Jacob Shapiro:

Well honestly, Marco, I usually introduce this, but you just like,

Jacob Shapiro:

like got this great concept that we're gonna roll out to the listeners right now.

Jacob Shapiro:

So tell them why our listeners are enjoying their first

Jacob Shapiro:

pathogen Shapiro six pack.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, so, you know, in the ongoing effort to get a six

Marko Papic:

pack, which will last forever until I die, uh, and will never work

Marko Papic:

'cause I'm a chubby Serb like Yoki.

Marko Papic:

Uh, basically we're going to do an intellectual six pack.

Marko Papic:

And so when we don't have a prepared gimmick, like the top 20

Marko Papic:

liters in the world or the trade value or whatever, uh, we're just

Marko Papic:

gonna do a nice little six pack.

Marko Papic:

And what that means is that, you know, Jacob is gonna have three items of his

Marko Papic:

own that he didn't necessarily prep me for, except maybe a little bit.

Marko Papic:

And same with me together, it's a six pack of geopolitical events.

Marko Papic:

That we think are important for our listeners to hear about.

Marko Papic:

So there you go.

Marko Papic:

It's a six pack.

Marko Papic:

That's what this podcast is.

Marko Papic:

And every podcast where we don't have a specific topic, we prepared, uh, to

Marko Papic:

spend like an hour on, like we, you know, we did one about trade and tariffs.

Marko Papic:

Uh, listen up.

Marko Papic:

That was a really good one.

Marko Papic:

Like, go back and listen to it if you have the chance.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I'm gonna reference it a little bit in one of my six, one of my

Marko Papic:

three items, but whenever we don't have something, it's just gonna

Marko Papic:

be a nice little six pack for you.

Marko Papic:

So there you go.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's perfect.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's, that's perfect.

Jacob Shapiro:

Are, are you more of a, what, what, what is your favorite beer?

Jacob Shapiro:

I should know this about you.

Marko Papic:

Uh, oh, that's an interesting, so I'm not a beer drinker,

Marko Papic:

you know, it's, uh, all my friends from college remember me as the guy

Marko Papic:

who just walked the dorm hallways with like a bottle of, uh, Olli, you

Marko Papic:

know, like, so I come from Europe, uh, and I went to university in Canada,

Marko Papic:

university of British Columbia.

Marko Papic:

Shout out to the Thunderbirds.

Marko Papic:

And everyone's basically an alcoholic, right?

Marko Papic:

And everyone's drinking beer nonstop.

Marko Papic:

And I'm like, why are we drinking beer?

Marko Papic:

Is it somebody's birthday?

Marko Papic:

And they're like, no, mark, it's Tuesday.

Marko Papic:

We get drunk.

Marko Papic:

That's what we do.

Marko Papic:

And so I was like, okay, but why don't we cut out the middleman?

Marko Papic:

I eat the carbs and just go straight to the alcohol.

Marko Papic:

Like what's, what's, why, why is the vessel through which

Marko Papic:

you consume alcohol only 6%.

Marko Papic:

Why not go to 40?

Marko Papic:

Like, I don't understand if the point is to get drunk.

Marko Papic:

So I was the guy with a bottle of vodka, right?

Marko Papic:

And uh, I've never really acquired beer.

Marko Papic:

Like I still drink like only laggers 'cause I'm thirsty and it's super hot.

Marko Papic:

So yeah, the short answer is it's, I'm still light.

Jacob Shapiro:

Ugh.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, the log

Marko Papic:

is nothing, you know?

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I got you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, my six pack, I, I've, I've evolved quite a bit.

Jacob Shapiro:

When I was a, when I was in college, you would not see me with a bottle of stole.

Jacob Shapiro:

You'd see me with a six pack of some, uh, pretentious IPA, because

Jacob Shapiro:

you know, that sounds about right.

Jacob Shapiro:

Course you Cornell

Marko Papic:

man.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, Cornell man.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, IHA Cap, I think a brewing company.

Jacob Shapiro:

Great.

Jacob Shapiro:

But then I OD'ed on IPA to the point where now I just want like

Jacob Shapiro:

the most boring beers possible.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, and actually athletic does this light non-alcoholic beer, which is

Jacob Shapiro:

like, it gets you 80% of the way there.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause all you're really drinking the beer for is you wanna feel

Jacob Shapiro:

like it's hot and you're at the ball game and things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I find that drinking the non-alcoholic light beer.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm like 80% of the way there and I could still function at five o'clock in the

Jacob Shapiro:

morning with my eight month old the next day, like clean up a blown out diaper that

Jacob Shapiro:

covered the entire, that was this morning.

Jacob Shapiro:

Anyway, not to go on that, but I'll also say I've been converted by the great

Jacob Shapiro:

people in Wisconsin Spotted Cow, which is only available in the state of Wisconsin.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's delicious.

Jacob Shapiro:

And every time I go do a gig or visit Wisconsin, I bring spotted cow.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I buy it in the airport and I bring it back to Louisiana.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm basically smuggling it down the bayou.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's how I think of it myself.

Jacob Shapiro:

And it's delicious.

Jacob Shapiro:

They actually, you know, they, they followed me on Twitter.

Jacob Shapiro:

I tried to get them to come on the podcast.

Jacob Shapiro:

No way to talk.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like geopolitics is beer or geography of different alcohol consumption.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, we'll, we'll tweet this FM and see if No, come on, because I love that

Marko Papic:

concept.

Marko Papic:

That's a great concept.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Geopolitics of alcohol consumption.

Marko Papic:

But I also just want to note that the fact that we are, um, you know,

Marko Papic:

lovingly and longingly calling this the six pack, 'cause we don't have one.

Marko Papic:

We're talking about what beer we drink.

Marko Papic:

Like, this is clearly a like early, like late thirties, early

Marko Papic:

forties, two dudes talking.

Marko Papic:

Just, we've definitely aged ourselves.

Marko Papic:

But yeah, so, uh, it's an interesting segue.

Marko Papic:

I didn't know we were gonna talk about beer and alcohol consumption,

Marko Papic:

but I'm not a beer drinker.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

You know, I, I also come by this honestly because if the

Jacob Shapiro:

Nazis had not taken over Vienna and tried to kill all the Jews, my family,

Jacob Shapiro:

which was distilling millions of dollars equivalent worth of alcohol

Jacob Shapiro:

in Vienna would still be in Vienna.

Jacob Shapiro:

I wouldn't be sitting here with you in, uh, in the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

thinking about geopolitics.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, wow.

Jacob Shapiro:

I guess if, if, if you want to thank someone for me taking this turn to

Jacob Shapiro:

geopolitics, you can thank Hitler.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's an interesting way to get to the reductive odd hit, Lauren.

Jacob Shapiro:

Anyway, this

Marko Papic:

is, uh, this is time 74 that you have said something like

Marko Papic:

that, and I can't comment on it.

Marko Papic:

Only you can, because you are the Jew on the podcast, and I will just sit

Marko Papic:

silently and I guess nod like, hmm.

Marko Papic:

Interesting.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's the only form of Jewish privilege there is.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's,

Marko Papic:

I'll not take, I'll not take Aal Hitler for anything, but you are of

Marko Papic:

course, allowed to do whatever you want.

Marko Papic:

Uh, cool.

Marko Papic:

So who starts, all right.

Marko Papic:

You or me?

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, well, it's up to you.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause you, you coined the, the bit, so why don't you

Jacob Shapiro:

pick, you, you wanna go first?

Jacob Shapiro:

Or, or you wanna give the g the first?

Jacob Shapiro:

I,

Marko Papic:

I, I feel, I, I feel like yours are more profound.

Marko Papic:

Like, I think yours are more profound.

Marko Papic:

Mine might be more nichey.

Marko Papic:

So why don't you start, because I know you're itching to talk, I

Marko Papic:

think about the trade deals, right?

Marko Papic:

This is the first part of our muy six pack.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm, I'm itching to talk about the US and Europe.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, let's do, and their, and their trade deal.

Marko Papic:

And by the way, I just wanna say like, I think one of the

Marko Papic:

best, uh, reactions to that trade deal is Jacob's reaction, uh, that you,

Marko Papic:

uh, sent through your Substack, right?

Marko Papic:

So you have, if you have not signed up for Jacob's Substack,

Marko Papic:

you should I read the whole piece?

Marko Papic:

I thought that you were spot on.

Marko Papic:

So why don't you tell our listeners what's your take of the US EU

Marko Papic:

trade deal and maybe just outline it a little bit for our listeners.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, that, that's very nice of you to say.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm, I'm trying to put more work into substack, putting thoughts out

Jacob Shapiro:

that are available for people when they're cutting room floor in two,

Jacob Shapiro:

two interesting things about that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Number one, I've been using a lot of chat GPT lately.

Jacob Shapiro:

That piece was the first time in six weeks where every single word is me.

Jacob Shapiro:

I didn't use any chat, GPT, and it landed with readers way more than

Jacob Shapiro:

anything else I've written recently.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think there's a lesson in that.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think maybe we're over, or at least I was over indexing on chat

Jacob Shapiro:

GPT and LLMs for research purposes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, so that was an interesting thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

The other thing is that that piece was written while my eight month

Jacob Shapiro:

old and my three-year-old were literally in the room next door.

Jacob Shapiro:

The door was shut, but at various points, my three-year-old was like

Jacob Shapiro:

banging on the door, like calling for me.

Jacob Shapiro:

They were screaming.

Jacob Shapiro:

My mother-in-law was folding laundry.

Jacob Shapiro:

I had like, I had these noise canceling headphones and like jacked all the way up.

Jacob Shapiro:

I probably lost a year of hearing 'cause I like could not hear myself

Jacob Shapiro:

as I was typing out those words.

Jacob Shapiro:

And it really landed with people.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I guess what I really need to write well is just sheer chaos and

Jacob Shapiro:

a sanity around me at all times.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, but anyway, so the, the, the US EU deal quote unquote, uh,

Jacob Shapiro:

what did, what did Trump call it?

Jacob Shapiro:

Hold on, lemme quote him.

Jacob Shapiro:

The biggest deal ever made, uh, since the last deal that he made.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause I'm pretty sure he says that about literally every single thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's a framework trade agreement.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco, I don't know what the fuck a framework trade agreement is.

Jacob Shapiro:

Is it a treaty?

Jacob Shapiro:

Is it an agreement?

Jacob Shapiro:

Is it a MOU?

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I still don't have a, like what is a framework trade agreement and

Jacob Shapiro:

how lazy are Reuters in the financial times and everybody else that you're

Jacob Shapiro:

just like, like treating that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like that's a thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like it's not a thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

A framework trade agreement doesn't, anyways, sorry, I don't need to go

Jacob Shapiro:

Larry David on you, but, um, so there

Marko Papic:

please do.

Marko Papic:

This is why you're here.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know you are

Marko Papic:

Larry, David and Silla combined in one human being in

Jacob Shapiro:

one.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is why I also can't watch Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like my wife wants to watch Curb and I'm like, it, it's a little too close to home.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I need to actively resist becoming that personality.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, it's just not good.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's not like good for me from a mental, this is also why I can't

Jacob Shapiro:

watch Woody Allen movies too much.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause like it's just, it's a little too close.

Jacob Shapiro:

I need to stay away.

Jacob Shapiro:

Anyway, so there's this US EU deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

We don't even really know what the terms are.

Jacob Shapiro:

There are already reports out there that the terms are different depending

Jacob Shapiro:

on who's who's, uh, which side says, um, the US is apparently gonna push

Jacob Shapiro:

it through via executive order, which I'm pretty sure is illegal.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, the EU still has to ratify it at a certain level via majority, but at least

Jacob Shapiro:

some of the things that we know, EU goods.

Jacob Shapiro:

Entering the US will be subject to a 15% baseline tariffs.

Jacob Shapiro:

Donald Trump had threatened 30% by August 1st.

Jacob Shapiro:

If there wasn't a deal, the tariff will cover, or at least as we think it is,

Jacob Shapiro:

is gonna cover about 70% of EU exports.

Jacob Shapiro:

Now, there are other things like pharmaceuticals and timber and lumber.

Jacob Shapiro:

That is, they have section 2 32 trade investigations there

Jacob Shapiro:

that are maybe gonna affect the final rates and things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

There will be some zero for zero tariffs on things like aircraft and

Jacob Shapiro:

certain chemicals and certain drugs and certain semiconductor equipment.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, certain doing a lot of work, uh, in a lot of these things, they still have

Jacob Shapiro:

not decided the most important thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

To our point on beer, what are the tariffs on alcohol, wine,

Jacob Shapiro:

cognac, whiskey, French cheese.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's the one I really care about.

Jacob Shapiro:

We don't have those answers yet, so I'm pissed off.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then also, and those are,

Marko Papic:

and just, just those are critical.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, please.

Marko Papic:

'cause we of, we of course know, uh, the insatiable appetite that

Marko Papic:

Europeans have for American beer.

Jacob Shapiro:

Right, right, right, right alongside their American cars.

Jacob Shapiro:

They'll put the American beer in the cup holder and drive on the auto bond,

Jacob Shapiro:

uh, with the, with the American cars.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then to really top it off, um, the EU is gonna invest 600 billion

Jacob Shapiro:

into the US over Trump's second term and is gonna buy energy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, what, 750 billion?

Jacob Shapiro:

Was that how much they promised to buy of energy?

Jacob Shapiro:

No.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, I

Marko Papic:

think it's actually been revised to $70 trillion of energy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, there you go.

Jacob Shapiro:

So the eu, I guess they're just gonna take a bunch of l and g and put it in Hungary

Jacob Shapiro:

or put it wherever they don't wanna put it so that they can just use it forever.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I don't really understand.

Jacob Shapiro:

So that, that's the outline of the deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

I said in my piece, look, I think there's two ways to look at this.

Jacob Shapiro:

Europe is fundamentally weak and it's gonna be a battleground in a multipolar

Jacob Shapiro:

world rather than a poll or, um, and this goes back to something we've

Jacob Shapiro:

talked about for a while, Marco.

Jacob Shapiro:

The people who win trade wars are the people who don't fight trade wars.

Jacob Shapiro:

So the EU basically declined to fight a war.

Jacob Shapiro:

Ursula of Underlain has taken all the heat from people and saying, all right,

Jacob Shapiro:

I will be, I will bear this cross.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and we got from 30% to 15% terrorists.

Jacob Shapiro:

But the real news is that, you know, Germany just passed a record

Jacob Shapiro:

budget about enabling, you know, uh, deficit spending and everything else.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, even inertial love under underlying statement, she said, okay, like, we're

Jacob Shapiro:

doing this, but this means we have to take bold action at home to make

Jacob Shapiro:

sure that Europe is more competitive, more innovative, more dynamic,

Jacob Shapiro:

you know, all these other things.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, Europe could have pushed a little bit more.

Jacob Shapiro:

They could have said, well, actually, like if you look at services, the trade

Jacob Shapiro:

deficit surplus situation is reversed.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mr. Orange, man, do you wanna talk?

Jacob Shapiro:

They didn't do any of that.

Jacob Shapiro:

They, they put it aside.

Jacob Shapiro:

They closed a deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I ended on, I think this is short-term weakness, but it,

Jacob Shapiro:

it is for long-term strength.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I think if you're counting Europe out, you're making a mistake.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then the last point, I would just make Marco on this is, and I, I, I feel

Jacob Shapiro:

like I only realized this a week ago.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe I should have realized it already.

Jacob Shapiro:

US foreign policy these days.

Jacob Shapiro:

Makes way more sense if you analyze it as if it was a reality TV show than as

Jacob Shapiro:

if we were using our geopolitics and political science brains and things

Jacob Shapiro:

like, all those models don't work.

Jacob Shapiro:

But if you think of this as just a reality TV show, this is the

Jacob Shapiro:

apprentice's tariffs edition.

Jacob Shapiro:

Actually, all of this makes perfect sense.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I wanted to see where you are, but I, I think you'll be with me in, in Europe

Jacob Shapiro:

and in, in having some faith in Europe.

Marko Papic:

I loved your piece, you know, and I loved it because

Marko Papic:

what you did is you outlined the two, two ways to look at this.

Marko Papic:

And I think that, uh, first of all, by the way, on, on the quip about TV shows,

Marko Papic:

I've told my clients, uh, in the financial community, basically when they scoffed

Marko Papic:

at the idea that Trump would be able to conclude trade deals in three months.

Marko Papic:

I said that you scoff only because you lack imagination.

Marko Papic:

And if you are, uh, speaking to way too many learned trade

Marko Papic:

negotiators, these are not trade negotiations for Geneva, for the WTO.

Marko Papic:

These are trade negotiations for made for TV trade deals.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

That's what I call them.

Marko Papic:

So we're fully aligned with that.

Marko Papic:

Um, I think that objectively speaking, like if you just use mathematics and you

Marko Papic:

objectively look at this trade deal, you objectively have to say that America won.

Marko Papic:

If you say anything other than that, you have Trump derangement syndrome.

Marko Papic:

This is the way I like test people, like who won the trade deal in

Marko Papic:

objective mathematical terms.

Marko Papic:

And if somebody tells me, well, Europe won.

Marko Papic:

I'm like, uh, guys, Europe will apply two point a half

Marko Papic:

percent tariff on America cars.

Marko Papic:

Americans will apply 15% tariff on European cars.

Marko Papic:

Like this is obviously an America victory.

Marko Papic:

The problem is that it's a pure hick victory, which is like,

Marko Papic:

it's a rock throwing competition.

Marko Papic:

It's like two kids.

Marko Papic:

No, no.

Marko Papic:

Like here's an analogy if you want, it's two children.

Marko Papic:

Trying to see who's going to throw the rock more accurate

Marko Papic:

accurately at the principal's car in the parking lot of your school.

Marko Papic:

And one kid is purposely like missing and the other kid is like, fucking nailed it.

Marko Papic:

And then here comes Mr.

Marko Papic:

Garrison.

Marko Papic:

It is like, what the hell did you do?

Marko Papic:

Right?

Marko Papic:

Oh, sorry, Mr. Mackey.

Marko Papic:

Like that was not nice.

Marko Papic:

Okay, so the point that I'm getting at here is that, yeah,

Marko Papic:

America won, but what did it win?

Marko Papic:

Your, to your point, the way you put it was like, you don't

Marko Papic:

wanna really fight a trade war.

Marko Papic:

And one of the reasons is that, um, this first order effect is what Reuters

Marko Papic:

and Bloomberg, and most of my clients, quite frankly, on Wall Street, and

Marko Papic:

most people on fin Tweet, they're obsess about first order effects.

Marko Papic:

Like, yeah, absolutely.

Marko Papic:

Donald Trump cleaned the floor with Ursula of Underlaid.

Marko Papic:

However, tariffs are not good, like for your economy.

Marko Papic:

Not because of some petty, idiotic reason, like their inflation.

Marko Papic:

Who cares?

Marko Papic:

I, I'm, I'm okay with that.

Marko Papic:

And they will raise revenue.

Marko Papic:

That's great.

Marko Papic:

Well done.

Marko Papic:

You're all like, cool.

Marko Papic:

The problem is that I'm not sure that you want to protect

Marko Papic:

your domestic car industry.

Marko Papic:

This is the land and the path and the narrative of import substitution.

Marko Papic:

This is the way that you lose productivity.

Marko Papic:

This is the way you rest on your laurels and you let the big three, Detroit, which

Marko Papic:

has effectively ceased to be able to produce, uh, what's the word, a sedan.

Marko Papic:

You let them basically just get lazy in fat.

Marko Papic:

Competition is how you get productive.

Marko Papic:

I mean, look, obviously if you're a developing nation and you

Marko Papic:

don't have a car industry at all, fine slap a 50% tariff on cars.

Marko Papic:

So you can maybe learn how to build a car domestically, but you wanna take them

Marko Papic:

off in order to be competitive globally.

Marko Papic:

And that's what the irony of this is like, yes, America absolutely won.

Marko Papic:

Objectively speaking, America will now apply 15% tariff on a European car.

Marko Papic:

Europe will have to apply 2.5%, but no one's gonna buy American cars in Europe.

Marko Papic:

You know, other than Tesla, like no American car is gonna be purchased.

Marko Papic:

You, you could put a negative tariff on them.

Marko Papic:

Like here, I'll give you 10%.

Marko Papic:

So if a American car costs two thou 20,000 euros, I'll give you 2000 euros.

Marko Papic:

How are you gonna park in F-150?

Marko Papic:

How are you gonna parallel park it in Brussels?

Jacob Shapiro:

You know, like, I mean as, as, as we've talked about before,

Jacob Shapiro:

the real market to to capitalize on for, for trucks is gonna be your

Jacob Shapiro:

jihadis and your formerly ISIS guy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Make sure.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And they're driving Toyotas, so, yeah, that's

Marko Papic:

right.

Marko Papic:

Make sure Afghanistan has like, look, look.

Marko Papic:

But seriously, I think that this is the point of this, I think, I think

Marko Papic:

there is some level of tariffs the United States probably should apply in

Marko Papic:

order to deal with its fiscal issue.

Marko Papic:

I think that's where I am more aligned with the Trump administration.

Marko Papic:

15% is I think, too high and I think it's not too high because

Marko Papic:

the consumers can't take it.

Marko Papic:

Although yes, that is a concern of mine as well.

Marko Papic:

The other concern I have is that protecting American industry is a

Marko Papic:

sure way to ensure that it collapses not tomorrow, not in two or three

Marko Papic:

years, but in five to 10 years.

Marko Papic:

So if you're listening to this podcast and you don't have like a PhD in economics

Marko Papic:

or you're not like a CFR member or you're not somebody who understands these things

Marko Papic:

'cause you think about 'em all day.

Marko Papic:

I just wanna make sure you understand.

Marko Papic:

It is not good to protect your industries.

Marko Papic:

Just like it's not good to coddle your children.

Marko Papic:

Like if you give your children $3,000 monthly allowance, guess what?

Marko Papic:

You're never going to learn how to do.

Marko Papic:

Get a job.

Marko Papic:

It doesn't matter how rich you are.

Marko Papic:

You should not be coddling your industries, especially when you

Marko Papic:

are a rich, advanced, industrial, productive country like America.

Marko Papic:

You are not, you're not starting a car industry.

Marko Papic:

You have it.

Marko Papic:

You need to expose it to international competition.

Marko Papic:

You need to ensure that when Cadillac makes a sedan to fight

Marko Papic:

against BMW three series, it doesn't need that 15% tariff to survive.

Marko Papic:

Rather, people around the world are like, you know what?

Marko Papic:

I would like to drive a Cadillac.

Marko Papic:

Like I actually think that's a really good car.

Marko Papic:

So right now America makes like pickup trucks and giant SUVs for

Marko Papic:

family of 14 or Uber drivers.

Marko Papic:

Like that's it.

Marko Papic:

If you are in a market for a pickup truck or in a three row sedan, so you can be

Marko Papic:

an Uber driver, you favor American cars.

Marko Papic:

Everybody else, no.

Marko Papic:

Like not, not really.

Marko Papic:

And so I think that's a problem.

Marko Papic:

And I think that tariffs are not gonna help.

Marko Papic:

That.

Marko Papic:

They're gonna actually impede that over the long period of time.

Marko Papic:

They're gonna ensure that American industry actually gets lazy.

Marko Papic:

So I would say that from that perspective, it's a mistake.

Marko Papic:

The other thing you mentioned is the rest of the world is going to do

Marko Papic:

what President Trump says right now.

Marko Papic:

You you, what was the way you phrased this?

Marko Papic:

Wait and see.

Marko Papic:

Didn't you have a, like everyone's just kind of doing what he wants

Marko Papic:

right now, but they're buying time.

Marko Papic:

I think you used the term buying time.

Marko Papic:

A lot of the countries are going to give President Trump what he wants,

Marko Papic:

which is the apprentice moment.

Marko Papic:

You know, you're fired.

Marko Papic:

Oh, I'm so sorry.

Marko Papic:

You know, everyone's gonna kowtow publicly and in those three to five

Marko Papic:

years, they're gonna learn to wean themselves off the us I think one

Marko Papic:

of the greatest powers of the US.

Marko Papic:

Is that it allows the rest of the world to become addicted to it, to its market,

Marko Papic:

to its technology, to its culture.

Marko Papic:

I don't think you want to start, I mean, again, if your objective is to

Marko Papic:

preserve American power over the next 10, 15 years, not the next two years,

Marko Papic:

then I don't think it's really smart to be encouraging the rest of the

Marko Papic:

world, including your allies, to start weaning themselves off of your market.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I

Marko Papic:

think that's

Jacob Shapiro:

it.

Jacob Shapiro:

It, it's funny because in our last episode you talked about how Trump was

Jacob Shapiro:

caught liver oil and now like what Trump is doing is he's more like a twinie.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like it's, there's literally no Well, twin benefit to like,

Marko Papic:

well, I think he's a twinie to the us.

Marko Papic:

When I said he's called liver oil, I meant to literally every

Marko Papic:

country other than the us Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Which is consistent.

Marko Papic:

Which is consistent with your view.

Marko Papic:

You're basically saying like, look, I don't think that

Marko Papic:

Amer, uh, that Europe lost.

Marko Papic:

I think Europe is just buying time.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And, and they're buying time to do stuff that Trump is forcing them to do.

Marko Papic:

But those, that stuff, those reforms will be good for Europe, not necessarily for

Marko Papic:

the us and unfettered access to American markets, which a lot of market camp hates.

Marko Papic:

They think it's like just wanton, magnanimous without any

Marko Papic:

concern for national interest.

Marko Papic:

I disagree with that.

Marko Papic:

I think that access to the American market, American consumers, that

Marko Papic:

access has been one of the greatest tools of American foreign policy.

Marko Papic:

And it's the stick that America has used to ensure the rest of the world remains

Marko Papic:

addicted to its services, products, goods, markets, blah, blah, blah.

Marko Papic:

And now President Trump has basically said like, look, we

Marko Papic:

will use that access willy-nilly to accomplish whatever we want.

Marko Papic:

And I think that will be that called liver oil that forces Canada, Europe,

Marko Papic:

China, everyone else to say, okay, fine.

Marko Papic:

Let's make a five year plan to become less reliant in the us.

Jacob Shapiro:

When you said wanton, magnanimous, magnanimous.

Jacob Shapiro:

I I thought you were saying wonton for a second.

Jacob Shapiro:

I thought we were gonna start talking about wonton soup and South

Jacob Shapiro:

Park and a bunch of other things.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, but I, I have three signals and then I'll, and then I'll turn it

Jacob Shapiro:

over to you for our second beer, because there's a lot of noise here.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I, I put three signals, or I identified three signals in all this.

Jacob Shapiro:

The first, and I just sort of brushed this aside, but Germany, Germany's government

Jacob Shapiro:

approved a draft 2026 budget that includes a record investment of 126 billion euros

Jacob Shapiro:

and borrowing 175 billion euros more for a big package on infrastructure and defense.

Jacob Shapiro:

So that sound that you can hear in the background listeners, those are

Jacob Shapiro:

the gears of German industry getting ready to fuck up the rest of the world.

Jacob Shapiro:

When they decide that they wanna start doing things,

Jacob Shapiro:

they will start doing things.

Jacob Shapiro:

So there's your one signal, your second signal, and this was something

Jacob Shapiro:

I was ac the, the second, yeah, we'll go back to the Hitler stuff.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like my distillery was in the cross airs the last time this shit happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

I am perfectly placed to tell, I hear the sound it's coming.

Jacob Shapiro:

The second thing, and I was actually surprised about this, Marco, if you look

Jacob Shapiro:

at both non-military and military aid given to Ukraine in 22 to 24 versus so far

Jacob Shapiro:

this year in 2025, it's basically Europe.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's not the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

So we've been hearing for years the Europeans aren't there,

Jacob Shapiro:

they're not supporting Ukraine.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

In, in 2025.

Jacob Shapiro:

You surprised they've been supporting Ukraine?

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I didn't know it was that big.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I thought it was, ah, maybe it's more 50 50.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe it's 60.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's not, it's like most of it is coming from Europe.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like this vision of the Europeans are, are effeminate and puny.

Jacob Shapiro:

No.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like they're actually the ones that are standing up the Ukrainians versus Russia.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then the last thing is just think about all the shit that

Jacob Shapiro:

Wander land has taken for this.

Jacob Shapiro:

People like the French Prime Minister, by the way, who cares that France

Jacob Shapiro:

has a prime minister, but whatever like is is saying she's super weak.

Jacob Shapiro:

I can't believe we did this.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's a signal, because that's the Europeans being like, we

Jacob Shapiro:

don't want to be puny and passive.

Jacob Shapiro:

We want to be strong.

Jacob Shapiro:

So the next European commissioner better be muscular and strong.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think that's actually, you know, people are showing, oh, that's a

Jacob Shapiro:

sign that Europe is into Clint.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, no, no.

Jacob Shapiro:

The reaction is showing you that Europe itself, the median

Jacob Shapiro:

voter in Europe, if you will.

Jacob Shapiro:

Doesn't like this, wants to make sure that the next time this

Jacob Shapiro:

happens, it's Europe that's holding the cards, not the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like amidst all the noise, like those are the three things that like

Jacob Shapiro:

really brought me to, uh, in the long term probably better for, for Europe.

Marko Papic:

Well, you also said something important, again,

Marko Papic:

I'm paraphrasing your view.

Marko Papic:

Uh, you mentioned that all the hate and all the criticism for wander laden

Marko Papic:

is also a sign that is buck passing.

Marko Papic:

That's a term that European analysts have used for a long time.

Marko Papic:

Whenever European member states don't like something, they blame the

Marko Papic:

commission, but they do that because it's a very painful and, uh, foul

Marko Papic:

tasting pill they have to swallow.

Marko Papic:

So they have the commission do it on their behalf.

Marko Papic:

So again, co liver oil.

Marko Papic:

Donald Trump is out there handing out a spoon with cod liver oil and it's wander

Marko Papic:

laden who has to swallow it, right?

Marko Papic:

And everybody is like, oh, that's so bad.

Marko Papic:

But actually they all need that.

Marko Papic:

They, she bought them time.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

And look, ultimately, you and I are both quite bullish Europe and we think that

Marko Papic:

Europe is gonna do a lot of interesting things over the next five years.

Marko Papic:

But at the end of the day, we're gonna be right or wrong on whether

Marko Papic:

they take this time that Ursula of underlaid and bought them with kowtowing

Marko Papic:

to Donald Trump unceremoniously and quite gracious Ungraciously.

Marko Papic:

If they just wasted again, as Europeans are known to do, well,

Marko Papic:

then they will have wasted it.

Marko Papic:

But the commitment by Germany that you just cited suggests

Marko Papic:

to me they're not wasting it.

Marko Papic:

And you know, it was funny when, uh, when Trump met with Frieder Mertz, I

Marko Papic:

don't know if you caught that really cute and funny moment when, uh, Trump

Marko Papic:

turns to Chancellor Mertz and goes like.

Marko Papic:

Oh, and now you've committed to great defense spending.

Marko Papic:

And you go, Germany has done that in the past.

Marko Papic:

Maybe too much.

Marko Papic:

I don't know.

Marko Papic:

Something, you know, and it was just so funny 'cause it was a Nazi

Marko Papic:

joke with the German chancellor.

Marko Papic:

He did like, oh, in the past you guys have maybe done too much defense

Marko Papic:

spending, I don't know, some say.

Marko Papic:

And you're like, did you, did you just, you know, like we all have that

Marko Papic:

German friend that we've like pushed too far and they're like, bro, it's

Marko Papic:

not actually funny, but Friedrich Mez is there in the White House.

Marko Papic:

And he's like, haha.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, we, we did too much.

Marko Papic:

Like, yes.

Marko Papic:

Oh my God.

Marko Papic:

Only all Donald Trump.

Marko Papic:

And listen, if you don't laugh at that, you've got a Trump derangement syndrome.

Marko Papic:

Man, it's funny.

Marko Papic:

It's legitimately the president of the United States of America is making a

Marko Papic:

Nazi joke to the German chancellor.

Marko Papic:

That's 2025 for you.

Marko Papic:

Alright.

Jacob Shapiro:

It really, it really like, I mean, Trump has really taken away like

Jacob Shapiro:

lots of ammo from humor, like South Park to, to be humorous, has to put him in

Jacob Shapiro:

bed with Satan to make jokes, right?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because he is taken everything else.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's literally nothing else you can do except do that anyway.

Jacob Shapiro:

Open your second beer.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, that was, yeah.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

So I'm opening a second beer over, uh, six pack.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna, I'm gonna go a little obscure and, uh, I'm gonna give a shout out.

Marko Papic:

Uh, obviously you followed this stuff, but, uh, I'm not

Marko Papic:

sure a lot of other people do.

Marko Papic:

So I'm gonna give a big shout out to our mutual friend, uh, Matt Kin, who is, uh,

Marko Papic:

our former colleague from Strat four.

Marko Papic:

He's my current colleague at, uh, BC Research.

Marko Papic:

And basically, um, it has to do with a recall election of

Marko Papic:

24 legislators in, uh, Taiwan.

Marko Papic:

So basically, uh, the opposition party, KMT, the Kwame Dong, which is the

Marko Papic:

original of course, uh, existential.

Marko Papic:

Opponent to the Chinese Communist Party that fled the Chinese mainland to Taiwan.

Marko Papic:

Uh, they're now in the opposition and have been to the ruling DPP for a while.

Marko Papic:

They, uh, they're seen as, uh, as, uh, more friendly to

Marko Papic:

China, uh, in a perverse way.

Marko Papic:

It's because they believe that they are durational rulers

Marko Papic:

of all of mainland China.

Marko Papic:

So like, like, let's leave that aside.

Marko Papic:

But yes,

Jacob Shapiro:

you have, you have to really appreciate the con the intellectual

Jacob Shapiro:

consistency, like in a world of such hypocrisy, like just sticking with it.

Jacob Shapiro:

I really appreciate it.

Marko Papic:

I do too.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So KMT basically, uh, has always tried to, uh, reduce tensions across streets.

Marko Papic:

Um, and they, uh, want the legislative election, even though the president

Marko Papic:

is from the ruling DPP, and he is, uh, you know, pro, I don't

Marko Papic:

wanna say pro independence 'cause that's not fair, uh, but more pro

Marko Papic:

sovereignty and definitely anti-China.

Marko Papic:

And so there was a completely grassroots campaign.

Marko Papic:

Not aligned with any party.

Marko Papic:

To be fair, they tried to, but it was very virulently, anti-China grassroots

Marko Papic:

campaign to recall 24 members of, uh, KMT, um, of their, uh, of their legislative

Marko Papic:

caucus for basically being Chinese agents.

Marko Papic:

And, uh, there was a recall election and, uh, they lost the recall lost

Marko Papic:

across every single one, including a mayoral, uh, uh, actual mayor of one

Marko Papic:

cities who was a non-GI legislative member who was also being recalled.

Marko Papic:

And, uh, the reason it's important, of course, is that it shows that,

Marko Papic:

uh, Taiwanese people are not like solely focused on the China issue.

Marko Papic:

There are other issues.

Marko Papic:

They did not want to give the DPA legislative majority because they felt,

Marko Papic:

well, that's not what we voted for.

Marko Papic:

We already voted for the opposition to check them.

Marko Papic:

So the president is opposed by KMT, uh, uh, opposition led.

Marko Papic:

Legislative.

Marko Papic:

But the other issue that's important is that had, uh, the president achieved

Marko Papic:

legislative majority, one of the things he would've tried to push after the

Marko Papic:

recall is a massive increase in defense spending, which would've of course set

Marko Papic:

the cross street, um, relations, um, you know, uh, to a different ball game.

Marko Papic:

I mean, China was obviously already criticizing that.

Marko Papic:

Um, the reason I wanna bring this up is that he didn't receive that much coverage,

Marko Papic:

you know, and, uh, Matt, Matt kin and I were in a, in a client meeting actually

Marko Papic:

yesterday with a sovereign wealth fund.

Marko Papic:

And, uh, one of the people on that call actually mentioned that like, wow,

Marko Papic:

like nobody really talks about this.

Marko Papic:

This seems like a really big issue.

Marko Papic:

And I mentioned, yes, and the reason I wanted to bring it up is not just

Marko Papic:

because people in finance should listen to it, but also like just

Marko Papic:

listeners of this podcast should be aware of a very important reality.

Marko Papic:

Small countries sometimes change history.

Marko Papic:

I think too many of us have become enamored with this kind of risk

Marko Papic:

board game view of geopolitics.

Marko Papic:

Like, oh, it's China versus us, us versus Russia.

Marko Papic:

But countries that are often the chess board upon which the game of geopolitical

Marko Papic:

chess is being played, do, have agency of their own and they can muck up things.

Marko Papic:

For example, I'm Serbian, I know more about this than anybody else.

Marko Papic:

Like we literally started World War I, you know, the original terrorist, what's up?

Marko Papic:

You know, high Five to my brethren, assassinated.

Marko Papic:

You know your archduke apparently.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

He, he was my archduke.

Jacob Shapiro:

He sure was.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

He was your family's Archduke in Vienna, you know, sitting there trying

Marko Papic:

to lord over all of continental Europe.

Marko Papic:

And we were like, no.

Jacob Shapiro:

And, and he was still much nicer than what came afterwards.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, four one, actually, actually, actually, that's the irony.

Marko Papic:

Actually.

Marko Papic:

This is also ironic in a, in a very typical perhaps.

Marko Papic:

Historically Serbian fashion.

Marko Papic:

We did shoot ourselves in the foot because one of his ideas was to

Marko Papic:

bring Serbia into the monarchy and to make it Austria-Hungarian,

Marko Papic:

Serbian Empire, actually.

Marko Papic:

Really?

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

That was like, that was his, like, he was a liberal, like answer to his father.

Marko Papic:

So actually, you know, but oops.

Marko Papic:

You know, like, anyways, anyways, details.

Marko Papic:

We shot that guy down.

Marko Papic:

You know what I mean?

Marko Papic:

Anyways, world War, war starts, world war starts.

Marko Papic:

Starts.

Marko Papic:

But the point I'm trying to say is that Germany, Russia, Vienna, la, Paris, they

Marko Papic:

had a very complicated balancing game.

Marko Papic:

And Serb said, hold my beer or more, more accurately hold my, yeah, we got this.

Marko Papic:

And they World War I starts.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's okay listeners, if, if you're wondering if he just took a

Jacob Shapiro:

shot of flow of it and he can't hold it.

Jacob Shapiro:

He didn't, he would be able to hold it.

Jacob Shapiro:

He just got So, I'm so sorry.

Marko Papic:

I'm dying.

Marko Papic:

Oh, I'm dying over here.

Marko Papic:

But it was, it was such an exciting, uh, but, but my point is that that's why

Marko Papic:

it's important item that the situation in Taiwan was actually really important and

Marko Papic:

it could have had really global relevance.

Marko Papic:

And I feel like we kind of dodged the bullet, but it also means that

Marko Papic:

I feel like we don't spend enough time taking Taiwan seriously and

Marko Papic:

Taiwanese sentiment and politics.

Marko Papic:

Seriously.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's inter, and it also, I think one of the reasons it got covered up was

Jacob Shapiro:

because you probably saw that Taiwan's president was supposed to transit, uh,

Jacob Shapiro:

New York on a trip to the Americas.

Jacob Shapiro:

And it th I mean basically the FT was reporting that the US asked, uh, Taiwan

Jacob Shapiro:

not to do this so that he would not be on the United States for any of the trip.

Jacob Shapiro:

People were talking about whether that suggests that the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

wants to defend Taiwan or not as well.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, most of the polls suggest that, uh, most Taiwanese people don't prefer

Jacob Shapiro:

independence or reunion with China.

Jacob Shapiro:

They just prefer the status quo.

Jacob Shapiro:

That is correct.

Jacob Shapiro:

And really the job of the Taiwanese president and Taiwanese leadership

Jacob Shapiro:

is to maintain the status quo.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's just, it's probably gonna be fundamentally impossible for

Jacob Shapiro:

them to maintain the status quo.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you Yeah, go ahead.

Jacob Shapiro:

I can see you wanna take it.

Marko Papic:

Uh, the, just the reason I know those polls very well.

Marko Papic:

And actually after 2019, after the crackdown in Hong Kong by

Marko Papic:

China, the sentiment in Taiwan definitely turned anti-Chinese.

Marko Papic:

Absolutely.

Marko Papic:

But since 20 22, 20 23, 20 24, uh, specifically since 2022, they've

Marko Papic:

had a great front row seat to what it looks like to be a chess board.

Marko Papic:

Just talk to a Ukrainian, you know.

Marko Papic:

Because America has many ways to defend you.

Marko Papic:

One of them is to let you have hundreds of thousands of casualties

Marko Papic:

as you take the brunt of the largest military in the world, in the face.

Marko Papic:

So it's interesting between 2019 and 2022, there's a lot of chess beating in Taiwan.

Marko Papic:

Like, yo, we're not gonna turn out like Hong Kong.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

And then you see the status quo support rise over the last three years because

Marko Papic:

being a chess board sucks a chess board.

Marko Papic:

And when I say being a chess board, I mean like us and China are clearly

Marko Papic:

playing a geopolitical game of chess.

Marko Papic:

You are the chess board, bro, and it's painful to be a chess board.

Marko Papic:

And so I think that the Taiwanese sentiment has turned towards

Marko Papic:

the status quo more and more.

Marko Papic:

It's rising.

Marko Papic:

Now the, the problem is, as we know in democracies.

Marko Papic:

The loudest best finance interest groups often lead policy.

Marko Papic:

And there is a very loud minority in Taiwan that does want independence, and

Marko Papic:

they have the pool and the ruling DPP.

Marko Papic:

It, it, it's a fringe part of the ecosystem, but it's one that could

Marko Papic:

at some point through machinations, like the one you saw right now with

Marko Papic:

a recall of democratically elected legislators caused something to happen.

Marko Papic:

And that's obviously how World War I started.

Marko Papic:

You know, it's not like the Serbian government, assassinated France

Marko Papic:

Ferdinand, but various terrorist groups funded in nine in the early

Marko Papic:

20th century by members of the Serbian Military and Intelligence Services.

Marko Papic:

Absolutely supported those guys, uh, ADA, Bosnia and, and Black Hand

Marko Papic:

and all that stuff in, in Bosnia.

Marko Papic:

So like this is the issue.

Marko Papic:

Uh, Taiwan is a complicated place.

Marko Papic:

The median Taiwanese, you're correct, does not wanna confrontation with China.

Marko Papic:

Why would you?

Marko Papic:

That's idiotic and insane.

Marko Papic:

But there are always French groups that, that might do that.

Marko Papic:

And that's why I think closer monitoring of this Taiwanese politics

Marko Papic:

is something that we all have to do.

Marko Papic:

But yes, you are right.

Marko Papic:

Also, Trump administration seems to have changed.

Marko Papic:

It's, it's it's view as well.

Jacob Shapiro:

But by the way, well, it's been all over the place though.

Jacob Shapiro:

Remember like when Trump was the first time he was elected, do you

Jacob Shapiro:

remember the first thing he did?

Jacob Shapiro:

He called Taiwan's president.

Jacob Shapiro:

I remember at the time being like, oh my God, a, a precedent has been broken.

Jacob Shapiro:

And now it's like how many precedents since then have been broken.

Jacob Shapiro:

But like there was all that.

Jacob Shapiro:

But then you, you fast forward now it seems like only Bridge Kolby cares

Jacob Shapiro:

about this in DOD like everybody else, whether it's Ruby talking up one China

Jacob Shapiro:

or Trump pressuring the Taiwanese to give trade concessions to the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, oh yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And just to say like, uh, sort of what, uh, another thing about this is, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, you brought up Russia and Ukraine.

Jacob Shapiro:

The thing is China's not Russia.

Jacob Shapiro:

Taiwan is not Ukraine.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I don't think China wants to invade or like thinks it can invade Taiwan and win.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think it's gonna take the Hong Kong approach, which is isolate it, make

Jacob Shapiro:

sure nobody recognizes it, make sure nobody has an incentive to defend it.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then when Margaret Thatcher comes and says, we wanna renew the lease 99

Jacob Shapiro:

years, you tell her, okay, but we're gonna cut off the oil, uh, excuse me,

Jacob Shapiro:

the electricity and the water, uh, and like we're just gonna blockade it.

Jacob Shapiro:

Is that really what you want?

Jacob Shapiro:

And then she has to say, okay, I'll go like pool with the Falklands.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause I obviously can't mess around with this.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like when you see that like Beijing is isolating Taiwan and also brain

Jacob Shapiro:

draining them, just like throwing Yuan and all the Taiwanese semi engineers

Jacob Shapiro:

like, come to Shanghai, have the penthouse, do whatever you want.

Jacob Shapiro:

And they're coming like tho those people are listening to that.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then there's Taiwan, which is not Ukraine.

Jacob Shapiro:

And this gets to your point, like Taiwan.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't think it's gonna defend itself the way that Ukraine has

Jacob Shapiro:

defended itself against Russia.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm, that might hurt some Taiwan's feelings and maybe I'm wrong about that.

Jacob Shapiro:

But my impression based on studying it is that they're not gonna defend

Jacob Shapiro:

themselves the way that Ukraine,

Marko Papic:

well, either way.

Marko Papic:

I think that there is danger in being a chess board and I

Marko Papic:

think they understand that.

Marko Papic:

But to your, to the point on top Trump that you said, you know,

Marko Papic:

ambiguity about Trump, I think that there is a lot of unfair criticism.

Marko Papic:

For example, not letting president of Taiwan transit to the us There is a huge

Marko Papic:

gulf between not wanting to provoke China

Marko Papic:

and not wanting to defend Taiwan.

Marko Papic:

There is some like happy medium in between, and I think one of the problems

Marko Papic:

with the Biden administration was that it was so concerned with illustrating

Marko Papic:

domestic strength through aggression in Ukraine and Taiwan, that it was

Marko Papic:

leaning more towards provoking China.

Marko Papic:

I think there's some basic level.

Marko Papic:

Where the US can both guarantee Taiwan's, let's say sovereignty, if

Marko Papic:

not independence, and without having to provoke, you know, like maybe you

Marko Papic:

don't wanna send the Speaker of the House of Representatives to Taipei.

Marko Papic:

Maybe that's like unnecessary.

Marko Papic:

But you can sell weapons, which the US has been doing for decades,

Marko Papic:

you know, and continue to do so.

Marko Papic:

And through back channels tell China like, look, we are actually

Marko Papic:

committed to defense of Taiwan.

Marko Papic:

Like, but, but if, if you are angry by the fact that the Taiwanese president

Marko Papic:

is gonna be transiting through the United States America, fine.

Marko Papic:

He can take a flight through Zurich, great connections, best sandwiches at an airport

Marko Papic:

anywhere in the world, so he'll be happy.

Marko Papic:

You know, like there is a happy medium.

Marko Papic:

And I think a little bit of, of the, uh, criticism of President

Marko Papic:

Trump is like, he's not like, what?

Marko Papic:

Like aggressive, provocative, like asshole enough, eh.

Marko Papic:

I I don't buy that.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, I'm with you.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I'm gonna ask you an impossible hypothetical, but why not?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because this is cousins.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let, let's say China invades Taiwan tomorrow.

Jacob Shapiro:

You think the US defends Taiwan?

Marko Papic:

Well, did the US defend Ukraine?

Marko Papic:

Not at first, not at all.

Marko Papic:

I mean, like, what is the level of defense?

Marko Papic:

And I think, again, this is one of those things that's not a one or a zero.

Marko Papic:

It's a zero to a 10.

Marko Papic:

The United States of America is absolutely not gonna commit

Marko Papic:

US troops to defend of Taiwan.

Jacob Shapiro:

So you don't think so?

Jacob Shapiro:

You don't think that we would send a ba, a carry battle group or anything else

Jacob Shapiro:

to protect Taiwan from an s assault?

Marko Papic:

Maybe send it.

Marko Papic:

But I think that it would be exactly like the situation in Ukraine.

Marko Papic:

Just absolute, uh, no holds barred technological transfer

Marko Papic:

of very sophisticated weapons.

Jacob Shapiro:

Which, which was not what happened at first though.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like what happened first with Ukraine is that we withdrew

Jacob Shapiro:

our embassy staff to the west.

Jacob Shapiro:

We were like, okay, like everybody move out.

Jacob Shapiro:

Good luck.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sorry guys.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then after the Ukrainians kicked them in the teeth and it was like, oh

Jacob Shapiro:

my God, the Russians are bogged down.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh my God, the Russians are not as what we like, get them the

Jacob Shapiro:

missiles, get them everything.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's go.

Jacob Shapiro:

But the first reaction was, sorry guys.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like we took, we warned you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Fuck around and find out.

Marko Papic:

Well, actually the first, uh, also, the first thing

Marko Papic:

that the US did was pre-invasion.

Marko Papic:

And this is where Donald Trump is, right?

Marko Papic:

And nobody in the mainstream media wants to give him credit.

Marko Papic:

He did give Ukraine travels.

Jacob Shapiro:

He did in the first term.

Marko Papic:

Yep.

Marko Papic:

He was the first US president to give Ukraine offensive weapons.

Marko Papic:

And now everybody says, oh, that's 'cause he was trying to buy them.

Marko Papic:

So that, you know, like, okay, whatever.

Marko Papic:

Like, sure, maybe fine, but that's a fact.

Marko Papic:

So Ukraine was kind of ready for that initial assault

Marko Papic:

because of American technology.

Marko Papic:

But I agree with you, it was Ukrainians defending, in an amphibious assault

Marko Papic:

technology will matter even more than in a mechanized Dan horn, right?

Marko Papic:

Because you gotta cross a sea.

Marko Papic:

So area denial weapons are gonna be even more, uh, important.

Marko Papic:

So no, I don't think the US is going to use, its its own soldiers to

Marko Papic:

defend Taiwan, but the technological transfer of sophisticated weapons

Marko Papic:

will have an even bigger, more positive effect than it did in Ukraine

Jacob Shapiro:

if the Taiwanese are willing to use them and take the casualty.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I don't think it's for sure.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't think it's, yeah, I mean that's

Marko Papic:

the question, right?

Marko Papic:

Like that's ultimately what will the Taiwanese do?

Marko Papic:

And I guess we'll find out.

Marko Papic:

But I don't know.

Marko Papic:

You know, there's a lot of people who have been doubted.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I would say that nine out of 10 of my clients thought Ukrainians

Marko Papic:

were just gonna be incompetent.

Marko Papic:

And like I had to remind them of history of Ukraine.

Marko Papic:

This is a country that invented partisans.

Marko Papic:

You know what I mean?

Marko Papic:

Like I, and, and they were like, nah, they're corrupt

Marko Papic:

and it's a sclerotic country.

Marko Papic:

Everyone's old.

Marko Papic:

I was like, eh, I don't think so.

Marko Papic:

I think Ukraine is, are gonna fight viciously.

Marko Papic:

This is Eastern Europe.

Marko Papic:

We know how to fight wars.

Marko Papic:

Like even if we lose them, they're not gonna lay down.

Marko Papic:

And I think in Taiwan, you know, there's many, many examples I can

Marko Papic:

use of people who were seen as unwilling to defend themselves.

Marko Papic:

Like who actually then ended up defending themselves ly.

Marko Papic:

So we just don't know all

Jacob Shapiro:

which reasons.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think China's not gonna do this.

Jacob Shapiro:

Okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Third beer.

Jacob Shapiro:

This one will be a little bit shorter on the read 'cause it's already getting

Jacob Shapiro:

murky, but, so we started this morning with Donald Trump saying that there

Jacob Shapiro:

are going to be 25% tariffs on India.

Jacob Shapiro:

They've been negotiate, I think they've had what, five or six negotiating rounds.

Jacob Shapiro:

It seems like the United States has been holding up negotiations because

Jacob Shapiro:

they want access to Indian markets.

Jacob Shapiro:

In terms of US agriculture, which is a non-starter, I think

Jacob Shapiro:

probably for the Indian government.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, president Trump also said that there would be penalties on

Jacob Shapiro:

India for importing Russian oil.

Jacob Shapiro:

Classic Trump fashion.

Jacob Shapiro:

We don't know what the penalties are.

Jacob Shapiro:

He also came out later and said, ah, like, we're still talking.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe there's some wiggle room at the same pi at the same time, by the way,

Jacob Shapiro:

China got a 90 day extension for tariffs.

Jacob Shapiro:

So India, the largest democracy in the world.

Jacob Shapiro:

Howdy, Modi.

Jacob Shapiro:

You know, the, the Trump Modi bromance, all that is getting slapped on the

Jacob Shapiro:

wrist this after the Pakistan India fight, where Trump has been out there

Jacob Shapiro:

saying that he should get credit for the ceasefire because of tariffs, which

Jacob Shapiro:

has been pissing the Indians off too.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I, I, I bring it up because the reason that the British had a second

Jacob Shapiro:

lease on their empire was because they discovered and conquered India,

Jacob Shapiro:

basically like the British Empire probably collapses if they don't integrate India

Jacob Shapiro:

into the empire, um, in the mid 19th century and allows them to carry on to

Jacob Shapiro:

World War I and probably far beyond.

Jacob Shapiro:

If you're the United States and you're thinking about the world and the

Jacob Shapiro:

multipolar world and all the levers that you've pulled in the last couple

Jacob Shapiro:

of years, and administrations of both parties, you probably want India on your.

Jacob Shapiro:

It just feels like the Trump administration is going out

Jacob Shapiro:

of its way to piss India off.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm not sure that India was ever up for grabs.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're famously non-aligned.

Jacob Shapiro:

They wanna do their own thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're very, um, powerful is the wrong word, but I mean that many people that

Jacob Shapiro:

size market the potential, like they, they have a weight all of their own.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, but man, if, if Trump just isn't like kicking a potential ally or

Jacob Shapiro:

at least a balancer against some of these other powers in the teeth and

Jacob Shapiro:

for what, like what, what is the United States getting out of this?

Jacob Shapiro:

I know like, you know, you get the trade deal, the reality TV show thing,

Jacob Shapiro:

I guess to show that you're tough, but why you would pick on India this way?

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, we could ask this question about Japan and Canada too, but I'm,

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm really surprised that, um, the Trump administration is treating India like this

Jacob Shapiro:

and I think they are creating like yet another center of power in this multipolar

Jacob Shapiro:

world that is very, very quickly gonna be skeptical of the United States going

Jacob Shapiro:

forward and look to balance against it.

Marko Papic:

I mean, I think, uh, this, uh, maybe I don't really have

Marko Papic:

as much to to comment on this, but, uh, I think that I do worry that maybe

Marko Papic:

the markets and media and journalists and really everybody is not taking

Marko Papic:

Trump's threats like seriously enough.

Marko Papic:

You know, on the Russia thing,

Marko Papic:

the secondary sanctions, I think that we may not be spending enough time on that.

Marko Papic:

And you know, obviously India could be a casualty of those, uh, as well

Marko Papic:

as the China US trade negotiations.

Marko Papic:

Now, those are two parallel things.

Marko Papic:

I think Beijing can chew gum and walk in the same time.

Marko Papic:

They can separate American view towards Russia and um, um, you know, its

Marko Papic:

negotiations with the US separately.

Marko Papic:

But I do think we may be coming to a head, and this goes back to what

Marko Papic:

we talked about in our last episode.

Marko Papic:

Which is that I think that Trump, you know, hell had no, no fury,

Marko Papic:

like President Trump's scorned,

Marko Papic:

right?

Marko Papic:

Like to re redo that old adage, I do think that he is seriously angry that

Marko Papic:

Trump, that Putin has not moved at all towards some sort of ceasefire.

Marko Papic:

And so, like chi uh, India, US relationship could suffer

Marko Papic:

further because of that.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's a, it's a show.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's so shortsighted.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the thing, like we talked about the US and the eu.

Jacob Shapiro:

The things that Trump has done and how it's gonna affect the future

Jacob Shapiro:

of US India relations, US Brazil relations, US Japan relations.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, you can see sentiment turning against the United

Jacob Shapiro:

States in these countries.

Jacob Shapiro:

And maybe, you know, maybe, maybe it's ephemeral, maybe things turn around.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I think something has fundamentally shifted in these countries.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think these countries are looking at what the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

is doing and they're seeing if you're tough, it doesn't work.

Jacob Shapiro:

If you're friendly, it doesn't work.

Jacob Shapiro:

You're just gonna get screwed by the United States.

Jacob Shapiro:

So we're gonna have to find alternate options.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I think that is the takeaway lesson for these countries.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe Trump has in his mind, oh, if I can get this thing, I can move Putin.

Jacob Shapiro:

But that goes back to the classic, okay, instinctually you might

Jacob Shapiro:

be right and maybe you get the thing that you're after right Now.

Jacob Shapiro:

Was it really worth it to piss off India for the next 20 years?

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause that's what you've done with the combo of the tariff Pakistan, India

Jacob Shapiro:

thing, and now this thing about the tariffs and the secondary sanctions.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Not exactly a good trade.

Jacob Shapiro:

We'd have to think of the BA equivalent.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like maybe you're, you're trading for, uh.

Jacob Shapiro:

I dunno.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hired gun for just the end of the year.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, there's not really many good examples of that in the NBA works

Jacob Shapiro:

where it actually works out.

Marko Papic:

So you're saying India is kd

Jacob Shapiro:

No, I, uh, you'd have to think of a, of a deadline deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

Right?

Jacob Shapiro:

Like somebody that is acquired for just a couple of, maybe like

Jacob Shapiro:

a Kauai Leonard in this case.

Marko Papic:

Mm. You know?

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, that did lead to the championship though.

Jacob Shapiro:

It did lead to the championship and then, and then afterwards it led to

Jacob Shapiro:

nothing and then it led to paying yak perle $120 million for three to four.

Marko Papic:

So Trump is Messiah Jerry?

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's a nice, uh, cross-cultural interesting comparison.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

All right.

Marko Papic:

Let's, I'll have to sit on that.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Alright, well

Jacob Shapiro:

number four.

Jacob Shapiro:

You, you number four.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is, you can actually tell this is a six pack because we're getting less

Jacob Shapiro:

thoughtful as, as we go down as it would be if we were actually training.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

Um, I think, uh, my next, uh, actual, uh, subject here is, um.

Marko Papic:

I would like our listeners to spend an hour of their time listening

Marko Papic:

to winning the AI race President Trump on the AI action plan.

Marko Papic:

It's one hour, it's actually featured on the All In Podcast.

Marko Papic:

Um, and, uh, it's President Trump just riffing for an hour on why

Marko Papic:

he actually, what's his vision of how to compete with China and it's

Marko Papic:

diametrically different from Jake Sullivan slash Joe Biden's vision.

Marko Papic:

And so, um, I don't know to what extent our listeners are following this, but

Marko Papic:

effectively the Trump administration has decided to cancel some of the

Marko Papic:

Biden administration restrictions.

Marko Papic:

This has allowed Nvidia to sell some of its advanced chips semiconductors

Marko Papic:

to China, which is part of the reason why Nvidia stock is soaring.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I mean, there's many other reasons of course, and, uh, it's

Marko Papic:

very interesting because this.

Marko Papic:

It's 57 minutes.

Marko Papic:

If you can, Jacob, just put it in the, in our, we roll.

Marko Papic:

Yeah,

Jacob Shapiro:

yeah.

Marko Papic:

On our notes.

Marko Papic:

It's worth listening because Trump effectively says, I mean, aside from

Marko Papic:

saying that Joe Biden was wrong 75 times, you know, he basically, he

Marko Papic:

basically articulates a different strategy, which is that instead of, uh,

Marko Papic:

putting these high fences on American technology, president Trump will ensure

Marko Papic:

that American technology companies make money off of China and then reinvest

Marko Papic:

that money into the r and d so that they can continue to be a leading edge.

Marko Papic:

Those are two diametrically different ways of thinking about

Marko Papic:

competition in the 21st century.

Marko Papic:

And I gotta say, I 800% agree with Trump.

Marko Papic:

I think that the Jake Sullivan view of how to compete with China is abjectly wrong.

Marko Papic:

That it would ultimately ensure that China innovated and created a

Marko Papic:

completely separate architecture on the AI front on many other fronts.

Marko Papic:

And subsequent to that, it would ensure that many countries in the world will

Marko Papic:

adopt that infrastructure, infrastructure that China provides, whether that's

Marko Papic:

Alibaba's ai cloud infrastructure, whether it's China's EV infrastructure,

Marko Papic:

whether it's payment plans, whatever.

Marko Papic:

It's, uh, there is a sensible way to protect cutting edge technology, for sure.

Marko Papic:

Like you don't want to sell China your hypersonic cruise missiles, but like

Marko Papic:

selling China, like letting China gorge itself on a 10-year-old plane or a

Marko Papic:

5-year-old semiconductor is not going to change anything, particularly because many

Marko Papic:

of your own allies in a multipolar world.

Marko Papic:

Are not going to abide bio restrictions.

Marko Papic:

And that was one of the problems that the Biden administration found out.

Marko Papic:

It wasn't widely reported, but there were certain pretty good journalistic

Marko Papic:

efforts to un to reveal that companies like A SML Tokyo Electron would

Marko Papic:

like say, sure, great, we'll comply.

Marko Papic:

And then like 12 months later, like go, oh my God, where do

Marko Papic:

we get this pile of money?

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

And, and, and, and, and again because, not because they're evil, not because

Marko Papic:

they're proin or anti-American.

Marko Papic:

I mean, if you are the Netherlands and A SML is your champion, and

Marko Papic:

Americans come and tell you don't sell your equipment, your sophisticated

Marko Papic:

semiconductor manufacturing equipment to China, you're like, okay, so you

Marko Papic:

don't want me to sell this stuff to China, but you also want me to be part

Marko Papic:

of the anti-China Alliance by, you know, developing high tech, um, industrial

Marko Papic:

like innovation that helps the West win.

Marko Papic:

Like, well, I can't do both.

Marko Papic:

Because the foundation of geopolitical power is material wealth.

Marko Papic:

Let me say this again.

Marko Papic:

This is a realist view.

Marko Papic:

The foundation of geopolitical power is material wealth.

Marko Papic:

You need to skim from that surplus to invest in r and d in technology.

Marko Papic:

And the moment you stop losing sight of that, you know, uh, you lose.

Marko Papic:

And by the way, this is where this distinction between commercial

Marko Papic:

interests and geopolitical interests, national security interests blurs.

Marko Papic:

It actually is blurred.

Marko Papic:

It's very difficult to separate the two.

Marko Papic:

And so I actually think that this is a very good, uh, hour.

Marko Papic:

Of course, it's like full of trumpisms, you know, and he's like, I'm smart, Joe.

Marko Papic:

Biden's dumb.

Marko Papic:

You know, God bless.

Marko Papic:

Like, sure, knock yourself out.

Marko Papic:

But it's also an hour of, um, Trump's rhetoric that actually will anchor

Marko Papic:

both Democrats and Republicans.

Marko Papic:

This is something that there will be absolute bipartisan antagonism

Marko Papic:

towards this model, but this modern is rooted in history.

Marko Papic:

If you wanna find out how the United Kingdom fought its trade wars, how

Marko Papic:

United Kingdom became a hegemon and an empire, it was not by, uh, it was not

Marko Papic:

by cutting off trade with its rivals.

Marko Papic:

It was actually by making its rivals become addicted to its technology

Marko Papic:

and to its trade and to its capital.

Marko Papic:

And I think that President Trump has actually figured out how to fight, how

Marko Papic:

to fight rivalries in a multipolar world.

Marko Papic:

And nobody before him really has.

Jacob Shapiro:

The problem with that argument is that Trump started this with

Jacob Shapiro:

his crackdown on Huawei during his first term, and that China made the choice

Jacob Shapiro:

to vertically integrate on these things because of his restrictions on Huawei.

Jacob Shapiro:

So the Biden administration was trying to put a genie back in the

Jacob Shapiro:

bottle from my point of view, and that was never actually going to work.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and so now Trump is trying to reverse course when he actually did the damage.

Jacob Shapiro:

And to me, he probably reversed course because the CEO of Nvidia was on the

Jacob Shapiro:

stage with him at the event in the Gulf with all the investment and things like

Jacob Shapiro:

that, and probably said, Hey, Donald Trump, like, uh, things are gonna go badly

Jacob Shapiro:

if you don't lift these restrictions.

Jacob Shapiro:

And maybe Trump had some cronies who were long Nvidia and they

Jacob Shapiro:

wanted to see Nvidia stock go up.

Jacob Shapiro:

And so he was able to do that and, and sort of enrich, uh, and, and enrich them.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's, that's the much more cynical way of.

Jacob Shapiro:

Looking at the approach because China's gonna do that anyway.

Jacob Shapiro:

You brought up ass ML ASML is the really interesting one.

Jacob Shapiro:

You might remember, um, A SML didn't say where the money's from.

Jacob Shapiro:

Ass ML was like, uh, we're not gonna stop selling to China.

Jacob Shapiro:

Thank you for, for asking.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, but that's not something that we're going to do.

Jacob Shapiro:

And when the Dutch government started giving them problems, you might

Jacob Shapiro:

remember last year they were leaking.

Jacob Shapiro:

We'll, maybe we'll move to France.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe we're not gonna be in the Netherlands anymore.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, and the Dutch government then started pushing back against the

Jacob Shapiro:

United States along with the, with the Japanese government.

Jacob Shapiro:

And that's the thing that the Chinese can't do.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the advanced lithography equipment.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

That is the thing that they can't replicate quickly.

Jacob Shapiro:

Everything else, they've basically been able to do it and they're making

Jacob Shapiro:

advances when it comes to lithography.

Jacob Shapiro:

But you are dependent on A SML now to hold back the dam and they're not

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna be able to hold back the dam for,

Marko Papic:

but your point reveals several points of vulnerabilities

Marko Papic:

to the Jake Sullivans of the world.

Marko Papic:

Number one, America doesn't control all innovation on the planet.

Marko Papic:

Many of that innovation is controlled by the allies.

Marko Papic:

Number two.

Marko Papic:

You do not have the carrots and the sticks with which to incite your

Marko Papic:

allies to follow your orders anymore.

Marko Papic:

Because number three, China has not revealed itself to be an evil

Marko Papic:

empire like the Soviet Union.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

So everything will be solved.

Marko Papic:

If China invaded Taiwan, that would be perfect for the United States

Marko Papic:

of America because it could then go to the Netherlands and Japan and

Marko Papic:

France and say, aha, we told you so now we can, can we please now build

Marko Papic:

high fences around the technology?

Marko Papic:

But China hasn't done that because China's not, uh, what's the word?

Marko Papic:

Stupid like the Russians by the way.

Marko Papic:

Sorry, Russia.

Marko Papic:

But that's, that's why Vladimir Putin's not on our list of top 30.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

But she kind of squirmed his way in.

Marko Papic:

What, what I'm getting at here is that, uh, I think the problem

Marko Papic:

with the Jake Solomon view is that it's just, it's unrealistic.

Marko Papic:

It's built on a Cold War infrastructure.

Marko Papic:

Being able to bully your allies.

Marko Papic:

And the reason your allies cannot be bullied is because you don't

Marko Papic:

have anything to offer them.

Marko Papic:

That's why.

Marko Papic:

And

Jacob Shapiro:

well, and to put it slightly differently, it's also to do

Jacob Shapiro:

that you need an accompanying push when it comes to industrial policy, which also

Jacob Shapiro:

the Biden administration tried to do, but couldn't complete it, couldn't get, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, both houses on board with everything they wanted to do, even how big inflation

Jacob Shapiro:

reduction act haha was supposed to be.

Jacob Shapiro:

And so you didn't have this sort of space race, uh, mentality.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then also, like, you're not competing with the Soviet Union anymore.

Jacob Shapiro:

You're now treating with a country of over a billion people who's at the cutting

Jacob Shapiro:

edge of many different industries and is ahead of you on many different industries.

Jacob Shapiro:

You're not, you're not against, you know, some drunken guy in the factory

Jacob Shapiro:

and the Soviet Union who's just making up the data so that he doesn't get shot.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like China's a real dynamic economy in a way that the Soviet

Jacob Shapiro:

Union was not and never could.

Marko Papic:

So, yeah.

Marko Papic:

But, but, but that goes to another point that I would, I would wanna point

Marko Papic:

out, you know, uh, I'm of the view.

Marko Papic:

That the greatest, uh, sort of lever that the US can have in China

Marko Papic:

are those levers that empty China off its current account surplus.

Marko Papic:

And I know this is a little bit nerdy point, but what I mean is that when

Marko Papic:

China takes its hard earned money and takes it abroad for some reason,

Marko Papic:

that's a point of vulnerability.

Marko Papic:

Is it?

Marko Papic:

And if I was running the United States of America, I obviously am bathed in aloof

Marko Papic:

nihilism and couldn't care less who wins.

Marko Papic:

But if my interest was for the US to win, I would say, what is it that China buys?

Marko Papic:

Where does it take money and sends it abroad?

Marko Papic:

And there's really two things that it does.

Marko Papic:

Well, three.

Marko Papic:

One is oil.

Marko Papic:

Okay, well, he buys most of that from the Middle East and Russia.

Marko Papic:

So fine, let's leave that aside.

Marko Papic:

Can't really play that game.

Marko Papic:

The other two.

Marko Papic:

Are semiconductors.

Marko Papic:

So chips and tourism.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Yes, tourism sounds weird, but pre COVID.

Marko Papic:

Pre COVID tourism was actually the number one source of Chinese

Marko Papic:

capital outflows because tourism is effectively counted as an import.

Marko Papic:

You know, you're taking domestic currency and you're buying something abroad.

Marko Papic:

So if I was running to United States of America, the two things

Marko Papic:

I would've done is exactly what Donald Trump just did on the video.

Marko Papic:

I would say sell everything.

Marko Papic:

Make them grow addicted to these chips.

Marko Papic:

You want China to innovate as much as you can in ai, but you want that innovation

Marko Papic:

to rest on American infrastructure.

Marko Papic:

Oh, you want to invade Taiwan, yo normal chips, and you don't

Marko Papic:

have domestic production.

Marko Papic:

'cause it was so easy to buy Nvidia.

Marko Papic:

It's a sword of les.

Marko Papic:

The second thing I would've done is I would've gone in and said, no more visas.

Marko Papic:

For Chinese tourists, not because I don't issue them, but because

Marko Papic:

I say Chinese tourists can come to America without a visa.

Marko Papic:

Let's go.

Marko Papic:

And I would, I would like add airline flights to China like

Marko Papic:

50 a day from every major city.

Marko Papic:

Let's go.

Marko Papic:

Those are the, that's actually nuanced, second and third order

Marko Papic:

thinking, and I think that Joe Biden and Jake Sullivan had absolutely no

Marko Papic:

creativity and no domestic political backbone to do anything of that sort.

Marko Papic:

So they kept fighting with this first order, medieval Cold War mentality of

Marko Papic:

like, oh, let's put up restrictions.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

You know what happens in five to 10 years, China has its own AI infrastructure,

Marko Papic:

doesn't need you and can easily withstand any kind of a blockade you impose on

Marko Papic:

it, whether it's a capital blockade, whether it's a high tech blockade.

Marko Papic:

So.

Jacob Shapiro:

Good job.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, no, I, I, I agree with you.

Jacob Shapiro:

I just, I think that would, I think that's true of every single presidential

Jacob Shapiro:

administration going back to Truman and Trump started it, like Trump

Jacob Shapiro:

started it with Huawei, like he was the one that started this thing going.

Jacob Shapiro:

So absolutely pile on the shame for, uh, Sullivan and Biden being small

Jacob Shapiro:

c conservative when it came to this and thinking in a very, very old way.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, but I, I really, yeah, yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's a stretch for me to, it, it's a stretch for me that

Jacob Shapiro:

Donald Trump is sitting there thinking how you're thinking.

Jacob Shapiro:

Me like, aha.

Jacob Shapiro:

I have the sort of dam.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm pretty sure he is just like, I got some Nvidia stock with that, uh, proceeds

Jacob Shapiro:

from the Trump coin sales that I did.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's go, let's go to the moon.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's the kind of moon, moon project I want.

Jacob Shapiro:

You know,

Marko Papic:

look, we don't, we don't know, but you know,

Marko Papic:

like we can be open-minded.

Marko Papic:

That man changed his mind, you know, maybe, yes.

Marko Papic:

You know, maybe, maybe people around Trump finally read some cogent research

Marko Papic:

that wasn't just parroting the DC like lobbyists and actually convinced Trump

Marko Papic:

of an alternative way to fight this.

Marko Papic:

By the way, if you want to know.

Marko Papic:

How this actually turned out in the 19th century read history about the Opium wars.

Marko Papic:

That's exactly what I'm saying.

Marko Papic:

The United Kingdom did not stop trade with China.

Marko Papic:

It sold them heroin.

Marko Papic:

So when I talk about getting China addicted to American AI infrastructure,

Marko Papic:

the British were like, no, no, no, no.

Marko Papic:

We'll just make them addicted to heroin.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And now,

Jacob Shapiro:

and now China will make us addicted to Fentanyl.

Jacob Shapiro:

Right.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like that's the, the Opium War has come around, you know?

Marko Papic:

That's right.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

So your, your turn for, uh, the fifth beer.

Jacob Shapiro:

Alright.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, we should talk about Thailand, Thailand, and Cambodia, but there's

Jacob Shapiro:

nothing really to talk about.

Jacob Shapiro:

They had a border spat.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's already a cease fire.

Jacob Shapiro:

Malaysia sort of helped weigh in.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and I there there's a broader point there about how in multipole

Jacob Shapiro:

in a multipolar world, we're gonna have these brush fires,

Jacob Shapiro:

but they're gonna be contained.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I'll say that really fast.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I'll also just say that there was a new poll out about

Jacob Shapiro:

Trump's approval ratings.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, it's down.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's down from the beginning of July from to a new low in his administration,

Jacob Shapiro:

uh, from 41% to drum roll, 40%, which is also within the margin of error.

Jacob Shapiro:

So Trump continues to be the best analyst about his own charisma out there.

Jacob Shapiro:

He could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and no one would give a shit.

Jacob Shapiro:

We've had him.

Jacob Shapiro:

How long has it been of Jeffrey Epstein and if we got one percentage point that

Jacob Shapiro:

is still within the margin of error on a poll for how people are approving of

Jacob Shapiro:

Donald Trump, do they approve of him?

Jacob Shapiro:

No.

Jacob Shapiro:

His approval ratings are 40%, but they're down from 41%.

Jacob Shapiro:

And as long as the economy is fine, he's probably gonna

Jacob Shapiro:

be sitting there doing fine.

Jacob Shapiro:

And maybe he has powers of charisma that will allow him to boot, uh, to

Jacob Shapiro:

weather, uh, a turbulent economy as well.

Jacob Shapiro:

But those are, I, I just stole two, two.

Jacob Shapiro:

I had, I was a little mini beer flag that I, I snuck in.

Jacob Shapiro:

See what I mean?

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh,

Marko Papic:

what you did there, what you did there is you, uh, I think

Marko Papic:

that was a shotgun beer with shotgun.

Marko Papic:

Oh, yeah.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

A shotgun.

Jacob Shapiro:

There you go.

Marko Papic:

Just like, you know, uh, okay, cool.

Marko Papic:

Uh, what do I have to say about that?

Marko Papic:

Thailand, Cambodia.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

That's it.

Marko Papic:

In a multipolar world.

Marko Papic:

Get ready for this kind of stuff.

Marko Papic:

And you know what I called it?

Marko Papic:

Uh, I wanted to write a really long analysis on this, and then I realized

Marko Papic:

I would write, no, wouldn't read

Jacob Shapiro:

it.

Jacob Shapiro:

I had the same fee.

Jacob Shapiro:

I was, it was gonna be, I was supposed to write on substack about Thailand

Jacob Shapiro:

and Cambodia, and then the US EU deal came out and I was like, all right,

Jacob Shapiro:

I've got an hour and a half here.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

What am I gonna do?

Jacob Shapiro:

No, I was really looking forward to understanding it, but nobody would care.

Jacob Shapiro:

So,

Marko Papic:

listen, listen, the way I, I wanted to write about rev schism.

Jacob Shapiro:

I was, I was.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's good.

Marko Papic:

Rev Evangelism is back.

Marko Papic:

The problem is that like, you know, if there's a civil war in the Congo, if

Marko Papic:

Serbia takes over Republic Seka in Bosnia,

Jacob Shapiro:

if Azerbaijan takes back in the Gord Kab,

Marko Papic:

if a tree falls in a forest and nobody hears it, did it fall?

Marko Papic:

And, and like, I don't wanna only

Jacob Shapiro:

if only if Israel does it.

Jacob Shapiro:

If Israel does it, it fell.

Jacob Shapiro:

But everything else,

Marko Papic:

well, it depends.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Well, I'm gonna let you do that one.

Marko Papic:

Um, look, what I'm, what I'm getting at here is, uh, I think that we should expect

Marko Papic:

a lot more of this, you know, because ba basically what's happening is the rules

Marko Papic:

and norms of behavior are breaking down.

Marko Papic:

Uh, to Trump's credit, though, he did threaten both

Marko Papic:

countries with like a trade war

Jacob Shapiro:

who, with tariffs.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm sure that really resolved it.

Jacob Shapiro:

He is just trying to, he is just trying to boost his Nobel Peace Prize application.

Jacob Shapiro:

No,

Marko Papic:

no.

Marko Papic:

I, I totally agree with you, Jacob, but I, I think at least,

Marko Papic:

like he didn't just ignore it.

Jacob Shapiro:

I thought it was really interesting that he didn't ignore it.

Jacob Shapiro:

If he doesn't care about these things and he is not gonna sit in judgment, why is he

Jacob Shapiro:

out there threatening them with tariffs?

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe because he wants a Nobel Peace Prize.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think,

Marko Papic:

well, maybe, no.

Marko Papic:

Maybe the CCAs razor is he cares about human lives.

Marko Papic:

God, Jacob, why does everything have to be so cynical?

Marko Papic:

No, but listen, listen, I don't really care.

Marko Papic:

I, my point is just that it doesn't matter what America did.

Marko Papic:

The fact is this happened, you know, it's gonna keep happening in all sorts

Marko Papic:

of, so what you and I could maybe do as an idea, here's an idea that

Marko Papic:

comes out of this shotgun, uh, beer.

Marko Papic:

Maybe what we should do is a whole episode dedicated to

Marko Papic:

forgotten territorial disputes.

Marko Papic:

I tism, you know, like German and Poland over Esia.

Marko Papic:

Like, ooh, you know, like that would be a nice continental European just like fight.

Marko Papic:

And it doesn't have to be about wars breaking out.

Marko Papic:

Just why don't, why don't you and I spend like a month preparing a top 10

Marko Papic:

list of I dentist, ous, territorial disputes that come back to the surface?

Marko Papic:

Right?

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I love this idea.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sounds great.

Marko Papic:

Cool.

Marko Papic:

Like, maybe we finally have that war in Latin America.

Marko Papic:

Like, what was it, the Triple Alliance?

Marko Papic:

Like

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, that was a big one.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, that was the biggest one.

Marko Papic:

You not the only one.

Marko Papic:

Since then, I, I believe they've created a new rule in, uh, south America

Marko Papic:

where they just settle everything through, uh, football matches.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Uh, my last one, my last beer is, uh, well actually I am, uh, here still in the

Marko Papic:

British, uh, beautiful British Columbia.

Marko Papic:

So I was setting up this last, uh, part of our six pack and, uh, so I

Marko Papic:

went to dinner with, uh, this, uh, fantasy, uh, basketball league group

Marko Papic:

of guys that I've been honored to join.

Marko Papic:

It's a, it's a, actually a league that's been going on

Marko Papic:

for like 35 years, by the way.

Marko Papic:

It's an incredible story.

Marko Papic:

These guys have been together forever, uh, out here in Vancouver.

Marko Papic:

Uh, basically the commissioner, when he was a kid, his father had

Marko Papic:

to, uh, drive to point Roberts.

Marko Papic:

By the way, if you don't know what point Roberts is, it's a piece of the

Marko Papic:

United States of America that's like sticking off the coast of Vancouver.

Marko Papic:

It's completely isolated from the us.

Marko Papic:

It's like a little tiny territory of America that was

Marko Papic:

cut by the ignite parallel.

Marko Papic:

And so the dad would've to go to the, to this tiny little enclave

Marko Papic:

of America, uh, or Exclave.

Marko Papic:

I'm not, uh, it's an exclave to by USA today.

Marko Papic:

So they could by hand, Jacob by hand.

Marko Papic:

Cole told the statistics because this is pre internet, pre everything.

Marko Papic:

Like Microsoft Excel was like, you don't on a floppy desk.

Marko Papic:

I mean it was just insanity.

Marko Papic:

Anyways, I have the honor and privilege to be part of this, uh, fantasy league, and

Marko Papic:

I thought to ourselves, Jacob, we haven't really talked about basketball in a while.

Marko Papic:

Last night I was with these guys.

Marko Papic:

I keep getting my ass kicked.

Marko Papic:

I need some help.

Marko Papic:

And so what I was thinking is why don't we just spend the last five

Marko Papic:

minutes of our podcast, which we used to do often, and suddenly we've

Marko Papic:

stopped talking about basketball.

Marko Papic:

And I was like, let's start thinking who I should draft.

Marko Papic:

'cause these guys are absolute sharks.

Marko Papic:

I mean, they've been doing this back when they used pencil and paper and

Marko Papic:

erasers, man, like, I'm overmatched.

Marko Papic:

I need help.

Marko Papic:

I need some undervalued assets that are going to go for very little in

Marko Papic:

the auction, in the next fantasy draft that I should pick up.

Marko Papic:

So who are, who are the break?

Marko Papic:

And by the way, we don't have to have an answer right now.

Marko Papic:

I'm just like, this is a call for help.

Marko Papic:

If you're listening to this podcast, if you're a fan, you should

Marko Papic:

want one of the cousins to win this incredibly, incredibly, uh,

Marko Papic:

prestigious basketball fantasy league.

Marko Papic:

The JBL, that's what it's called, Johnny's Basketball League.

Marko Papic:

Uh, so help me help Marco win the league, who are the undervalued assets in 2020?

Marko Papic:

So either veterans who are gonna outperform expectations, maybe

Marko Papic:

Trey Young has a great season.

Marko Papic:

I know that's probably gonna give you brain aneurysm, Jacob.

Marko Papic:

'cause you are a, you're an Atlanta Hawks fan who's like, quit because, uh, because

Marko Papic:

he's such a terrible, terrible player.

Marko Papic:

Uh, but also like, uh, or someone who's gonna have a breakout season.

Marko Papic:

You know, those are my two categories.

Marko Papic:

All veterans who people have forgotten, but they have a, like a really

Marko Papic:

sneaky good season or young players who finally flower into an allstar.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, uh, before I answer that question, I just want you

Jacob Shapiro:

to know breaking, breaking news here.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, on the podcast itself, Gilbert Arenas has been arrested for operating an illegal

Jacob Shapiro:

gambling business at his Encino home.

Jacob Shapiro:

And also Kamala Harris says she will not run for governor of California.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm shocked, Kamala, that you came to the conclusion

Marko Papic:

she was gonna like absolutely win that one, you

Marko Papic:

know, but, but I, uh, yeah.

Marko Papic:

I mean, I think, you know what?

Marko Papic:

Gilbert Arenas and Harris.

Marko Papic:

Maybe good comps to one another.

Marko Papic:

By the way, Al also Gilbert dos, uh, the reason I know that story,

Marko Papic:

it's not breaking is because my JBL feed has informed me,

Marko Papic:

like, has already done it, John.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

This is the

Jacob Shapiro:

future.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is the future.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, we're no longer gonna go to the internet for news.

Jacob Shapiro:

We're gonna have personal intelligence networks that are gonna ping us that

Jacob Shapiro:

something's up because you don't know whether it's AI slop or not.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I guess my first the I'll, you know, by the way, it's not because I, I hate

Jacob Shapiro:

Trey Young, that I abandoned the Hawks.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's because the Atlanta Hawks traded the pick that was going to be Luca donates

Jacob Shapiro:

so that they could draft Trey Young, and then Luca went to the Mavericks.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, so it was, it was that move because I, you know, the Hawks were the team

Jacob Shapiro:

that they drafted Marvin Williams instead of Chris Paul, they drafted

Jacob Shapiro:

Sheldon Williams and Stella, Brandon Roy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Then they, I just couldn't, I couldn't stomach it anymore.

Jacob Shapiro:

And so I embraced the fucking pelicans, which really great timing on that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Oh, cool.

Jacob Shapiro:

Thanks Troy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Joe Dumars.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, I mean, I was just

Marko Papic:

gonna say, but Joe Dumars is not here.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know.

Jacob Shapiro:

So now I'm really now like the universe is like, well part of me is like, you know,

Jacob Shapiro:

I lived in Austin for almost 10 years.

Jacob Shapiro:

I have a couple Spurs jerseys, maybe I should just, but I

Jacob Shapiro:

can't embrace the Spurs now.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause that's front running.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, oh, when Victor is on your team, I'm gonna embrace the Spurs.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like really?

Jacob Shapiro:

But anyway, all of this is to say, my deep experience now with the Pelican says that,

Jacob Shapiro:

and maybe this is not dark horse enough for you, but uh, Trey Murphy third should

Jacob Shapiro:

be on your list, especially the eyes gone.

Jacob Shapiro:

Zion's probably gonna suck as long as he can stay healthy.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, he's gonna put up a lot of threes.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's got a lot of opportunities down here, I think.

Marko Papic:

Okay, that's good.

Marko Papic:

Uh, mine is Benedict Matran.

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

A good one.

Marko Papic:

You know, I just think that he's gonna have a breakout, uh, season,

Marko Papic:

uh, obviously with Halliburton injured.

Marko Papic:

So I think that's gonna be a, a really good one also.

Marko Papic:

Uh, look, you know, like an, uh, another way to look at that is Andrew Mhar.

Marko Papic:

I think, uh, you know, one of those two probably gonna

Marko Papic:

have to carry the look right.

Jacob Shapiro:

I also, um, I really like, um, Grady Dick in Toronto.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, Toronto's kind of a weird team, but I, I think

Jacob Shapiro:

he's got a lot of potential.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're in, they're in full on rebuild mode.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like that might be a good one.

Marko Papic:

The problem with Grady, Dick, I'll tell you is,

Marko Papic:

uh, so this, this fantasy league is, uh, exclusively Canadian.

Marko Papic:

And so every single Toronto rep player, yeah, it's just, there's a homer tax,

Marko Papic:

so he's already like, not just gone, but he's like gonna go for like 50 bucks.

Marko Papic:

You know, he's gonna go the same price as like, I don't know, an all star.

Marko Papic:

So grad Dick is already fully priced in this league.

Marko Papic:

So you gotta, you gotta be careful with home bias.

Marko Papic:

Um,

Jacob Shapiro:

you know, another, another one, um, who, who was the

Jacob Shapiro:

guy that Milwaukee just signed?

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, the, the guard, uh, God, what was his name?

Jacob Shapiro:

Cole Anthony, uh, on for Milwaukee.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, that's a really good one.

Marko Papic:

He was in, uh, Orlando, like, right, he was in

Jacob Shapiro:

Orlando and like, Milwaukee's just desperate.

Jacob Shapiro:

So they just need anybody to come in and handle the ball.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause they can't just be Giannis and Miles Turner and, like, call Anthony

Jacob Shapiro:

can score and, and he can do some stuff so that he, he's also just gonna get

Jacob Shapiro:

some stats by virtue of where he is.

Jacob Shapiro:

So,

Marko Papic:

yeah.

Marko Papic:

Another one, obviously I'm just, uh, picking off, you know, the problem

Marko Papic:

with these guys are too smart, so it's not gonna really work.

Marko Papic:

You're looking at like teams where like a star is gone.

Marko Papic:

Like, that's just not gonna work against these guys.

Marko Papic:

They're, they just are like a computer.

Marko Papic:

They're like ai, you know, everything is like, but Peyton Pritchard, you know,

Marko Papic:

if you're looking for a breakout season, I mean, he's already gonna be gone.

Marko Papic:

I think he's a keeper, actually.

Marko Papic:

Uh, so he's not gonna be available.

Marko Papic:

But I, I like Benton Pritchard, uh, Jayden Ivy in, uh, Detroit.

Marko Papic:

Also another one.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Uh, that's a good one.

Marko Papic:

Just because of, uh, you know, speaking of gambling Beasley obviously.

Marko Papic:

Um, yeah.

Marko Papic:

But, uh, I don't know.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I'm not sure.

Marko Papic:

I think Miles Turner.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, I mean, I, I have my doubts about what's gonna happen there.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um,

Marko Papic:

yeah.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Not, not, not a fan.

Marko Papic:

Don't think he's gonna like, put up numbers next.

Marko Papic:

No,

Jacob Shapiro:

he's, he's fine.

Jacob Shapiro:

You know who I've always rooted for, who's probably never gonna

Jacob Shapiro:

like, get to like Kevin Herder.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I, I'm always rooting for Kevin Herder and, you know, he's in Chicago.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, maybe he'll, I don't even know if Chicago resigned him.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know that he was at, uh, the Red Mamba.

Jacob Shapiro:

Red Velvet.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is another way in which I'm like, Silla Silla loves Kevin Herder.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I have also loved Kevin Herder since the Hawks drafted him.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's, he's, uh, he, he could really do some things if somebody

Jacob Shapiro:

would let him do it, you know?

Marko Papic:

Alright, well, uh, I just wanted to put that bug in the ear.

Marko Papic:

It's that time of the year I'm starting to get a little antsy

Marko Papic:

that, uh, basketball's been gone.

Marko Papic:

I mean, like, reread the Skinny Luca Men's Health, uh, article like six times.

Marko Papic:

Wow.

Marko Papic:

You are desperate.

Marko Papic:

Maybe three times.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

I am desperate.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Um, a couple of things on that.

Marko Papic:

One thing that I will definitely, so we haven't talked about basketball

Marko Papic:

for a long time, but next time we do talk about basketball, I'm going

Marko Papic:

to be all about the Euro basket.

Marko Papic:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

I think it's gonna be one of the most competitive Euro baskets ever.

Marko Papic:

So it's happening at the end of August.

Marko Papic:

Get ready for that.

Marko Papic:

You've got Yoki playing for Serbia.

Marko Papic:

I, he's not confirmed, but it looks like he will, obviously Don is

Marko Papic:

playing for Slovenia 'cause he's a psychopath and just wants to play

Marko Papic:

every time, which I love so much.

Marko Papic:

And I think it's gonna be an epic, epic battle.

Marko Papic:

Like every team is stacked.

Marko Papic:

Uh, German, Germany is obviously coming off of like a ton of

Marko Papic:

really great performances.

Marko Papic:

I don't think they're gonna have it again, but, you know, uh, what was it?

Marko Papic:

Uh, Feba, uh, there was that, uh, Feba, uh, Patty Mills.

Marko Papic:

You know, Feba Patty Mills.

Marko Papic:

There's a feba like Dennis Schroeder.

Marko Papic:

Like Dennis Schroeder got this huge contract and I'm like, were

Marko Papic:

they just going off of his like, international experience, you know?

Marko Papic:

So, uh, anyways, I think that it's gonna be a great, uh, great

Marko Papic:

way to get us into the NB season.

Marko Papic:

I can't wait.

Marko Papic:

And, uh, next time you hear from me on basketball, it's gonna be about what

Marko Papic:

happened at the Euro basket tournament.

Marko Papic:

Until then, though, everyone goes listening to this.

Marko Papic:

If you're a basketball fan, uh, please tweet at me.

Marko Papic:

Your favorite two, three undervalued assets.

Marko Papic:

I need help.

Marko Papic:

I'm never going to win this league unless we crowdsource.

Marko Papic:

Some, some like competition, you know?

Marko Papic:

And by the way, I have went Bama as a keeper, guys on a rookies

Marko Papic:

salary deal for two more years.

Marko Papic:

If I don't win next two years, it's like over like, oh no, they're

Marko Papic:

gonna, they're gonna like, make fun of me for the rest of eternity.

Marko Papic:

So,

Jacob Shapiro:

yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

So really what we need also listeners is somebody who makes sure that

Jacob Shapiro:

Victor doesn't have a return of his blood clots because what, what Marco

Jacob Shapiro:

really needs is sort of Victor to become the Thanos of the league that

Jacob Shapiro:

it looks like he's about to become.

Marko Papic:

Well I think that, uh, thankfully, uh, you know, there

Marko Papic:

are, uh, anticoagulants that he can take, so hopefully he is on them

Marko Papic:

for the rest of his life, uh, so that he does not have another blood

Marko Papic:

clot, you know, fingers crossed.

Jacob Shapiro:

Wonder what the tariff rate on those is on that note.