shapiro:like, again, 30 year time horizon.
Jacob Shapiro:I think I'll take Iran as a major player, um, in that part of the world.
Marko:Alright, well, I think that, uh, what I'm gonna do now,
Marko:that's a great pick by the way.
Marko:I've, I've, I've always been very, uh, drawn to it as well, especially
Marko:if it, uh, um, moves away from the current system of governance.
Marko:I think, uh, you know.
Marko:I think that's a fair point.
Marko:I think it's gonna have to unleash the innovation and
Marko:entrepreneurship of its people.
Marko:And that requires it to discard its current system of government.
Marko:And if that happens, honestly this is gonna be the best pick of the draft.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:So at 10 Iran, great pick.
Marko:Um, the next one for me, uh, there's a symbiotic gravitational pull, you
Marko:know, uh, and if you pick a Brazil, I think that I have to pick Argentina.
Marko:I think that Brazil and Argentina are going to advance.
Marko:I think what's happening in Argentina is a good example of your Iran analogy.
Marko:Argentina, you can think of it as having discarded its status system of garment.
Marko:Obviously I am projecting the current pace of Malay reforms
Marko:as continuing and benefiting.
Marko:And so I think that, uh, yeah, I think there will be innovation and
Marko:I think that there will be reform in Argentina, so I'm gonna pick them.
Marko:You'll love it.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay, uh, we've got seven minutes to do the last nine here.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm gonna get very controversial.
Jacob Shapiro:It's my first city state.
Jacob Shapiro:Um, I will take Singapore at number 12.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm thinking about the Strait of Malacca.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm thinking about material wealth.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm thinking about the ability to project power with advances
Jacob Shapiro:in AI and things like that.
Jacob Shapiro:And there is no place in the world that is better suited to deploy AI
Jacob Shapiro:and all these different fancy things at scale than a city state with the
Jacob Shapiro:relative stability, material, wealth, and strategic location as Singapore.
Jacob Shapiro:So if we're thinking about who can shape global trends and how
Jacob Shapiro:they can use that power, I think in multipolar eras we'll see the
Jacob Shapiro:return of very powerful city states.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think Singapore is the top one.
Jacob Shapiro:So I'm probably picking too high 'cause I wanted them, but I wanted them, I needed,
Jacob Shapiro:I needed the crown jewel at number 12.
Marko:Alright, so, uh, we'll definitely do a download of this in the next episode
Marko:'cause we're gonna do this very quickly.
Marko:Saudi Arabia is my 13 pick.
Marko:Now I am including in this, first of all, Saudi Arabia is doing what Iran
Marko:should have done just 10 years earlier.
Marko:The second thing is I think that when I see Saudi Arabia, I do
Marko:really mean the region as well.
Marko:So, um, no offense to anyone, uh, but I think Saudi Arabia is going
Marko:to harness the power of innovation, not just in Saudi Arabia, but also
Marko:in neighboring countries as well.
Marko:So I'm gonna pick that at 13.
Marko:Uh, and that includes some of the city states that are around Saudi Arabia.
Marko:Mm-hmm.
Marko:You know, so that like, it's like Saudi Arabia plus like three
Marko:Singapores, so I'm gonna take them 13.
Marko:Exactly.
Jacob Shapiro:It's probably a crime that we've left them to number 14.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause I don't think Japan is gonna collapse anytime soon.
Jacob Shapiro:So at this point I will bend the knee to Japan and say, sorry we left you off.
Jacob Shapiro:Yes, you have lots of demographic issues and all these other things,
Jacob Shapiro:but if there's any country that is gonna respond to the continued
Jacob Shapiro:growth of China, it's gonna be Japan.
Jacob Shapiro:And Japan is gonna be at the front lines of doing that.
Jacob Shapiro:And they technologically all different sorts of ways.
Jacob Shapiro:Like they know how to exist in this world.
Jacob Shapiro:So I'll take them.
Marko:Okay.
Marko:So I'm gonna take Ukraine 15.
Marko:Ooh, spicy.
Marko:Yeah, so I think the Ukraine is going to become a garrison state.
Marko:Garrison states do very well.
Marko:Western Germany, Taiwan, uh, South Korea, Japan in some sense,
Marko:Pakistan for a period of its time.
Marko:Um, so I think, yeah, Ukraine's gonna be a garrison state.
Marko:It's gonna be armed to the teeth.
Marko:Your point that Russia is still six.
Marko:Okay, cool.
Marko:Well, the west is gonna have to stalk Ukraine with a lot of good
Marko:governance, anti-corruption, money, innovation, and so on.
Marko:So I, I like Ukraine and, and I almost feel like I took it way too low here.
Marko:I think that it's a large country, it's in the West.
Marko:It's got a lot of natural resources, not energy, but it's
Marko:gonna have to work on that.
Marko:Um, so yeah.
Marko:Now look, we have four minutes and we have to do five.
Marko:So here's what I'm gonna say.
Marko:Let's do second part of this next week.
Marko:Next, yeah.
Marko:If you agree.
Marko:That sounds good.
Marko:Uh, we've got top 15, uh, we got five more and then maybe we can do some thoughts.
Marko:You know, for example, uh, Russia didn't fall as much as it did.
Marko:Japan seems to have fallen more than I think both of you and I. Like if I
Marko:took South Korea seventh, like, you know, should Japan really be 14th?
Marko:Like I think there's a lot of things here that, that maybe
Marko:we can talk about next time.
Marko:Um, but yeah, that, that can be part two of our trade value.
Jacob Shapiro:I think that sounds great.
Jacob Shapiro:And that also allows the listeners to send us feedback about the initial list.
Jacob Shapiro:Like let's, so tell listeners, tell us either via email or via social media
Jacob Shapiro:how you think the draft went so far to maybe some of your alternate picks.
Jacob Shapiro:And then to your point, Marco, we can pick the last five and then sort of go
Jacob Shapiro:through and whether this was actually a fruitful exercise or whether we
Jacob Shapiro:were just picking out of our butts.
Marko:Alright.
Marko:Cool.
Marko:Well thank you Jacob.
Marko:Uh, I guess we'll do another one soon.
Jacob Shapiro:We've got three minutes.
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, anything you want quick 60 seconds of NBA thoughts?
Jacob Shapiro:Uh, I don't think any expert out there had, uh, Knick's, Pacers as,
Jacob Shapiro:uh, as the Eastern Conference Finals.
Jacob Shapiro:I, my, my, uh, my Knick's, uh, Timberwolves, uh, uh, pick is starting
Jacob Shapiro:to look a little, a little good looking.
Jacob Shapiro:Okay.
Marko:No.
Marko:So, uh, my pick was timber rolls versus, uh,
Marko:Boston.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:Yeah.
Marko:So I looked really stupid on the timber rolls, right?
Marko:Like, I mean, that, that didn't look like it was gonna happen,
Marko:but what I think would be cool was Timberwolves versus Nicks, you know?
Marko:And I just think that that's like such a great finals, um, because Kat versus
Marko:Randall, like who won the trade, yeah.
Marko:I guess it's one of the first trades that actually really did work out
Marko:for both teams, like massively.
Marko:So, no, I, I, I think it's gonna be interesting.
Marko:Uh, YOIC needs help last night's game where he just had a crazy stat line
Marko:that three pointer or like just, I mean.
Marko:It was just sad to see that.
Marko:Uh, but, uh, but yeah, um, all I would say is like, uh, don't write
Marko:off Denver yet, because it's gonna go back to game seven, I think in Okay.
Marko:C and then maybe, um, you know, we'll see the youth versus
Marko:experience that might work.
Marko:Uh, other than that, uh, you ended up being right about Tatum, but I
Marko:gotta say I don't feel good about it.
Jacob Shapiro:Oh, I, I, I don't want to be right if I'm right, if I'm right
Jacob Shapiro:this way, but I, I'm rooting for Yoic, but I think OKC, the, the smart money is
Jacob Shapiro:KC and that OKC has agree, has a measure of everyone and that, and that probably
Jacob Shapiro:going through the crucible of Denver has now made them ready for what they
Jacob Shapiro:need to get the rest of the way, like Denver needed to give them that test.
Jacob Shapiro:So,
Marko:by the way, speaking of picking Canada too high mm-hmm.
Marko:Nobody's mentioned this narrative, but that OKC nuggets, um, series
Marko:is really Canada on full display.
Marko:Like the two most important players on the Thunder are clearly obviously Canadian.
Marko:It's not Williams who's playing terrible, it's Dot and Shea.
Marko:And then of course, uh, Murray on Nuggets can be the difference maker.
Marko:So I thought that was really interesting.
Marko:Uh, but yeah.
Marko:Cool.
Marko:Alright.