Jacob Shapiro:

Hello listeners.

Jacob Shapiro:

Welcome to another episode of Geopolitical Cousins.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, Marco and I are both on the road, but we made some time in the evening on

Jacob Shapiro:

Tuesday, October 14th to talk to you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, before we were dealing with our respective responsibilities.

Jacob Shapiro:

We talk about, uh, the Gen Z protests, uh, some interesting curve balls

Jacob Shapiro:

in there, but of course, US China relations, trade, everything else.

Jacob Shapiro:

We hope you enjoy the episode.

Jacob Shapiro:

If you wanna do us a favor, please share this podcast with everybody that you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, like that's all you have to do.

Jacob Shapiro:

Spread it far and wide.

Jacob Shapiro:

Cheers and see you up.

Jacob Shapiro:

All right, listeners, cousins, back at it.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, I cut Marco off 'cause he was starting to make basketball jokes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco, I'm in, I'm in Milwaukee.

Jacob Shapiro:

You are in, you are in Phoenix.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, what does that have to do with basketball?

Marko Papic:

Well, I was just saying that, uh, both cities have something

Marko Papic:

in common, which is that they're going nowhere when it comes to the NBA.

Marko Papic:

So,

Jacob Shapiro:

uh, Phoenix.

Jacob Shapiro:

Phoenix, probably not.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's really, you know, it's amazing how fast Phoenix fell from Grace and how

Jacob Shapiro:

different the narrative would be if they had beat Giannis in that finals and CP

Jacob Shapiro:

three had gotten his finals, and yeah, quite a, quite a sliding doors moment.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, yeah,

Marko Papic:

also, um, Deandre Aton, I mean, that was his

Marko Papic:

last, uh, relevant season.

Marko Papic:

But look, we can't lead with basketball.

Marko Papic:

We're gonna lose a lot of our, uh, uh, listeners.

Marko Papic:

We obviously have to leave that for the end.

Marko Papic:

I do have some questions for you at the end, though, for you and our

Marko Papic:

listeners on the basketball front, but

Jacob Shapiro:

I know that, well, I mean, uh, obviously we have to lead with Ryan

Jacob Shapiro:

Russillo breaking up with Bill Simmons officially and moving to Barstool Sports.

Jacob Shapiro:

Right.

Jacob Shapiro:

That that's what you're implying.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, I, that was actually, uh, very surprising, you know, um, but I

Marko Papic:

guess, uh, you know, that's, that's what happens when you don't give people equity.

Marko Papic:

Good people leave when you don't give them enough or you know, at all, any equity.

Marko Papic:

So, I don't know, you sent me, or you posted the, the video of Ryan

Marko Papic:

Illa basically saying why, and it was very clear that he emphasized,

Marko Papic:

you know, that uh, it was all about partner, being a partner.

Marko Papic:

He wants to be partner at this stage in his career.

Jacob Shapiro:

Number one for somebody who's been on the radio and podcast

Jacob Shapiro:

and TV for as long as he was, he was so painfully awkward in that video,

Jacob Shapiro:

which is one of the reasons I like him.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause he's, he just like sucks at these things.

Jacob Shapiro:

He also deed to use the words at this stage in my career, uh,

Jacob Shapiro:

which I don't know, like how many people has he probably criticized

Jacob Shapiro:

as well from that point of view.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I'm, I'm gonna make this, this vow to you in front of all the listeners.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco, I will never leave you for.

Jacob Shapiro:

For David Portnoy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Now, Mr. Portnoy, if you're listening and you want to bring both of us to the

Jacob Shapiro:

Barstool Geopolitics network, like we are both gonna talk, but you will not.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, first of all, you'll not divide my loyalties,

Marko Papic:

but the reason I'm not Bill Simmons is because we're equal partners.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's in this

Marko Papic:

endeavor.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

So that is the difference.

Marko Papic:

I mean, um, and that's, and by the way, that's, I think what's very

Marko Papic:

important for anyone starting a business, you cannot keep people who

Marko Papic:

are critical to the business or who are clearly a, like a generational talent

Marko Papic:

without sharing equity with them.

Marko Papic:

That's just like, yeah, they're gonna leave.

Marko Papic:

You know what I mean?

Marko Papic:

And it's a free market baby.

Marko Papic:

Once you reach a certain level of, um, excellence, you know, like, and Ryan

Marko Papic:

SLO is excellent, and so he bounced.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he bounced.

Jacob Shapiro:

All right.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, um, also just, just the last bit of, uh, foreplay before we get into it.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, um, sure it, it takes, I, I don't drink a whole lot these days, mostly because

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm, you know, I've got, was up with the 10 month old all night last night.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, it's just, it's just a lot.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I will say when I'm in Wisconsin, I cannot help but,

Jacob Shapiro:

but drink some of the spotted cow here, only available in Wisconsin.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's a delicious beer.

Jacob Shapiro:

They drink more per capita in Wisconsin than anywhere else in the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

I felt like I should join in.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I'm having a beer with you this evening too, mark.

Marko Papic:

That's awesome.

Marko Papic:

I'm, I'm actually on coffee 'cause I've been on client calls since 5:00 AM.

Marko Papic:

Uh, also couple of things since we are partners, don't do

Marko Papic:

that again unless they pay us.

Marko Papic:

Can we just make sure

Jacob Shapiro:

I've been adding them to come on the

Jacob Shapiro:

podcast for some time, but Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Fine.

Marko Papic:

At second.

Marko Papic:

At second of all, I love you, but you sometimes say things

Marko Papic:

that are completely illogical.

Marko Papic:

You drink because you have a 10 month old.

Marko Papic:

That's why you would drink.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, I see.

Jacob Shapiro:

What, you see what I mean?

Jacob Shapiro:

You're saying?

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, yeah, but that if you're using alcohol as a crutch to deal with, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, your feelings of stress, parent,

Marko Papic:

yes.

Marko Papic:

Like, yes.

Marko Papic:

Go on.

Marko Papic:

You're gonna lose everyone listening to this podcast.

Marko Papic:

Let's just move on.

Marko Papic:

Let's just move on,

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco.

Jacob Shapiro:

I lost them a long time ago.

Jacob Shapiro:

Remember, I'm, I'm the elitist here in the conversation.

Jacob Shapiro:

My job is not to make these people happy.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's, uh, fair enough.

Jacob Shapiro:

Anyway, okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

But the thing that probably everybody wants to talk about,

Jacob Shapiro:

I'll try and set us up here while Marco, so we've got fireworks in

Jacob Shapiro:

the US China trade relationship.

Jacob Shapiro:

We've got some other things we want to get to in the episode today,

Jacob Shapiro:

but we should talk about them.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, it began, well it depends what, where, where you think it begins.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sort of depends because there was this ruling, uh, last week, um, the

Jacob Shapiro:

sort of fi for the, the Department of Commerce, um, had this new 50%

Jacob Shapiro:

rule that entities that are owned 50% by a foreign government or some.

Jacob Shapiro:

Entity that is on an entity list that would trigger a bunch of,

Jacob Shapiro:

uh, different export controls.

Jacob Shapiro:

That at least is what people are pointed to as the reason for China reacting pretty

Jacob Shapiro:

disproportionately and announcing a bunch of export controls on rare earth elements.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, this is the part in the conversation where we have to remind listeners

Jacob Shapiro:

that rare earth elements are not rare.

Jacob Shapiro:

They are just incredibly costly and pollutive to mine effectively, and

Jacob Shapiro:

China doesn't care about any of that.

Jacob Shapiro:

They got rid of all the regulations and they have become the real center,

Jacob Shapiro:

um, of a lot of these different, of mining and processing and refining a

Jacob Shapiro:

lot of these different rare earths.

Jacob Shapiro:

A lot of these are minerals and resources whose names I can't even pronounce, but

Jacob Shapiro:

I know that they're incredibly important, um, in semiconductors, um, in electricity

Jacob Shapiro:

management devices like capacitors.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, there's all sorts of things that they're absolutely mission critical for,

Jacob Shapiro:

and which China controls massive amounts of the supply chain for, um, and China.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's not.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's not necessarily banning the exports of lots of these different minerals.

Jacob Shapiro:

What it's doing though, is it's gonna make Chinese companies and Chinese

Jacob Shapiro:

exporters, um, have to apply for approval to continue exporting in the future.

Jacob Shapiro:

I thought one of the interesting things too is it's not just, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, the heavy rare earth elements and the li uh, the graphite and

Jacob Shapiro:

the, and all that other stuff.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're also, they also put at least, you know, quote unquote restrictions,

Jacob Shapiro:

um, on any technologies that lead to the assembly, maintenance,

Jacob Shapiro:

repair, and upgrading of production line for rare earth mining.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I think they're, they're.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're looking there and saying, okay, these other countries

Jacob Shapiro:

in the world want to do this.

Jacob Shapiro:

They want to take some of this processing and refining back.

Jacob Shapiro:

We're not gonna let you do that either.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause we have cornered the market on this and we're the ones that have

Jacob Shapiro:

all the technology and the refining, processing and capacity as well.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, there's also, and this is just in the last couple of days, like

Jacob Shapiro:

everybody's focusing on the rare earth.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, but I dunno if you saw this, Marco.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's also a return to these tit for tat port fees that ocean shipping firms

Jacob Shapiro:

are gonna be charging on each other.

Jacob Shapiro:

This was something that both the United States and China announced

Jacob Shapiro:

earlier in the year when President Trump was talking about 240% tariffs.

Jacob Shapiro:

They were supposed to kick in later.

Jacob Shapiro:

Were they gonna get kicked in at all?

Jacob Shapiro:

It appears that they're being kicked in.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, now both China and the United States tried to, to tried to assuage

Jacob Shapiro:

investors and say, eh, like it's not gonna be that big of a deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

But China also said it has started to collect charges on us owned,

Jacob Shapiro:

operated, built or flagged vessels.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the United States has similar restrictions in

Jacob Shapiro:

place at its different ports.

Jacob Shapiro:

I talk to different folks in the shipping industry.

Jacob Shapiro:

They don't even really know what the rules are at this point and

Jacob Shapiro:

how they're gonna be enforced.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, China also added some, um, some subsidiaries of a South Korean ship

Jacob Shapiro:

building company, um, on its sanctions list for engaging with the United

Jacob Shapiro:

States, which is an interesting thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and before I turn it over to you to, to let you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, give us a take on this.

Jacob Shapiro:

I did just want to quote the President of the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, by the way, Scott Besson said that President Trump and Xi Jinping will still

Jacob Shapiro:

meet in a couple of weeks, and that he thinks these things can be deescalated.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, um, that, that to me probably says short-term deal, but we

Jacob Shapiro:

won't step on the punchline.

Jacob Shapiro:

But here is, here's what the president of the United States had to say, uh, when

Jacob Shapiro:

he was asked about Beijing pursuing these new curbs on rare earth element exports.

Jacob Shapiro:

Quote, we have the ultimate export.

Jacob Shapiro:

We have import and we have export.

Jacob Shapiro:

We import from China, massive amounts, and, you know, maybe

Jacob Shapiro:

we'll have to stop doing that.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I don't know exactly what it is.

Jacob Shapiro:

Neither do you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Neither does anybody.

Jacob Shapiro:

End quote.

Jacob Shapiro:

I also loved the next line in the Bloomberg article that had this

Jacob Shapiro:

quote, it was unclear what exports the president was referring to.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco, what is going on in the US China relationship?

Marko Papic:

Oh, man.

Marko Papic:

Uh, well, first of all, uh, one of the, one of the reasons that I love

Marko Papic:

that you set up our conversations is that you do such a thorough

Marko Papic:

job of explaining what happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

Because I, I would say No, seriously, and I, and I'm just, just

Marko Papic:

saying that because, um, most of the media kind of missed that October 2nd

Marko Papic:

semiconductor round of export control.

Marko Papic:

So the United States of America has tried to close the loophole basically.

Marko Papic:

Um, the US does not want entities in China that are aligned in some

Marko Papic:

way, shape, or form, pretty loosely.

Marko Papic:

I would say the Donald Trump administration was very

Marko Papic:

narrow in its definition of.

Marko Papic:

What Chinese entities are aligned with the military and the Communist party.

Marko Papic:

They needed to see direct ownership link.

Marko Papic:

The Biden administration broadened the connection massively, too, massively, I

Marko Papic:

would say, because, you know, if you sell toilet paper to the Chinese, like people's

Marko Papic:

liberation army, you are effectively like part of the military industrial complex.

Marko Papic:

So that's, that's Joe Biden, uh, and, and, uh, um, and his administration's fault.

Marko Papic:

But what bi, what Trump has done is he ha he's continued the Joe Biden

Marko Papic:

line and then he's closed the loophole where whereas many of these Chinese

Marko Papic:

companies would create a subsidiary, they would create another company,

Marko Papic:

own a piece of it, and then have that subsidiary just buy the chips.

Marko Papic:

And so, uh, on October 2nd, the Trump administration tried to close that

Marko Papic:

loophole with what's called a 50% rule.

Marko Papic:

You know, um, if various list.

Marko Papic:

Entities of the Chinese government that Chinese government has some

Marko Papic:

sort of relationship with is they control effectively over 50%.

Marko Papic:

You're not supposed to do these trips.

Marko Papic:

You're not, you know.

Marko Papic:

Um, so the first foray this time around was again, launched by the us.

Marko Papic:

Uh, your, your assessment is correct that, that October 2nd was important,

Marko Papic:

but then you also said that China reacted disproportionately, and

Marko Papic:

I would actually argue that it reacted extremely proportionately.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

So, as the Chinese, uh, I think it was commerce ministry or

Marko Papic:

someone like that, their, their statement on Saturday after the Friday, uh,

Marko Papic:

tweet for President Trump that he was going to put sanctions at a hundred

Marko Papic:

percent, their statements went along.

Marko Papic:

Something like, look, you know, and this was not carried by a lot

Marko Papic:

of the Western press because it doesn't fit the neat narrative that

Marko Papic:

the Chinese are losing their cool.

Marko Papic:

But the Chinese commerce ministry came out and said, look.

Marko Papic:

These are export controls, they're not export bans and all legitimate

Marko Papic:

businesses have nothing to worry about.

Marko Papic:

It was almost verbatim.

Marko Papic:

Something like that.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

In other words, like, hey look, I mean the US is imposing export controls

Marko Papic:

where they want to go purchase order by purchase order and approve each one.

Marko Papic:

Well, we want to have that sort of les over your heads too.

Marko Papic:

We're not saying that you are not gonna get the rare earth from China and

Marko Papic:

everyone listening to this, just to be clear, none of this is about banning.

Marko Papic:

Like America will still sell semiconductors, but it has

Marko Papic:

to go to companies in China that are allowed to buy it.

Marko Papic:

And China simply saying, we're not banning rare earths.

Marko Papic:

But similarly we're going to say to Lockheed Martin, like,

Marko Papic:

Hey, dual use technology.

Marko Papic:

You are building missiles that one day might kill Chinese.

Marko Papic:

We're not gonna sell you rare earths, but we'll sell it to Nvidia.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

Um, and so I think that that's an important point.

Marko Papic:

I think this is extremely proportionate.

Marko Papic:

As is the shipping fees that you also mentioned.

Marko Papic:

China's saying to the US we're just gonna do tit for tat.

Marko Papic:

So, um, I think that that's something to understand.

Marko Papic:

I don't think there is a real shift in Chinese thinking here.

Marko Papic:

I think that they're just finally starting to say to America,

Marko Papic:

like, look, we are gonna start restricting access to rare earths.

Marko Papic:

If you restrict access to semiconductors, um, on tariffs on

Marko Papic:

tariffs, we're not gonna follow you.

Marko Papic:

We're not gonna keep ratcheting tariffs.

Marko Papic:

And they actually said that after April, they, they came out and said it's

Marko Papic:

nonsense to keep increasing tariffs.

Marko Papic:

They made a joke like Beijing made a joke about this.

Marko Papic:

Like, this is, yeah,

Jacob Shapiro:

it was really, it was good.

Jacob Shapiro:

It was, it was, uh, because it was so affected, it, it really hit, well, I,

Jacob Shapiro:

I can try to find the exact language, but it was when Trump did 240% tariffs

Jacob Shapiro:

and they were, they did something like.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, this doesn't mean anything after 120%, so we're just gonna stop at 120%.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like whatever,

Marko Papic:

1000000000%.

Marko Papic:

No.

Marko Papic:

So, uh, the, so I, I, I, I basically think, look, the Chinese are saying like,

Marko Papic:

you do something on October 2nd, we do something on October 8th, and then Friday

Marko Papic:

rolls along and Donald Trump reacts, loses his school and he's like, this is nuts.

Marko Papic:

And then 24 hours later he's like, ha, psych, I was just kidding.

Marko Papic:

Everything is gonna be fine.

Marko Papic:

So what happened here?

Marko Papic:

I'll tell you what I think happened, Jacob.

Marko Papic:

I think there's two tracks in American, uh, foreign policy right now.

Marko Papic:

There's a sort of a bureaucratic inertia, and if you think about how bureaucracy

Marko Papic:

works, just like a lever, just like a toggle, and the toggle is like from

Marko Papic:

one to 10, one being like, let's be nice to China, 10 being, you know, time

Marko Papic:

to fuel up the nukes in nuke China.

Marko Papic:

And so obviously since 2017, Donald Trump himself moved the toggle from one to six.

Marko Papic:

And then interestingly, Joe Biden moved it from six to eight.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

You know, and so that's just the default setting of the bureaucracy.

Marko Papic:

And that bureaucracy continues to initiate Section 3 0 1 investigations in China,

Marko Papic:

uh, which take months to get done.

Marko Papic:

There's a, there's a bureaucratic and technocratic process

Marko Papic:

in these investigations.

Marko Papic:

There's serious people who get paid good money, who are well educated,

Marko Papic:

who are working on all these, oh, you know, we need to close the loophole

Marko Papic:

because of these subsidiaries.

Marko Papic:

Let's do that.

Marko Papic:

And that's, that's one layer of the cake.

Marko Papic:

And then there's the icing, which is very orange and very,

Marko Papic:

very like profoundly awesome.

Marko Papic:

And that's Donald Trump.

Marko Papic:

And he does not have any, I think, awareness of what his own bureaucracy

Marko Papic:

is doing on those other layers.

Marko Papic:

And so when China retaliates against something that, you know, the

Marko Papic:

United States of America did, like his administration did, he's like,

Marko Papic:

whoa, Xi Jinping made a mistake, but well, no, he's just reacting

Marko Papic:

to what your government is doing.

Marko Papic:

And then he realizes it, and then he calms down 24 hours later, he

Marko Papic:

probably has a snicker bar, right?

Marko Papic:

Like the famous Snicker commercial.

Marko Papic:

And he says, oh, okay, I see what happened here.

Marko Papic:

And as of course, Donald Trump said a couple of months ago, or maybe even

Marko Papic:

a couple of weeks ago, look, American chip companies will sell chips to China.

Marko Papic:

They want to sell chips to China.

Marko Papic:

He wants them to sell chips to China so they can continue to have a monopoly.

Marko Papic:

And so I think that where this is headed is Donald Trump who wants to deal with

Marko Papic:

China and understands that there are downsides to some of these export controls

Marko Papic:

in a genuine way, not in sort of a silly, Donald Trump just wants to make a deal

Marko Papic:

way, but there's actual downside to.

Marko Papic:

Effectively helping China develop its own chip industry.

Marko Papic:

You know, that's what America is doing.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

I think that what you're gonna see is Donald Trump is gonna

Marko Papic:

win over that lower layer where he's just gonna tell the bureaucracy, like,

Marko Papic:

look, let's find a compromise here.

Marko Papic:

And so, yes, I do think there's gonna be a deal.

Marko Papic:

And, and it's not just, uh, Scott Best and Jameson Greer came out also with

Marko Papic:

very sort of conciliatory comments.

Marko Papic:

Like, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, we're gonna, we're gonna

Marko Papic:

sit down with the Chinese.

Marko Papic:

And I would say that this is where the TikTok deal is also important, because

Marko Papic:

speaking to people with contexts in China itself, what I've been told from

Marko Papic:

my onshore context is that the TikTok deal actually allowed a creation of, you

Marko Papic:

know, it wasn't that relevant as a deal.

Marko Papic:

Like nobody's really like sitting here like wondering where TikTok is going.

Marko Papic:

But what it did is it created C news and connectivity at very top.

Marko Papic:

And so there's finally.

Marko Papic:

Channels of communication, whereas there weren't really in April when

Marko Papic:

President Trump just went on a tariff tirade after the, after the TikTok

Marko Papic:

deal was settled, even though the deal itself was not that important.

Marko Papic:

The mechanism to get the deal done means that people in power in both China and us

Marko Papic:

have a way to text each other, have a way to call each other, have a way to be like,

Marko Papic:

yo, why are you restricting rare earths?

Marko Papic:

Well, because you guys just a week earlier restricted semiconductors.

Marko Papic:

No, we didn't.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, you did.

Marko Papic:

What about this?

Marko Papic:

Oh no, no, that's just standard stuff we're doing.

Marko Papic:

'cause you guys arrivals, well, well, you know, now we're gonna respond.

Marko Papic:

And then you have that conversation and it's not just two megaphones

Marko Papic:

shouting into the ether.

Marko Papic:

So, um, I think that's the background of this story.

Marko Papic:

And I, I don't think we're gonna end up with a hundred percent

Marko Papic:

tariffs on, on toys for Christmas.

Jacob Shapiro:

No.

Jacob Shapiro:

And, and if we do, I mean things are gonna be terrible there.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's a couple things to say in there.

Jacob Shapiro:

You're right that the Biden administration was much tougher and much more, much

Jacob Shapiro:

more surgical on Beijing, and you might remember the Biden administration,

Jacob Shapiro:

one of their last gasp acts was the semiconductor restriction plan.

Jacob Shapiro:

It was basically, some countries have no restrictions, some

Jacob Shapiro:

have some level of restriction.

Jacob Shapiro:

Then there's the, the ultimate level of restriction and China

Jacob Shapiro:

was gonna be on that list.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Trump administration threw that plan out months ago now, saying

Jacob Shapiro:

we, we are gonna have something that we're gonna put in its place.

Jacob Shapiro:

We still don't know what that thing is in its place.

Jacob Shapiro:

And in the meantime, we've had, for example, Nvidia.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, lobby again, some of the restrictions that it was dealing with and then

Jacob Shapiro:

the Trump administration saying that it was gonna take a cut of exports

Jacob Shapiro:

going to China, which is also an interesting, um, sort of part of this.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's also like, I don't know if this is still true, but when China first started

Jacob Shapiro:

making noise about this and they've been doing this for years, like these export

Jacob Shapiro:

controls and some of these different elements and mineral resources, yes, it is

Jacob Shapiro:

that they want to be able to control this with the west and control the processing.

Jacob Shapiro:

But China, again, I'll just remind our listeners, is a country of

Jacob Shapiro:

a billion people and the Chinese government doesn't always know

Jacob Shapiro:

what its own companies are doing.

Jacob Shapiro:

So part of the process of getting Chinese companies to apply for approval to export

Jacob Shapiro:

these things, yes, it was to create a lever with the west, but it was also

Jacob Shapiro:

for the Chinese government to figure out what the fuck they had going on.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause they didn't even know what kind of levers they were pulling.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think they, they have a better sense of those levers now.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I wouldn't be surprised if there's like a little bit of that in there.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's also, and, and, oh yeah, go ahead.

Jacob Shapiro:

Before.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, no, no, no.

Jacob Shapiro:

Please, please.

Jacob Shapiro:

Finish, finish, finish.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, the, the last thing I just wanna say is, you know, I, I, I

Jacob Shapiro:

talked to a guy who's, who's in the rare earth refining processing space

Jacob Shapiro:

and who was trying, um, to basically bring that to the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I was asking him, well, I, I texted him today and I was like, you

Jacob Shapiro:

must be having an interesting week.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he said, yeah, I am having an interesting week.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I asked him, is it anything more than talk?

Jacob Shapiro:

And his answer was basically like, not really.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like people are freaking out.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're saying lots of things in public, but the shift from, hey, this is a

Jacob Shapiro:

problem to no, we're actually going to spend the money to have CapEx to refine

Jacob Shapiro:

and process these things and countries that are, that are the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

are friendly to the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I don't think we're exactly there there yet.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he expects some kind of short term deal as well.

Jacob Shapiro:

All and all of which is to say, and I think you and I have both been on this

Jacob Shapiro:

from different angles from the very beginning, which is Trump's instinct,

Jacob Shapiro:

I think is to make a deal with China.

Jacob Shapiro:

Much to the chagrin of Peter Navarro and the other China Hawks

Jacob Shapiro:

that he has in his administration.

Jacob Shapiro:

And people like Jameson Greer and Scott Besson are cool with that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think if Trump, if it was up to Trump, like he would announce some deal

Jacob Shapiro:

and there would be a grand US China bargain and everything would be fine.

Jacob Shapiro:

The flip side of that is that some of the things that his government

Jacob Shapiro:

is doing and some of the things that he says right, is the exact

Jacob Shapiro:

opposite, which is full decoupling.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like there's not gonna be any future in the US China relationship.

Jacob Shapiro:

These are geopolitical rivals.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I don't even think Trump, like there's no consistency with him.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think the Chinese have at least realized that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And so they have to punch the bully in the mouth when the bully comes at

Jacob Shapiro:

them with something like the 50% rule.

Jacob Shapiro:

But they also ultimately have economic problems of their own.

Jacob Shapiro:

And if they can have a short-term deal whose provisions they won't live up

Jacob Shapiro:

to, like, so for, for any investors or folks who have companies, you should

Jacob Shapiro:

behave as if there is no deal because I'll, I'll put my neck out there and

Jacob Shapiro:

say in five years it doesn't matter, like the US and China are decoupling.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like it doesn't matter if we have some kind of short-term deal

Jacob Shapiro:

or whatever else is happening.

Jacob Shapiro:

But anyway, just.

Jacob Shapiro:

Go from there.

Marko Papic:

Cool.

Marko Papic:

Okay, so we have some disagreements.

Marko Papic:

Great.

Marko Papic:

Which is good.

Marko Papic:

Which is good.

Marko Papic:

So first of all, I think, uh, the onshore narrative in China, like if you were

Marko Papic:

to spend some time reading op-eds in Mandarin in China, which I don't, but

Marko Papic:

I'm told what they are is effectively there's no urgency for anything.

Marko Papic:

There is no urgency to even punch the bully in the mouth,

Marko Papic:

although I agree with you.

Marko Papic:

They did.

Marko Papic:

They, they finally kind of did something, but there's no urgency.

Marko Papic:

And that's why the comments on Saturday were so conciliatory.

Marko Papic:

They were like, Hey guys, this isn't export bans.

Marko Papic:

We're not banning export of rare Earth.

Marko Papic:

Relax.

Marko Papic:

The issue is they do want a deal.

Marko Papic:

And the reason is that the onshore commentary, if you were reading like

Marko Papic:

the equivalent of a New York Times op-ed in China, the consensus in China is

Marko Papic:

the United States of America is gonna collapse into a black hole of Civil War

Marko Papic:

demographic decline, racial tensions, and.

Marko Papic:

Complete collapse.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Late stage

Jacob Shapiro:

capitalism.

Jacob Shapiro:

The, the Marxists were, were right.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So what's the rush?

Marko Papic:

There's no rush.

Marko Papic:

You know, like, let's make a deal with Trump.

Marko Papic:

And I think that everyone in China completely understands something

Marko Papic:

that I was saying on this podcast, like a year, like when we started

Marko Papic:

and before that on your podcast, Trump will make a deal with China.

Marko Papic:

I said this in February of 2024.

Marko Papic:

Like I've consistently, like Trump is not a national security hawk.

Marko Papic:

You don't put Tulsi Gabbard as the head of your, you know, um, national security

Marko Papic:

if you are a national security hawk.

Marko Papic:

He's not.

Marko Papic:

He is mercantilist.

Marko Papic:

And I actually think where we disagree a little bit is I actually think that his

Marko Papic:

approach is the more optimal approach.

Marko Papic:

In a multipolar world, it doesn't pay to decouple.

Marko Papic:

And I think the big risk for the US is that by restricting export of American

Marko Papic:

technology, often a couple of generations late, you will incentivize China to

Marko Papic:

become very good at its own technology.

Marko Papic:

Alternative technologies that you have no pre you have no input into.

Marko Papic:

But anyways, what I wanna like really emphasize here is that I think that

Marko Papic:

the Chinese are perfectly fine.

Marko Papic:

They understand that this is a limited window where maybe they

Marko Papic:

have somebody who's a little bit different from what's coming.

Marko Papic:

You know, whether it's JD Vance or a OC, I can see a world in which whoever inherits

Marko Papic:

the presidency after President Trump is much tougher on China and, and adopt

Marko Papic:

the Jake Sullivan Joe Biden approach.

Marko Papic:

Uh, but they're cool with that because they just don't really think they're in

Marko Papic:

a rush, uh, because America's collapsing.

Marko Papic:

And that narrative of American collapse is almost like a

Marko Papic:

really good thing for the world.

Marko Papic:

It means that China's not gonna do something stupid.

Marko Papic:

Um, and if I was advising President Xi, I would say that that narrative

Marko Papic:

is, you know, while very pleasing to read, I'm sure in those New York Times

Marko Papic:

equivalent op-eds in China, you're kind of reading what's very pleasing to you.

Marko Papic:

You know, it's sort of like a liberal reading, a guardian oped, you know?

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, yeah, I, well, I mean, I'm not reading that version of,

Jacob Shapiro:

of the commentary in Chinese, but my, my, my sense is more that it's in the

Jacob Shapiro:

same way that the, that any average student in the United States is taught

Jacob Shapiro:

that the United States is a beacon of liberalism and individual rights.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the United States stands up for these things like China.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, you know, Xi Jinping himself was educated in a Marxist framework,

Jacob Shapiro:

and he thinks of the world through a, a Marxist point of view.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, I, I, I don't know that they're thinking that it's gonna be civil

Jacob Shapiro:

war and carnage in the streets.

Jacob Shapiro:

My interpretation of.

Jacob Shapiro:

Intelligentsia in China has always just been more, yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like this is late stage capitalism.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like Marx was a little bit later than he should have been, but like,

Jacob Shapiro:

eventually this system is going to, is not going to work in the long term.

Jacob Shapiro:

And meanwhile, like we have socialism with Chinese characteristics and, and

Jacob Shapiro:

everything, it, it seems a little more.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I think it's

Marko Papic:

going, I think it's more than that.

Marko Papic:

I think now it's about technological, uh, yeah.

Marko Papic:

Superiority of China.

Marko Papic:

I, I think there's, there's, and, and I think like, you know, deployment of, look,

Marko Papic:

I mean, if you grew up in an authoritarian state when you see, uh, you know, the

Marko Papic:

military deployed to cities, like, you know what that means in a Chinese context.

Marko Papic:

But there's another thing I wanna disagree with you on.

Marko Papic:

Well, this wasn't really a disagreement, this was just an

Marko Papic:

intro to the real disagreement.

Marko Papic:

And my real disagreement is I think that decoupling is impossible.

Marko Papic:

You know, and let me, and let me explain why I say that.

Marko Papic:

Um, the one, our, our, our actual example of decoupling.

Marko Papic:

In a modern industrial world and equals one, our sample size is

Marko Papic:

one, and that's the Cold War.

Marko Papic:

And I really, really, really want to emphasize how a historical and

Marko Papic:

idiosyncratic and pat dependent the Cold War was in 1945.

Marko Papic:

I know I've said this before on our podcast, but I just wanna emphasize

Marko Papic:

in 1945, the world was destroyed.

Marko Papic:

Like it was destroyed.

Marko Papic:

You know, it looked like Gaza.

Marko Papic:

It did it, it, it, it looked better

Jacob Shapiro:

than Gaza.

Marko Papic:

Large swats of the developed worlds, yes, looked worse than gossip.

Jacob Shapiro:

No.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, n well, no, because not like even Germany didn't look

Jacob Shapiro:

that bad because like, oh my God,

Marko Papic:

okay, we don't have to get into commentary of what Gaza looks like.

Marko Papic:

I retract that.

Jacob Shapiro:

I win, I win.

Jacob Shapiro:

You get that?

Jacob Shapiro:

See that you do,

Marko Papic:

you win.

Marko Papic:

Look, the point is that, um, the world was completely destroyed.

Marko Papic:

Like, you know, let me, let me, let me emphasize the destruction.

Marko Papic:

There were tens of millions of refugees starving in Western Europe, not like

Marko Papic:

in eastern Germany, like I'm talking like the western side of Europe.

Marko Papic:

Like in Belgium.

Marko Papic:

People were starving to that in freaking Brussels.

Marko Papic:

Japan had two nuclear bombs dropped on it, and multiple cities completely firebombed

Marko Papic:

into like even worse destruction level.

Marko Papic:

Like if you got hit with a nuke, you were lucky.

Marko Papic:

You know, you escaped the firebombing.

Marko Papic:

China would have, and China

Jacob Shapiro:

went straight to Civil War.

Jacob Shapiro:

They were like, oh, world War Two's over.

Jacob Shapiro:

I would go that like, let's, let's get to it.

Marko Papic:

They had another four years of civil war.

Marko Papic:

India was a colony of a tired, weakened empire.

Marko Papic:

And then you have, of course, Soviet Union, which is just a complete mess.

Marko Papic:

I mean, they, they eked out that win by the skin of their teeth.

Marko Papic:

Only really the United States of America and some parts of Soviet

Marko Papic:

Union still have an industrial plant.

Marko Papic:

And so what I'm getting at is that when the Cold War starts, you have large

Marko Papic:

parts of the planet are tabula rasa completely, completely erased, which

Marko Papic:

is a fancy way of saying blank plate.

Marko Papic:

And so you can craft a material reality.

Marko Papic:

An industrial world that truly is decoupled.

Marko Papic:

'cause you're starting with large swaths of the planet completely

Marko Papic:

unintegrated or destroyed.

Marko Papic:

And so if the Soviets want to have their technological zone

Marko Papic:

that's clearly decoupled from the us, they can and vice versa.

Marko Papic:

Now notice that that's how Cold War started.

Marko Papic:

That was the starting conditions of the Cold War World War I.

Marko Papic:

However, and World War II started in a completely different world.

Marko Papic:

They actually started in a globalized world.

Marko Papic:

So my favorite historian, Margaret McMillan, you know, she wrote all

Marko Papic:

these books about First World War.

Marko Papic:

She really talks about this in a great way.

Marko Papic:

Like when World War I starts, there are literally.

Marko Papic:

Munitions companies that are like building sea mines that are like

Marko Papic:

30% owned by a German conglomerate.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And 40% owned by British.

Marko Papic:

So the board meets when the war starts and the board is like high fiving

Marko Papic:

the Germans and the Brits are high fiving, holy shit, we're going to war.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

The, the, the munitions ones were the, the British insurance companies that

Jacob Shapiro:

were ensuring German ships were not high fiving and they were looking at

Jacob Shapiro:

themselves and being, what the hell?

Jacob Shapiro:

But you know what I mean?

Marko Papic:

What there's a German guy and the British guy saying

Marko Papic:

like, yo, we're gonna make money.

Marko Papic:

I'll see you in six months.

Marko Papic:

You know, I'm sorry about what's gonna happen.

Marko Papic:

It's gonna be fine.

Marko Papic:

We'll back by Christmas.

Marko Papic:

Everything is good.

Marko Papic:

The point is that the world was so, so integrated in 1914.

Marko Papic:

And don't you make the mistake, and I don't mean you Jacob, but don't you make

Marko Papic:

the mistake to your listener to think that the World War I somehow crept up on us.

Marko Papic:

That's what everybody always says.

Marko Papic:

Oh, but they didn't.

Marko Papic:

No, they knew.

Marko Papic:

They knew from mid 1890s.

Marko Papic:

Everybody knew that Germany and Austria would go to war with France, Russia, and

Marko Papic:

the UK in some combination shape or form.

Marko Papic:

Everybody knew everybody was looking forward to it and yet they couldn't

Marko Papic:

disentangle this technological reality.

Marko Papic:

And now that's a world where I actually think I can see

Marko Papic:

maybe an argument being made.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

But technology back then was difficult to entangle.

Marko Papic:

What are you talking about?

Marko Papic:

Our levers, our tools, our components were huge widgets and you know,

Marko Papic:

giant things they rotate to.

Marko Papic:

Today, it's so much more difficult to disentangle when the components are

Marko Papic:

like rare earth you don't even know how to pronounce and neither do I.

Marko Papic:

Lemme be very clear.

Marko Papic:

And so I would say that the problem for the world today is that we had 25 years.

Marko Papic:

If not 35 years of genuine peace and prosperity in a unipolar global

Marko Papic:

system that America designed, they became deeply intertwined.

Marko Papic:

And so full decoupling is probably never going to happen.

Marko Papic:

However, however, I do believe that there will be the technological decoupling in

Marko Papic:

certain ways, but that's nothing to fear.

Marko Papic:

I mean, I grew up in communist Yugoslavia, Jacob, you grew up in, you know, a

Marko Papic:

pillar of liberty and freedom in America.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And if you were to send, if a 12-year-old Jacob was going to send,

Marko Papic:

you know, a 14-year-old Marco, a a, a tape of Atlanta hawks with Dominique,

Marko Papic:

you know, having their day in the sun, if you were gonna send that to me, I,

Jacob Shapiro:

well hold, I, I, I have to date myself.

Jacob Shapiro:

I unfortunately just missed the Dominique era.

Jacob Shapiro:

My, I came of age during the Mookie Blaylock, Steve Smith.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, oh, listen, I

Marko Papic:

love that team.

Marko Papic:

Mookie Blaylock was, was, was one of my favorite players by the way.

Marko Papic:

Curiously looked almost exactly like Michael Jordan.

Marko Papic:

Almost like they were brothers.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like a min, like a little mini me.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Like a le But anyway, so like if you were to

Marko Papic:

send me a VHS tape, guess what?

Marko Papic:

It wouldn't work.

Marko Papic:

And poor Marco trapped in Communist Yugoslavia would've not been able to

Marko Papic:

play that VHS tape because I was in a different technological system than you.

Marko Papic:

Similarly, when cell phones started, when I moved from

Marko Papic:

Europe to pursue my undergraduate degree in Canada, guess what?

Marko Papic:

My cell phone didn't work.

Marko Papic:

I had to get a Trib band.

Marko Papic:

It's okay.

Marko Papic:

There will be some technological decoupling.

Marko Papic:

And I see a lot of, I hear a lot of investment banks and commentators talking

Marko Papic:

about how that will cause the world to go on two different No, it won't.

Marko Papic:

All it will do is it will lead to entrepreneurs building systems

Marko Papic:

that can read both technological, um, both, both technological, uh.

Marko Papic:

Pillars, which is exactly what happened with phones.

Marko Papic:

You know, Nokia came up with a tri ban phone that did work in

Marko Papic:

both Japan and North America.

Marko Papic:

And Europe.

Marko Papic:

And yes, there were VHS players.

Marko Papic:

There were literally, they could flip between Pal Secum and NTSC.

Marko Papic:

Like, yeah, that's how old I am.

Marko Papic:

I know that stuff.

Marko Papic:

So the point is, somebody's gonna figure this out, just like we

Marko Papic:

had in early desktop computers.

Marko Papic:

You know, you are on the MAC system, I'm on the Microsoft system.

Marko Papic:

Eventually, yes, you could read the files from one system to another,

Marko Papic:

and now we're seamlessly integrated.

Marko Papic:

So I think that we are overstating the decoupling massively.

Marko Papic:

I don't think the decoupling is really what we should be thinking about.

Marko Papic:

I think if World War II starts Jacob, it's gonna start with both countries

Marko Papic:

being very deeply integrated, and I think Donald Trump, to his

Marko Papic:

credit, has figured that out.

Marko Papic:

I think he has figured out that it's very difficult to completely decouple, and that

Marko Papic:

not only is it difficult, it's stupid.

Marko Papic:

It means that American companies cannot make money off of China, the

Marko Papic:

second largest economy in the world, which is objectively a mistake.

Jacob Shapiro:

I love how, how optimistic, um, you were in that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, that was really like, uh, I like it.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I, you're right.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I do, I do disagree with you.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm gonna quote the guy who's figured this out.

Jacob Shapiro:

Again, quote, we have the ultimate export.

Jacob Shapiro:

We have import and we have export.

Jacob Shapiro:

We import from China, massive amounts.

Jacob Shapiro:

And, you know, maybe we'll have to stop doing that, but I

Jacob Shapiro:

don't know exactly what it is.

Jacob Shapiro:

Neither do you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Neither does anybody.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is not a guy who knows what he's talking about.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco, you're giving him way.

Jacob Shapiro:

Way too much credit that he's something, his gut,

Marko Papic:

I think his gut is in the right place, man.

Marko Papic:

You know, and the fact, listen, if that quote, he

Jacob Shapiro:

has a wonderful sense of where power is and when it comes to trade,

Jacob Shapiro:

the United States has certain levers that it is far and away better than China on.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay?

Jacob Shapiro:

But a lot of them, it's China.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I say this a lot in my presentations right now.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I put up a picture of William McKinley and I ask audiences,

Jacob Shapiro:

do you know who this guy is?

Jacob Shapiro:

And literally, like, 1% of audiences know who it is.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I say, this is William McKinley.

Jacob Shapiro:

He literally referred to himself as a quote unquote tariff man.

Jacob Shapiro:

And Donald Trump loves to talk about him all the time.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he imposed tariffs across the board.

Jacob Shapiro:

And when he imposed tariffs across the board, which.

Jacob Shapiro:

Good for the US economy in that pre-World war I world that you're talking about.

Jacob Shapiro:

By the way, I hope you don't turn into the Norman angle of, of

Jacob Shapiro:

globalization, like the great illusion.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

That because like you're, you're That's right.

Jacob Shapiro:

You're flirting with it a little bit.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, when, when William McKinley did that, the United States was making

Jacob Shapiro:

something like 30% of the manufactured products that were in the world.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the Brits had another 20% Right.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Chinese and the Japanese weren't doing any of that.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Japanese were just starting to rev up.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Chinese were a morass.

Jacob Shapiro:

India was getting dominated, um, you know, by a couple thousand

Jacob Shapiro:

British soldiers and everything else.

Jacob Shapiro:

You flip that to today.

Jacob Shapiro:

China wins, China wins on ships, it wins on, you know, active

Jacob Shapiro:

pharmaceutical ingredients.

Jacob Shapiro:

I guess we're not gonna have Tylenol in this country anymore.

Jacob Shapiro:

But if you did want Tylenol for, you're a kid with an ear infection,

Jacob Shapiro:

like probably the API is coming either from India or China.

Jacob Shapiro:

Agricultural, machinery, fertile.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like you start going down the list of things the United States is,

Jacob Shapiro:

but doesn't that prove my point?

Jacob Shapiro:

But doesn't that prove my point?

Jacob Shapiro:

It does, it does.

Jacob Shapiro:

It does prove your point today.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think they are deeply interconnected and I think any person

Jacob Shapiro:

who wants to fight a trade war with China and then is the one who is

Jacob Shapiro:

responsible for what happens afterwards.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like maybe, you know, president Trump, the first administration was a little bit more

Jacob Shapiro:

muscular and he loves to go after China on the campaign, Trump, but when he's the

Jacob Shapiro:

one sitting in the White House and he's looking at the inflation numbers and he's

Jacob Shapiro:

looking at all the things that cannot be manufactured in the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

All the things, by the way that he pushed to be manufactured in the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

during his first term, in which we are no closer to manufacturing in the United

Jacob Shapiro:

States than we were in the first term.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think you're

Marko Papic:

just, but you, you are over indexing on my

Marko Papic:

point that Trump has a good.

Marko Papic:

What you should be overindexing is that you just laid the case for why

Marko Papic:

there's no way we're gonna decouple.

Marko Papic:

And it's not Donald Trump.

Marko Papic:

Who's confused?

Marko Papic:

It's Joe Biden who was confused and Jake

Jacob Shapiro:

Sullivan.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, I mean that's Joe Biden's confused.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's a low Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Joe Biden was, was was confused and is confused.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well wait,

Marko Papic:

well, lemme just explain what I mean by the, the statement.

Marko Papic:

Like, like I'm not trying to make a domestic political point.

Marko Papic:

I'm just saying that Donald Trump, I never took him seriously when he did

Marko Papic:

impose the tariffs at 800% in China, I think that Donald Donald Trump was

Marko Papic:

always gonna make a deal with China.

Marko Papic:

He went on the campaign trail saying he was cool with BYD building ca uh,

Marko Papic:

factories in Ohio because it's smart, it's fixed asset investment that America

Marko Papic:

can nationalize in case of a war.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Of course you should let China build BYD factories.

Marko Papic:

And Donald Trump had the balls to say that in front of a crowd full

Marko Papic:

of potential manufacturing blue collar laborers who are not gonna

Marko Papic:

work in there because of automation.

Marko Papic:

But this isn't, this isn't about whether Donald Trump is right or not.

Marko Papic:

I just never took him seriously when he's aggressive on China, because I take

Marko Papic:

him seriously that he wants to make this deal because of everything you just said.

Marko Papic:

And you laid out a plethora of evidence why it's really difficult to decouple,

Marko Papic:

and that's what we should be focusing on.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, and and I think you were exactly right earlier, by

Jacob Shapiro:

the way, when you said that gov, president Trump doesn't always

Jacob Shapiro:

know what his bureaucracy is doing.

Jacob Shapiro:

And by the way, that's true of any executive like

Jacob Shapiro:

bureaucracies are machines, right?

Jacob Shapiro:

And they're frankensteins, they have lifes of their own.

Jacob Shapiro:

And a good executive has to come in and reign them back in

Jacob Shapiro:

because like, that's what, that's what happens with bureaucracies.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, but that said, the.

Jacob Shapiro:

I would say most of the bureaucracy is aligned against President Trump.

Jacob Shapiro:

And Yes, public, yes, public opinion is aligned against President Trump.

Jacob Shapiro:

And, and the interesting thing about Trump is he rode what you're talking

Jacob Shapiro:

like, I, I agree with you that that's what he wants to do, but also part of

Jacob Shapiro:

the reason he got elected the first time was because he talked about China.

Jacob Shapiro:

In a way that was way more serious than anybody else did.

Jacob Shapiro:

So he is got the Santi China thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the other thing, and I'll, I'll let you cook in a second.

Jacob Shapiro:

I just wanna say, I think we actually do agree, and I laid out that case.

Jacob Shapiro:

The only thing I wanna say back to you is I completely agree with you that it

Jacob Shapiro:

is irrational and asinine and crazy to, for the United States to try and decouple

Jacob Shapiro:

from China, it would be disastrous.

Jacob Shapiro:

That does not mean it won't happen.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well let, it's totally irrational.

Jacob Shapiro:

It does not make any sense.

Jacob Shapiro:

But this is where geopolitics falls off the rails because sometimes actors

Jacob Shapiro:

do irrational things for reasons that are hard for rational cousins to divine

Marko Papic:

well, so, so first of all, I I, I definitely took offense

Marko Papic:

to the Norman Angle reference, you know, for, you know, it's deep cop

Marko Papic:

look at, that's a very deep cut.

Marko Papic:

Just to be, just to repeat my point.

Marko Papic:

My view is that when World War III starts, it may very well start, and

Marko Papic:

that's what Norman Engel was wrong about.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

He thought that the level of interconnectedness would prevent the war.

Marko Papic:

I'm not saying that we are in a world where, I'm just saying like World War

Marko Papic:

War III will start maybe 10 years from now, we will remain connected with China.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And I believe that because of the 50 years of Cold War, most

Marko Papic:

human beings listening to this podcast want to light themselves on fire.

Marko Papic:

Their brains blow up.

Marko Papic:

They cannot process mentally.

Marko Papic:

What I, the words that are coming out of my mouth and the words that

Marko Papic:

are coming out of my mouth is what empirics and game theory proves,

Marko Papic:

which is that in a multipolar world, order enemies trade with one another.

Marko Papic:

Sorry, end of sentence.

Marko Papic:

That's it.

Marko Papic:

So yeah, war can still happen, but it will happen at a very high level

Marko Papic:

of economic integration 'cause it's just so difficult to disentangle.

Marko Papic:

Namely 'cause your own allies steal market share from you by trading with the enemy.

Marko Papic:

That's the whole point.

Marko Papic:

Like it's difficult.

Marko Papic:

And that's what Trump tried to do.

Marko Papic:

And quite frankly, he's given up because the rest of the world is like, no,

Marko Papic:

sorry, we're gonna trade with China now.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

You know, like Europe is imposing tariffs in China, but they're gonna

Marko Papic:

make a deal separate from the US Now there's a BYD factory coming into Spain.

Marko Papic:

And what did they ask?

Marko Papic:

They asked for IP boom.

Marko Papic:

Yeah,

Jacob Shapiro:

that that's true.

Jacob Shapiro:

But, but one thing I forgot to do in my intro was, did you see that thing

Jacob Shapiro:

that the Dutch did with this company?

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Called Xperia, where they're basically seizing a Chinese semiconductor.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, we all know.

Marko Papic:

We all know why the Dutch are doing that.

Marko Papic:

Why?

Marko Papic:

You know what I'm gonna say?

Marko Papic:

I know what the Dutch are doing.

Marko Papic:

That the Dutch are doing that so that they can shower themselves with money

Marko Papic:

selling A SML machines to China.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Right.

Jacob Shapiro:

Which the United States does not want them to do.

Jacob Shapiro:

To your point,

Marko Papic:

but, but they've done it.

Marko Papic:

Even with Jake Solid and Joe Biden.

Marko Papic:

Nobody cares in, let's say, why should they listen?

Marko Papic:

Listen, at some level, it's very simple.

Marko Papic:

And I've said this before on this podcast, France, in Netherlands, they're

Marko Papic:

gonna tell America, listen, bro, world War II starts, we're dying with you

Marko Papic:

in the trenches against the Chinese.

Marko Papic:

But until that moment, you know Emma Manuel has to sell them air buses

Marko Papic:

and I gotta sell them A SML machines.

Marko Papic:

Why?

Marko Papic:

'cause we need the money to develop cruise.

Marko Papic:

Miss sells with which to help you fight the Chinese.

Marko Papic:

Are you gonna give us that money?

Marko Papic:

Are you going to buy air buses instead of Boeings so that France has enough money

Marko Papic:

to become a, to remain a viable ally?

Marko Papic:

No.

Marko Papic:

Jd,

Jacob Shapiro:

JD Vance wants them to use that money to turn around and

Jacob Shapiro:

buy American, uh, defense product.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well,

Marko Papic:

and that's, you know, and this is where this

Marko Papic:

all kind of breaks apart.

Marko Papic:

But, but one thing I wanna say is that, uh, one last thing I wanna

Marko Papic:

disagree with you on, and I know we gotta pivot to X, but this is great.

Marko Papic:

This is, this is a good discussion.

Marko Papic:

The last thing I wanna say is, like you said, bureaucracy

Marko Papic:

is against Trump and China.

Marko Papic:

You're 150%, right?

Marko Papic:

So, uh, the national intelligence defense community, all of course against China,

Marko Papic:

I mean, they know what butters their bread and it, it ain't world peace buddy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Nope.

Marko Papic:

So, so bureaucracy and yes, I think there's a lot of vested

Marko Papic:

interest against, um, the narrative that it's impossible to decouple.

Marko Papic:

But I do disagree with you on the people.

Marko Papic:

And I have a chart that maybe we can put in the show notes.

Marko Papic:

But it shows something fascinating, Jacob.

Marko Papic:

It's one of the most fascinating charts.

Marko Papic:

It's an ipso poll done with, I think the Chicago Council, and it

Marko Papic:

shows that in 2016, about 30% of Americans, 30% Republicans, 40% of

Marko Papic:

Democrats agreed with a statement that trade leads to jobs in America.

Marko Papic:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

So your point is correct.

Marko Papic:

In 2016, voters wanted a trade war with China because they

Marko Papic:

felt that the trade was unfair.

Marko Papic:

And President Trump beat Hillary Clinton as a result of it.

Marko Papic:

I really believe that.

Marko Papic:

And he delivered it.

Marko Papic:

He satiated the demand that the American public had in 2016.

Marko Papic:

But since then, you know what the current level is, Republican sup,

Marko Papic:

Republican support is at about 65%.

Marko Papic:

Democratic is 75%, and I would say that it's thanks to Donald Trump.

Marko Papic:

Donald Trump delivered what the median voter wanted in 2016.

Marko Papic:

What he and his administration seems to be unaware of.

Marko Papic:

Is that they should be patting themselves on the back for what they delivered in

Marko Papic:

2017 and 18 instead of tripling down on policy that nobody in this country wants.

Marko Papic:

And I have, I have so much data, I have a cornucopia of charts, Jacob,

Marko Papic:

that proves my points, tariffs and trade are the least important political

Marko Papic:

issue in the United States of America.

Marko Papic:

You know, behind like abortion.

Marko Papic:

Nobody cares about this stuff.

Marko Papic:

And he's completely over indexing on it, not knowing that what

Marko Papic:

he should be doing is claiming victory for delivering fair trade.

Marko Papic:

Because clearly American voters are now far more, they've doubled

Marko Papic:

their support for globalization.

Marko Papic:

That's, that's surprising.

Marko Papic:

No,

Jacob Shapiro:

it, it is a little surprising, but it also, if you

Jacob Shapiro:

pull the data on what Americans.

Jacob Shapiro:

Perceptions of China were in 2016 and 2017, and I haven't looked at the,

Jacob Shapiro:

the data in the last year or two.

Jacob Shapiro:

I doubt it's changed that much.

Jacob Shapiro:

But in 20 16, 20 17 old people hated China 'cause it was communist China,

Jacob Shapiro:

part of the Cold War, everything else.

Jacob Shapiro:

But young Chinese people, generally speaking, were

Jacob Shapiro:

interested in and liked Americans.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the same was true and over the course of the first Trump administration and the

Jacob Shapiro:

Biden administration, um, that changed where both youths on both sides now

Jacob Shapiro:

distrust each other at the same level that the old guys from the Cold War do.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I, I think you're right that you can point to data that shows

Jacob Shapiro:

that, um, about globalization.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I think you can also point to data that the average median voter

Jacob Shapiro:

in the United States is animated by a deep set fear of China.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then if you like, give them policies and they have to fight between the,

Jacob Shapiro:

like their supportive globalization or whatever else, um, or even their like,

Jacob Shapiro:

you know, cheap products at the Dollar General versus let's stick it to China.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like for some, the fear thing will pop up and for some the other thing will pop up.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think the fear will, I think for vast

Marko Papic:

majority, I'll, I'll just make a call right now.

Marko Papic:

I think for the vast majority it will be economics over foreign policy.

Marko Papic:

'cause foreign policy is, again, completely and utterly

Marko Papic:

irrelevant to most Americans.

Marko Papic:

I mean, sorry, I'm not saying that out my ass.

Marko Papic:

I'm, I'm, I'm, again relying on pulse.

Marko Papic:

So yes, I think, I think what you are revealing is exactly evidence, again, for

Marko Papic:

my view, which is that eventually when World War III starts because young people

Marko Papic:

hate each other, fine, you're right.

Marko Papic:

It will do so at a very high level of economic integration.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Because nobody, like, you're right.

Marko Papic:

Like clearly, clearly, clearly sentiment towards China has soured, but that

Marko Papic:

sentiment towards China as an enemy, as a, as a rival economic sentiment

Marko Papic:

toward, towards globalization is extremely high and nobody wants tariffs.

Marko Papic:

So.

Marko Papic:

The way I square those two views together is that, yeah, like I think Americans

Marko Papic:

have become much more anti-Chinese, but no, they don't want to pay more for

Marko Papic:

their Christmas toys as a result of it.

Marko Papic:

And by the way, they're right, the wisdom, and I know this

Marko Papic:

is where we always disagree.

Marko Papic:

In this particular case, I would say the median voter is right.

Marko Papic:

The median voter understands that buying a toy from China does not fuel the Chinese

Marko Papic:

Communist Party in its military machine.

Marko Papic:

Oh yeah, it does, does not, you know, I

Jacob Shapiro:

agree here, like who started World War I, to your point,

Jacob Shapiro:

the munitions guys, it wasn't, you know, the people in the upper level

Jacob Shapiro:

of government wasn't these like people on the street who just want the cheap

Jacob Shapiro:

toys, like Yeah, I'm, I'm with you.

Marko Papic:

But anyways, I think, I think it's interesting.

Marko Papic:

Uh, ultimately I think we're getting a deal.

Marko Papic:

I don't think a war is starting like tomorrow.

Marko Papic:

I also don't think this deal is a grand bargain.

Marko Papic:

I think we both agree with that.

Marko Papic:

Uh, when Trump meets, which he in, in, you know, South Korea for this Apex

Marko Papic:

summit, uh, I think you should just expect a truce that does not last beyond.

Marko Papic:

Probably the Trump administration.

Marko Papic:

I think we're both in, in agreement in that.

Marko Papic:

Do you think world worth three's inevitable?

Marko Papic:

No, absolutely not.

Marko Papic:

Absolutely not.

Marko Papic:

And I think we need a, a, a because, you know, I think, I think we're

Marko Papic:

gonna stay in a multipolar world order for the next 50 years.

Marko Papic:

Uh, maybe 20 years, maybe something in between.

Marko Papic:

And I think that the biggest geopolitical story of the next 50 years, uh, or 20

Marko Papic:

years is not gonna be China, US tensions.

Marko Papic:

I think it's gonna be dissolution of Russia.

Marko Papic:

And the process by which it's rotting carcass is pulled sunder across

Marko Papic:

Eurasia by various other powers.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

So I think that what's gonna be very interesting is that us may

Marko Papic:

be in a very good position, but for the, all the different reasons

Marko Papic:

than a lot of people think.

Marko Papic:

I think that, uh, the weakness of Russia, I mean, you know, like if

Marko Papic:

the Ottoman Empire was the Eastern question and the Sikh man of Europe.

Marko Papic:

Dominated European and global geopolitics for a hundred years.

Marko Papic:

It was really the weakness of Ottoman Empire.

Marko Papic:

Can you imagine what the weakness of a country, the size of Russia.

Marko Papic:

Will mean for geopolitics, but I think we should spend a whole podcast just on that.

Marko Papic:

I know, I know.

Marko Papic:

There's other things we wanna talk about.

Marko Papic:

Well, no, I don't.

Marko Papic:

World War ii, well, I shouldn't call

Jacob Shapiro:

you, I shouldn't call you Norman Eng. I should call you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, you're a kinder now.

Jacob Shapiro:

The the heartland is, is being torn asunder by, by all these different forces.

Jacob Shapiro:

By the way, while we were talking, uh, the, the person who I'm meeting

Jacob Shapiro:

tomorrow for my av check, for my event, he texted me and said, Hey, by the way,

Jacob Shapiro:

uh, Dodge, I'm in Milwaukee, Dodgers and brewers are playing tonight, and

Jacob Shapiro:

the Dodgers are staying at the hotel.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you see any Dodgers, that's what's going on.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I might, oh wow.

Jacob Shapiro:

I might see some Dodgers in the hotel and if I see Freddy Freeman or if I find

Jacob Shapiro:

out what room he is gonna be in, I'm gonna prank his room because he should

Jacob Shapiro:

have never left the Atlanta Braves.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I'm really, really butt hurt that he decided to go to

Jacob Shapiro:

Los Angeles for the dollars.

Jacob Shapiro:

That was not very nice.

Jacob Shapiro:

Freddy, I had literally just bought your jersey after you won us the World Series.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm really Freddy, dude.

Marko Papic:

Everybody goes to Los Angeles for the dollars.

Marko Papic:

I did too.

Marko Papic:

Like, come on.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, give him a break.

Marko Papic:

That's what you do.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I went to New Orleans.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, uh, let's talk about Gen Z. I'm not gonna be able to set you up quite as well

Jacob Shapiro:

as I, I could set you up, um, for China.

Jacob Shapiro:

But, um, you know, we talked, I think in our last episode or episode before

Jacob Shapiro:

you, we've had protests in Morocco.

Jacob Shapiro:

We've had protests in Indonesia.

Jacob Shapiro:

We've had a government change in Nepal.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, in the last two weeks, add two more, basically coups to the list.

Jacob Shapiro:

So last week we add Peru to the list.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, president Dina Boar, uh, was taken out by Congress.

Jacob Shapiro:

Peru is, no, I don't know if you can exactly call it a coup.

Jacob Shapiro:

There were some Gen Z protests two to three weeks ago, uh, which

Jacob Shapiro:

was, do you know what, what drove the protests in Peru, Marco?

Jacob Shapiro:

I did not until I, until I started researching this.

Jacob Shapiro:

But do you know why the, the youth were so upset, um, in Peru

Jacob Shapiro:

and why they hit the streets?

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't think so.

Jacob Shapiro:

No.

Jacob Shapiro:

There, there was a reform being proposed that would've forced self-employed workers

Jacob Shapiro:

to contribute to pension funds, um, and Peru, at least according to the OECD,

Jacob Shapiro:

aside from the fact that like the young kids don't want to be contributing to

Jacob Shapiro:

pension funds, um, they have the fifth highest proportion of young people in

Jacob Shapiro:

the world who neither study nor work.

Jacob Shapiro:

And there's even an acronym for this.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're called neats, not in education, employment, or training.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yep.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know that.

Jacob Shapiro:

I guess they're just not, yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

I didn't know that.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's 1.5 million of them in Peru.

Jacob Shapiro:

So you had all these protests a couple of weeks ago.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and Congress basically removed the Peruvian president, um, Peru,

Jacob Shapiro:

not a stranger to these things.

Jacob Shapiro:

There was, was it 22 or 23?

Jacob Shapiro:

I forget, a couple years ago.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like Peru literally went through three presidents.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yep.

Jacob Shapiro:

In the span of a month.

Jacob Shapiro:

It was incredible.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, Peru also like lots of different rare Earths and copper and all sorts

Jacob Shapiro:

of other things that Chinese are building up port infrastructure there.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like it's a, it's an important one.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then this week, I mean, nobody really cares about this, but.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, Madagascar had a proper military coup.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, they had weeks of Gen Z protests around the country.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and then, um, you know, the president was basically

Jacob Shapiro:

toppled, I guess earlier today.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, he's fled the country.

Jacob Shapiro:

The military has taken over.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's a special committee, everything else that goes

Jacob Shapiro:

along, um, with a military coup.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, so that's at least, uh, you know, the, the two things that have happened

Jacob Shapiro:

in the last two weeks, but you said you wanted to cook on, on Gen Z. So I'll

Jacob Shapiro:

step aside and let you cook for a second.

Marko Papic:

No.

Marko Papic:

Well, I think you, you also wanted to last, last podcast,

Marko Papic:

and actually it was prescient.

Marko Papic:

Your, your spidey sense is sense this, and then we got another country where,

Marko Papic:

where you pro protests did this.

Marko Papic:

So, first, first thing I wanna say is that this all really started in

Marko Papic:

2019, and me and my, uh, good, uh, Colombian friend Santiago, who I,

Marko Papic:

who I often cook and, and talk about.

Marko Papic:

I remember we were looking at what was happening in 20 19, 20 18, 20 19.

Marko Papic:

You had Hong Kong protests, which were deeply violent.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And then we had Chile.

Marko Papic:

Remember Chile, where the protests were actually launched because the, uh, transit

Marko Papic:

fees went up by like quarter of a cent.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Marko Papic:

Bus fees,

Jacob Shapiro:

yeah,

Marko Papic:

yeah, bus fee.

Marko Papic:

Uh, so, and um, and what was interesting to me about those protests

Marko Papic:

is that they were quite expansive.

Marko Papic:

2018 was, I think Hong Kong 2019 was Chile.

Marko Papic:

Hong Kong protests were some of the most violent student protests I've ever seen.

Marko Papic:

Like the kids were attacking police with hammers.

Marko Papic:

And I think that one of the reasons that we in the West have not really realized

Marko Papic:

how violent the Hong Kong protests were is because we had a very deep, that was

Marko Papic:

the turn, that was the anti-China turn.

Marko Papic:

The narrative about what was going on in Hong Kong was deeply, deeply anti-Chinese.

Marko Papic:

And there was this view that the Hong Kong police was cracking down a protests

Marko Papic:

like first and foremost, foremost, you can go back and look at this.

Marko Papic:

Two people died in those protests.

Marko Papic:

One fell off a parking garage.

Marko Papic:

I think the other one died of a heart attack.

Marko Papic:

Please fact, check me on that.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

And the Hong Kong police was being assaulted by students who were

Marko Papic:

wearing body armor and wielding like, you know, machine tools.

Marko Papic:

If you attack a bunch of ice officers in like Chicago wearing body armor and

Marko Papic:

a hammer, you're getting shot to death.

Marko Papic:

And so it was very funny to me as somebody who lived in countries where

Marko Papic:

there's actual protests, all these western commentators talking about

Marko Papic:

how, you know, Chinese Allied Hong Kong police was cracking down on students.

Marko Papic:

I was like, guys, if you had the same protest in the US, there'll

Marko Papic:

be like a thousand students dead.

Marko Papic:

You're gonna be kidding me.

Marko Papic:

So why do I bring this up?

Marko Papic:

I bring this up because the Chile example of launching countrywide protests

Marko Papic:

because of a small increase, shows you that Gen Z has a very short fuse.

Marko Papic:

Remember when like Spanish millennials.

Marko Papic:

Camped in Madrid because youth unemployment was like 80%.

Marko Papic:

So millennials, we clearly don't have a short fuse.

Marko Papic:

We put up with a lot.

Marko Papic:

Gen Z has a short fuse, number one and two is much more violent.

Marko Papic:

And that I don't need Madagascar in Nepal to teach me that.

Marko Papic:

Hong Kong taught me that, like kids in Hong Kong.

Marko Papic:

And so why do I mention this?

Marko Papic:

I mentioned this because I think the two generations are just much more different.

Marko Papic:

You know, I think that, uh, millennials kind of came of age, entered the

Marko Papic:

labor force in a lot of the world after the great financial crisis.

Marko Papic:

There was a lot of insecurity.

Marko Papic:

There was a lot of sense.

Marko Papic:

So like, oh, you better shut up and enjoy that internship.

Marko Papic:

That doesn't pay you anything.

Marko Papic:

You're lucky, you know, like, and, and most of us did that.

Marko Papic:

And part of the reason also is that most millennials also grew up in the

Marko Papic:

middle of this globalized American hegemony world where like, you know, if

Marko Papic:

you just worked hard enough, you were going to do better than your parents.

Marko Papic:

I mean, that was the narrative that still worked.

Marko Papic:

We were the generation that realized that that's not necessarily true.

Marko Papic:

Gen Z is coming behind us and saying like, you guys are suckers and you are weak.

Marko Papic:

And we played a whole lot of Fortnite, buddy.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

So we're gonna

Marko Papic:

put on, and we

Jacob Shapiro:

haven't read books, so we don't know what happens when we protest.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, is this your way to get it back at me for calling you Norman Eng? You're gonna

Jacob Shapiro:

make me try and stick up for Gen Z here.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think you're being a little bit, uh, no, I be pro

Marko Papic:

Gen Z. No, no.

Marko Papic:

Wait a minute.

Marko Papic:

I'm not being anti Gen Z. I'm just saying like, look, they have a

Jacob Shapiro:

ways, you said they had, you said they had a very short fuse.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I might already, which

Marko Papic:

for for good reason.

Marko Papic:

For good reason though, I would say, I would say.

Marko Papic:

That a lot of us have been waiting for generational war.

Marko Papic:

The reason it didn't happen is because millennials are basically suckers.

Marko Papic:

That's what I'm saying.

Marko Papic:

As a generation, they are suck and Gen Z is not, you know, also when I say

Marko Papic:

the short fuse, like yeah, I mean they have a short fuse because they're gonna

Marko Papic:

stand up and fight for their stuff.

Marko Papic:

And now a lot of critics are gonna say, and I, I, I actually, it's funny

Marko Papic:

Jacob, it's amazing that you wanted to talk about this topic last week.

Marko Papic:

'cause I've been talking about it to clients all week.

Marko Papic:

You totally nailed it.

Marko Papic:

And I just finished a great conversation with a client just before this call

Marko Papic:

and they said to me, but aren't you afraid that Gen Z's anti-democratic?

Marko Papic:

You know, because there's all these surveys that say that they're

Marko Papic:

anti-democratic and like, look, I'm actually not that concerned about that.

Marko Papic:

They see that democracy doesn't really work in many, many ways,

Marko Papic:

and they see that it's, it can be corrupted, it can be paid for.

Marko Papic:

I mean, look, I mean, Donald Trump won on this platform as well.

Marko Papic:

Like democracy is not working for you.

Marko Papic:

Like you need to vote for someone who's anti-establishment.

Marko Papic:

It doesn't mean that Gen Z is going to replace democracy

Marko Papic:

with fascism or communism.

Marko Papic:

It doesn't mean that at all.

Marko Papic:

It just means that there are certain things in our democracy and democracy

Marko Papic:

in Madagascar, certainly in democracy in Hong Kong or Chile, and certainly

Marko Papic:

in my home country where I was born in Serbia, where its students have been

Marko Papic:

protesting for like 18 months as well, even before all these other protests.

Marko Papic:

I think Gen Z is connected.

Marko Papic:

They see what the rest of the world looks like.

Marko Papic:

They see what countries without corruption look like, and they, they just, you

Marko Papic:

know, they're kind of, A lot of these regimes are victims of their own success.

Marko Papic:

They haven't delivered aside from.

Marko Papic:

Maybe economic growth.

Marko Papic:

They haven't delivered on governance of quality of life.

Marko Papic:

And that, and Gen Z, just unlike millennials, unlike millennials,

Marko Papic:

gen Z, are not gonna put up tents and occupy anything.

Marko Papic:

They're gonna burn it.

Marko Papic:

And I respect them for that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Man, there is so much to break apart there.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I, I, okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't think millennials are suckers.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think millennials came of age in an era, to your point of optimism and

Jacob Shapiro:

believed that if they did the work, they would be rewarded for the work.

Jacob Shapiro:

And some of us woke up in 2001 on September 11th, and some of us woke

Jacob Shapiro:

up in 2008 with the financial crisis.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then COVID really like drove it home.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, that this was like, not, like you were not gonna be guaranteed something that

Jacob Shapiro:

was better than your parents' generations.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think, I think millennials have had to cope with that because

Jacob Shapiro:

they grew up with this idea about the world and the world that they're

Jacob Shapiro:

inheriting is actually very different.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the people that taught them that world are these boomers who won't step

Jacob Shapiro:

aside and keep on doing all these things.

Jacob Shapiro:

The world that, you know, we talked about this last time, I think you're

Jacob Shapiro:

right, that like Gen Z grew up in a world that was fundamentally not

Jacob Shapiro:

optimistic, um, in a world where all of this was native to them.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and, and where like this is all just sort of, I, I don't know,

Jacob Shapiro:

like maybe in the same way that millennials are better with technology

Jacob Shapiro:

because we grow up with computers, even if they were shitty computers

Jacob Shapiro:

with Ms Dos and things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like we at least know how computers work.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like we understand the basics.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you give us a new cell phone, like, okay, like it'll take us a

Jacob Shapiro:

couple hours, but we'll figure it out.

Jacob Shapiro:

Whereas a Boomer, like once you take away a Boomer's phone, like it's

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna take them months if they're ever gonna actually learn like

Jacob Shapiro:

the new phone architecture again.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe Multipolarity is something that the Gen Zs learn.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I don't know.

Jacob Shapiro:

But um.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think one thing, I, I had a, I had a, um, a loss or a, a graduate student from

Jacob Shapiro:

Nepal on my podcast a couple weeks ago.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I was asking her, and she, she participated in the Gen Z protest

Jacob Shapiro:

in Nepal, and I was asking her perspective and why she participated.

Jacob Shapiro:

And one of the things that she alluded to was, look, because we're

Jacob Shapiro:

also interconnected, we see what's going on in other countries, we

Jacob Shapiro:

see that in other countries, things work and people have nice things.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like, you know, we already know like that we're not gonna have

Jacob Shapiro:

better than our parents' generations.

Jacob Shapiro:

We saw what happened to the millennials, them believing that nonsense.

Jacob Shapiro:

And we also see that people in at least other countries, like things are better

Jacob Shapiro:

over there, so why can't we have those things and we're gonna go out and protest.

Jacob Shapiro:

And there is a part of this also where, I dunno if you've seen those stats

Jacob Shapiro:

about, um, you know, gen Z and reading and like their knowledge of like history

Jacob Shapiro:

or anything that came before them.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's, it's just they're reading at shockingly low rates.

Jacob Shapiro:

So maybe they, maybe they lack a requisite level of fear about what it means to go

Jacob Shapiro:

and burn something in the streets, but.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't know.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm, let's, let's, I'm grasping at straws there.

Marko Papic:

No, no.

Marko Papic:

Let's pause on those two because, um, you know, that was

Marko Papic:

one of the things I also said.

Marko Papic:

It was this knowledge of the rest of the world that I think is very important.

Marko Papic:

I think social media brings the rest of the world to you, and I think that

Marko Papic:

that's very, very important because then you ask exactly those questions

Marko Papic:

like, well, why isn't this better?

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And I also think that, um, you know, it just, it's travel has become cheap

Marko Papic:

as well, and I think a lot of younger people have also managed to travel.

Marko Papic:

And, and I know for a fact, like if you are from Serbia and

Marko Papic:

you're in your twenties, you've probably traveled to Europe.

Marko Papic:

It's not that expensive to do that.

Marko Papic:

You have a phone and you can go to Croatia, which is next door.

Marko Papic:

You can like drive to it.

Marko Papic:

They basically speak the same language and you're like, well, this

Marko Papic:

place is better run than this place.

Marko Papic:

Like, why?

Marko Papic:

What's the difference?

Marko Papic:

Oh, okay.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

They, they, they at least made an effort to clean up their governance

Marko Papic:

to get into the EU as an example.

Marko Papic:

You know, and I think that, um, a lot of these regimes are

Marko Papic:

also victims of their success.

Marko Papic:

I mean, in Serbia's case, I made this point before, I think in many

Marko Papic:

ways, um, you know, IC and the people in power have managed to

Marko Papic:

stabilize geopolitics of Serbia.

Marko Papic:

It's actually one of the best performing economies in Europe.

Marko Papic:

Um, but the problem with that is that you've got, you've delivered

Marko Papic:

jobs to the young people.

Marko Papic:

You've let them travel.

Marko Papic:

They all got enough money for an iPhone.

Marko Papic:

But you can't then have governance of the 1980s or seventies.

Marko Papic:

You know, you can't just have these patron, you just gotta clean that up.

Marko Papic:

I mean, that's just like, you've created a problem for yourself, but actually

Marko Papic:

delivering stability, um, and also by delivering, um, economic growth.

Marko Papic:

So I do think that that interconnectedness, I think

Marko Papic:

is an, is an important issue.

Marko Papic:

Although I would say that millennials were also similarly interconnected.

Marko Papic:

I mean, we were, even in our youth, we were able to see what's

Marko Papic:

going on in the rest of the world.

Marko Papic:

And again, that goes and speaks to the Occupy Wall Street

Marko Papic:

movement, which started in Spain.

Marko Papic:

Like that whole Occupy movement began in southern Europe.

Marko Papic:

Spain spread to other countries, ended up in us.

Marko Papic:

And again, just to clarify, the difference between millennials and

Marko Papic:

Gen Z. Gen Z are willing to take it to the streets in a much more

Marko Papic:

aggressive way than millennials were.

Marko Papic:

And I think partly the reason is that if you are in your early twenties

Marko Papic:

and you talk to someone in their early forties, you would say, what

Marko Papic:

did your peaceful protest get you?

Marko Papic:

What did Occupy Wall Street actually do?

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

And um, and, and then the final thing I would just say is like,

Marko Papic:

are they really ahistorical?

Marko Papic:

Do they not know the danger of this, or are they just young people?

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, that's fair.

Jacob Shapiro:

You know, because it's fair.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I always actually shy away from generational arguments

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause I fundamentally think everybody's actually just the same.

Jacob Shapiro:

And all of these different tribes that we're putting ourselves into Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Are just like, it's false.

Marko Papic:

1968, listen, 1968 was an explosion of social movement in the world.

Marko Papic:

Read it up, you know, folks out there, it was global with like, it was in

Marko Papic:

America, it was about anti-Vietnam in France, it was about the state

Marko Papic:

of education system, system and, uh, the rigidity of social norms.

Marko Papic:

There was a sexual revolution going on.

Marko Papic:

There was an anti-war revolution going on.

Marko Papic:

There was an economic revolution going on.

Marko Papic:

And the baby boomers had their moment in 18 where they blew up the world.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

And they were, in many ways, these were quite violent protests.

Marko Papic:

I mean, Charlotte de Gold like fled France to an army base in Germany where

Marko Papic:

he was just hiding for like two days.

Marko Papic:

The Prime Minister of France didn't know where he was.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So this is what happened in 1968.

Marko Papic:

This was, this was the height of this baby boomer protest too.

Marko Papic:

And I think it's unfair for a bunch of baby boomers now to say that Gen Z is

Marko Papic:

undemocratic and they haven't read a book.

Marko Papic:

It's like, bro, you were having sex and doing drugs at 18 and then try to

Marko Papic:

burn down the world and then sold out and you know, you know, like reverse.

Marko Papic:

Well no, that,

Jacob Shapiro:

and that's a good point.

Jacob Shapiro:

So what was the geopolitical impact of 1968 and what do

Jacob Shapiro:

you think the geopolitical impact of this in 2025 will be?

Jacob Shapiro:

Or will this just be like a paragraph in, in history books such as they

Jacob Shapiro:

are 20 years from now and you know, amidst all of the different us,

Jacob Shapiro:

China, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Jacob Shapiro:

There were these protests in these different countries all around

Jacob Shapiro:

the world demanding like lower bus fairs or whatever, demanding.

Marko Papic:

So, you know what I think, I think I'm going to make,

Marko Papic:

when you were asking that question, I thought that was an unfair question.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

Uh.

Marko Papic:

But I think there was, uh, geopolitical relevance in particular.

Marko Papic:

If you think about the 1970s, there was, um, there was like a Deante in

Marko Papic:

the 1970s, in part because all of these protests and made these countries

Marko Papic:

and societies very inward looking.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

You know, and you had to deal with the unruly baby boomers effectively.

Marko Papic:

Uh, so I think that one of the things that, you know, we're all fixated

Marko Papic:

on Russia versus West China versus us, and we're, we're thinking that

Marko Papic:

this is gonna dominate next 10 years.

Marko Papic:

Domestic politics could dominate the next 10 years.

Marko Papic:

On the other hand, what I would also say about, uh.

Marko Papic:

1968, it did lead to the seventies, which were yes, very domestically

Marko Papic:

oriented decade, but very suboptimal from an economic perspective.

Marko Papic:

So one of the ways that you dealt with those protests is that you just, uh,

Marko Papic:

use Ian policies to satiate the public.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

Uh, so that could be also something that happens this time around.

Marko Papic:

Although I think in a weird way, I, I don't think Gen Z is

Marko Papic:

necessarily asking for that.

Marko Papic:

You know, think in some cases no, because

Jacob Shapiro:

they're all buying Bitcoin as, as I'm starting to join them.

Marko Papic:

They're all buying Bitcoin.

Marko Papic:

But I also think that they, um, understand that one of the reasons

Marko Papic:

they don't have access is because of the patronage networks of the past.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

And also we did just go through a inflationary cycle

Marko Papic:

in the West in 2020, uh, two.

Marko Papic:

So I'm not sure we're gonna repeat that.

Marko Papic:

I, I'm not sure, but, but I'm open to it.

Marko Papic:

All I'm saying is that the 1968 protests.

Marko Papic:

Force the world to be a little bit more inward looking for

Marko Papic:

the next decade at least.

Jacob Shapiro:

Do you, are you willing to, do you think that that'll be the case

Jacob Shapiro:

as a result of the 2025 Gen Z protest?

Jacob Shapiro:

Or have they, have they not even congealed enough for you

Jacob Shapiro:

to, to put your neck out on?

Jacob Shapiro:

Look,

Marko Papic:

look, Jacob, I mean, right now our examples are Serbia,

Marko Papic:

Madagascar, Nepal, Indonesia, Peru.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Fair.

Marko Papic:

Uh, Hong Kong, Chile.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

In 20 18, 19

Jacob Shapiro:

May, maybe some Turkey, like Turkey has kind

Jacob Shapiro:

of popped its head up and then Erdogan's gotten it under control.

Marko Papic:

I think we would need to see it happen in, in,

Marko Papic:

you know, big developed markets.

Marko Papic:

Um, but, you know, one, one thing that I would say is that

Marko Papic:

you don't need to use violence.

Marko Papic:

You know, sometimes what happens is just political evolution and, and one of the

Marko Papic:

interesting conversations I just had with a client, they were asking me about

Marko Papic:

what's going on in France and Japan.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And I would say that partly millennials and Gen Z, let's move away from protests.

Marko Papic:

But I think millennials and Gen Z, you know, they're just incapable of really

Marko Papic:

connecting with some of these political parties that have been left over.

Marko Papic:

Uh, you know, and, uh, there's this idea, there's this idea that, um,

Marko Papic:

voters vote for their economic interest.

Marko Papic:

We know that's not the case, right?

Marko Papic:

So what's the matter with Kansas?

Marko Papic:

Great book.

Marko Papic:

Um, if you wanna, it's, it's very liberal critique of

Marko Papic:

conservative politics of Kansas.

Marko Papic:

So if you're conservative, you're not gonna like it.

Marko Papic:

Um, I think it's a well, uh, research book by a journalist, uh, Thomas Frank, who

Marko Papic:

basically argues that people in Kansas vote against their economic interests.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And then, um, the book that kind of answers what is why people do

Marko Papic:

that is Alexander Schussler, who's a political scientist who wrote the

Marko Papic:

book, A Logic of Expressive Choice.

Marko Papic:

And that book is a far, far more complicated book to go through,

Marko Papic:

but it's actually very good.

Marko Papic:

Anyone who wants to kind of think about politics should read it.

Marko Papic:

In that book, Schuler makes a very controversial argument that goes against

Marko Papic:

decades of rational choice theory and says that nobody votes because

Marko Papic:

of some sort of a rational reason.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Mathematically, mathematically, you have a higher probability of

Marko Papic:

being hit by a bus on your way to the polls than impacting the vote.

Marko Papic:

So why do you vote?

Marko Papic:

That's the puzzle to him.

Marko Papic:

Why do we even do it?

Marko Papic:

Why do we even take the time out of our day to go vote?

Marko Papic:

And his argument is that you vote for the same reason you choose

Marko Papic:

Pepsi over Coke or Coke over Pepsi.

Marko Papic:

It's because it says something about you.

Marko Papic:

And he uses really interesting data and, uh, you know, analogies

Marko Papic:

to the marketing industry.

Marko Papic:

For example, Pepsi tried for years, for decades to use the taste test

Marko Papic:

as a reason to get people to, to, to drink Pepsi over Coca-Cola.

Marko Papic:

They would do these commercials, I think back in the seventies.

Marko Papic:

I'm not even sure when, but like long time ago, they would say like, no, not

Marko Papic:

10 people agreed that Pepsi tastes better than Coke, you know, in a blind test.

Marko Papic:

And then once they decided to just do some silhouette of a person dancing to

Marko Papic:

hip hop and call it the Pepsi generation.

Marko Papic:

Dare Sales went up, well St

Jacob Shapiro:

started, started with the King of Pop, Michael Jackson.

Jacob Shapiro:

Michael Jackson was the first one that got doing that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And that was also probably why he needed his first nose job

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause he broke his nose on set.

Jacob Shapiro:

I fair listeners used to be a Michael Jackson impersonator, so

Jacob Shapiro:

I know this history very well.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm just, I mean, dude dropping bombs there, you know,

Marko Papic:

that's that.

Marko Papic:

We need to out unpack that.

Marko Papic:

We need a whole podcast for that.

Marko Papic:

And what was the other one was?

Marko Papic:

Uh, equestrian.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, equestrian Vault.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

I was also an accomplished equestrian vaulter.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm just, I you all need to watch Marco's brain just literally

Jacob Shapiro:

spontaneously combusted.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, it's not spontaneous.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, it's 'cause I caused it, but

Marko Papic:

No, it's, it is just why you're in a Renaissance man and you

Marko Papic:

have effectively Joe Johnson's game.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, that's very nice.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's very nice.

Marko Papic:

I mean, this is like, uh, so look what I'm getting at is that, to go

Marko Papic:

back on track, but we will unpack this.

Marko Papic:

We, we will not let you, we, this won't die.

Marko Papic:

We will pick this up.

Marko Papic:

Next podcast.

Marko Papic:

I just want to end land the plane on this.

Marko Papic:

The point is, once Pepsi started saying that you do something when

Marko Papic:

you drink a Coke or you, you do, you, you are saying to the world,

Marko Papic:

I'm member of this new generation.

Marko Papic:

When I drink a Pepsi, Coke is for boomers or whatever.

Marko Papic:

That's when their sales went up.

Marko Papic:

Similarly, the reason that Donald Trump does well is 'cause yes, he's

Marko Papic:

authentic, but he also understands branding and he hits his own brand.

Marko Papic:

And I think one of the things that Gen Z and millennials just don't understand is

Marko Papic:

the brand, like Christian Democratic Union and a social Democratic party of Germany.

Marko Papic:

Holy crap, those are old ass brands.

Marko Papic:

The Democratic Party and the Republican Party

Jacob Shapiro:

are old ass brands.

Jacob Shapiro:

Very old brands.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's a reason Donald Trump was able to co-opt the Republicans and turn it

Jacob Shapiro:

into the Trump party and why a majority of Americans identify as independents,

Jacob Shapiro:

not as Republicans or Democrats,

Marko Papic:

Japan, LDP.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Oh my God.

Marko Papic:

It's one of the longest, uh, running parties in Asia.

Marko Papic:

Like a lot of these are just brands that you know, like

Marko Papic:

nobody gets enthusiastic about.

Marko Papic:

And so I would say that while we have spent a lot of time today

Marko Papic:

talking about Gen Z protests.

Marko Papic:

I do think that we need to be on the lookout for emergence of new

Marko Papic:

brands and we shouldn't fear them.

Marko Papic:

There is this really, really built into, especially in finance, that's like,

Marko Papic:

oh, god forbid a new party takes over.

Marko Papic:

Listen guys, material constraints will force them to do.

Marko Papic:

Probably what's the right thing to do, but new brands are

Marko Papic:

not necessarily a bad thing.

Marko Papic:

Fort Seit is kind of an old brand that was taken over by Georgia Maloney, and

Marko Papic:

by the way, the brand is kind of fascist.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's leave it aside.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's not kind of like, it's the OG.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's the original is that

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

But the thing is, it's like this resurrection of old brands and

Marko Papic:

bringing them back up and, and brushing them up for the new

Marko Papic:

generation, I think is gonna happen.

Marko Papic:

And we should not panic when the CNNs of the world, the guardians of the

Marko Papic:

world, the Fox news of the world, say anti-establishment party wins

Marko Papic:

election in insert major economy.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

No, it is just that People got sick of these old brands and somebody

Marko Papic:

else came in and Manu Macron effectively did this in France, which

Marko Papic:

by the way was a two party state.

Marko Papic:

Whatever you wanna say, they have a very sim, similar electoral system.

Marko Papic:

Anybody who thinks that first pass the post in the United States of America will

Marko Papic:

prevent the emergence of a third party, should look at what happened in the United

Marko Papic:

Kingdom with the Brexit party, what's happening in the United Kingdom today

Marko Papic:

with a complete collapse of the Tories and what happened in France with the

Marko Papic:

emergence of this third party in France.

Marko Papic:

The rebels.

Marko Papic:

The rebels were centrist.

Marko Papic:

Now he did appeal to a lot of older people, which is kind of weird,

Marko Papic:

but let's leave that as a side.

Marko Papic:

Of course, he's the member of the establishment.

Marko Papic:

He preserves their prerogatives.

Marko Papic:

That makes sense.

Marko Papic:

All I'm saying is that we should not necessarily fear the

Marko Papic:

emergence of these new brands.

Marko Papic:

I think it's healthy and it's the only way to ultimately get buy-in.

Marko Papic:

Democratically, at the end of the day, who gives a fuck Pepsi or Coke?

Marko Papic:

It gives you caffeine in a sugar rush.

Marko Papic:

And don't be fooled by these new anti-establishment politicians.

Marko Papic:

'cause in many ways they'll just do the same things but

Marko Papic:

appeal to the younger people.

Marko Papic:

And that's how democracy kind of works.

Marko Papic:

It works in in those, you know, like in a way in which new generations

Marko Papic:

get a voice and without changing the place in a dramatic fashion,

Marko Papic:

that obviously would introduce political volatility and violence.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I agree with most of that and we'll, we'll close out 'cause

Jacob Shapiro:

we're, we're running up on time, which is that here's another theory, half half in

Jacob Shapiro:

jest about why Gen Z is, is doing protests and it connects with something else.

Jacob Shapiro:

Earlier today, the United States hit another, um, Venezuelan

Jacob Shapiro:

ship, killed six Venezuelan drug traffickers in the Caribbean.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and Marco, maybe we should posit that what's going on is that this is what

Jacob Shapiro:

happens when you have an excess of cocaine in the global international trade system.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, cocaine production rose 53%, uh, from 22 to 23, 20 4% the year before that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I'm gonna quote here, a US official who was anonymous, anonymously,

Jacob Shapiro:

quote in New York Times, quote, we're seeing production at levels

Jacob Shapiro:

that Pablo Escobar dreamed about.

Jacob Shapiro:

You go to Coca Field and it's like standing in a cornfield

Jacob Shapiro:

in Iowa, you can't see the end.

Jacob Shapiro:

And there are tons of interest articles here about Colombian towns and villages

Jacob Shapiro:

that are literally dying, uh, because the, the cartels are not showing up anymore

Jacob Shapiro:

because they have too much cocaine.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're literally just throwing cocaine everywhere they possibly can because the

Jacob Shapiro:

price has gone from something like $20 a bushel to $7 a bushel, which maybe some

Jacob Shapiro:

of our American farmers can believe it.

Jacob Shapiro:

So maybe there's just too much cocaine out there, Marco, I don't know.

Jacob Shapiro:

So you're saying that the targeting of these, uh, boats reflects

Marko Papic:

that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, the targeting of the boats, I think reflects the fact

Jacob Shapiro:

that they have too much cocaine, and the cocaine is so much cheaper, so they're

Jacob Shapiro:

willing to risk, like the Caribbean route was not their main route for the past

Jacob Shapiro:

couple of years, or even decades, right?

Jacob Shapiro:

It was overland through Mexico.

Jacob Shapiro:

So now they're like, fuck it, we have all this cocaine.

Jacob Shapiro:

We just need to get cocaine to our markets in Europe and Asia.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, which is where the markets are actually growing the most.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like there is some growth in North America, but it seems like, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, uh, Southeast Asia, east Asia, like Europe, that's where

Jacob Shapiro:

you're getting most of the cocaine.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, consumption growth.

Jacob Shapiro:

We just need to get cocaine to those markets and it's so cheap that whatever,

Jacob Shapiro:

if they blow up a couple cargoes in the middle of the Caribbean, that's fine.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the United States isn't gonna be able to blow all of it up.

Jacob Shapiro:

So let's just send as much cocaine as we possibly can out there.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's, that's my working theory.

Marko Papic:

Well, look, uh, I'm gonna close on a positive note here.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Uh, you just said the European consumption of cocaine is going up, right?

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Is it not?

Jacob Shapiro:

I thought it was.

Jacob Shapiro:

I

Marko Papic:

mean, I mean, there you go.

Marko Papic:

Everybody thinks Europe is just a museum full of old people that has no future.

Marko Papic:

I mean, not according to that stat.

Marko Papic:

At least they're doing lines.

Marko Papic:

You know, like maybe that will invigorate the continent.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, I love this.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I just double checked myself.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Cocaine conception has been an upward train.

Jacob Shapiro:

An extensive study of waste water across 128 European cities in 26

Jacob Shapiro:

countries reveals a significant increase in cocaine use since 2016.

Jacob Shapiro:

And for the seventh year in a row, EU member states reported record amount.

Jacob Shapiro:

Where do they say

Marko Papic:

exactly where?

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, well, they say.

Jacob Shapiro:

128 cities in 26 countries, but the countries that they call out, which

Jacob Shapiro:

doesn't mean they're the top ones, but they call out Belgium, Netherlands.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, Belgium, Belgium, Netherlands, and Spain account for 72% of the

Jacob Shapiro:

cocaine seized by governments.

Jacob Shapiro:

So that doesn't mean they're the ones that are doing the most, but

Jacob Shapiro:

those are at least the places where the governments are seizing it.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Oh my God.

Marko Papic:

I think that also needs a podcast by itself.

Marko Papic:

But again, you know, you hear a lot of this, uh, kind of narrative that Europe

Marko Papic:

is sclerotic and just without any vigor.

Marko Papic:

They took the advice and.

Marko Papic:

Did some lines, I guess.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, I'm, I'm only joking about Gen Z, uh, snorting a bunch of cocaine, but

Jacob Shapiro:

I did, I did think, because I'm, I'm a little mystified by the US continuing

Jacob Shapiro:

to just bomb boats in the Caribbean.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I also just wanted to point out that last week the US hit a boat.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Colombian government said, uh, that wasn't Venezuelan, that was Colombian,

Jacob Shapiro:

and you killed Colombian citizens.

Jacob Shapiro:

And now the US Columbia relationship continues to unravel, like very quietly,

Jacob Shapiro:

I think one of the most significant breakdowns in US foreign policy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like that was the most important US security partner in South America.

Jacob Shapiro:

And between, God, it feels so long ago that Trump was tweeting at Petro about

Jacob Shapiro:

illegal migration, and then they've signed onto Belton Road, um, everything else.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, I, I'm sorry.

Jacob Shapiro:

One other statistic about cocaine.

Jacob Shapiro:

That was incredible.

Jacob Shapiro:

I was doing research.

Jacob Shapiro:

They think that this, this will be the year that cocaine produces more revenue

Jacob Shapiro:

for the Colombian economy than oil.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like insane.

Jacob Shapiro:

Right.

Marko Papic:

Even, even though the prices have collapsed.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Just

Marko Papic:

think about that for a second.

Marko Papic:

Oh my god.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

That's, that's a lot of cocaine.

Marko Papic:

That's a lot of cocaine.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Well, I mean, uh, wow.

Marko Papic:

Um, I don't know what to say about that.

Marko Papic:

That's very interesting.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Um, but,

Jacob Shapiro:

um, you, you were trying to land the plane and I would,

Jacob Shapiro:

in my La Dodgers fashion, I was like, here is a cocaine curve ball, Marco.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm just, I'm just gonna lay this in right here.

Jacob Shapiro:

We're gonna go,

Marko Papic:

no, you know what?

Marko Papic:

I think, I think the only way to land the plane on this is that, uh,

Marko Papic:

this is probably what's gonna happen with a lot of soft commodities,

Marko Papic:

which you are an expert on.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

There

Marko Papic:

you go.

Marko Papic:

As emerging market tastes change.

Marko Papic:

Right, because the Southeast Asia and like the emerging markets like starting

Marko Papic:

to develop a taste for some Coke, I mean, that is also the same argument

Marko Papic:

for coffee, for chocolates, for cocoa.

Jacob Shapiro:

A lot of, yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And it's also, if I, if I really want to stretch, it's also an argument

Jacob Shapiro:

against what you were talking about with globalization because any of

Jacob Shapiro:

these things that get globalized, the price of these things collapses

Jacob Shapiro:

and the people that produce them come under significant strain.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think part of Trump's protectionism and part of the, the glorification of

Jacob Shapiro:

hard labor and industrial work again, which we, you know, we talked about

Jacob Shapiro:

that months ago about how strange it was that we're glorifying that now.

Jacob Shapiro:

Part of that is.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the more you globalize, like yes we all get cheap widgets and all these other

Jacob Shapiro:

things, but like people actually like the people who were making the things, their

Jacob Shapiro:

lives are destroyed and these governments are not taking care of those people.

Jacob Shapiro:

And so you have political movements that are rising that service those

Jacob Shapiro:

people who are, you know, out there in the streets and protesting and

Jacob Shapiro:

making their voices heard with votes.

Jacob Shapiro:

So there, there's something in there too about the lower you drive the

Jacob Shapiro:

cost of these things, the more you're affecting the producers and that some

Jacob Shapiro:

of the politics that we're seeing is about trying to help the producers.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't know, I'd have to put some more meat on that bone, but,

Marko Papic:

well, alright.

Marko Papic:

Alright.

Marko Papic:

I think, uh, I think we have, uh, exhausted our energy on

Marko Papic:

this podcast and neither one of us is going to rely on a bump.

Marko Papic:

To get it back up.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, no, that's, that's never been my, uh, never been my vice.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

We'll talk, however,

Marko Papic:

if anybody wants to sponsor the podcast from the beer

Marko Papic:

industry, we will drink beer.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

On the show.

Jacob Shapiro:

That would be great.

Jacob Shapiro:

And please, like both Barstool stores, Barto Sports and The Ringer, we're open.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like there, there's an opportunity for both of you to be on the

Jacob Shapiro:

ground floor of geopolitics and you're both just wasting it.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like seriously, like get your shit together.

Jacob Shapiro:

Alright,

Marko Papic:

Jacob, great talking to you, Matt.