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Episode 30 to the freezing point of water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit, when I was thirty two, I started my first and last firm that would ever go public on the Nasdaq, the number of completed numbered piano sonatas by Ludovic von Beethoven, Lex Luthor, von Bitch, this podcast.

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Go, go, go. Welcome to the 30 second episode of the Property Show, today's episode, we speak with Roger McNamee, an American businessman, investor, venture capitalist and founding partner of the venture capital firm Elevation Partners. He's also the author of XOX Waking Up to the Facebook Catastrophe. We discussed the big news around the DOJ suing Google for violating antitrust laws, how the social platforms destroy democracy and what remedies can be put in place moving forward. We also get into the sharing economy and why Roger is hopeful for the next generation of innovators instead of reviewing the news.

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I think Roger cuts a lot of it down or distills a lot of it down in its relevance. So let's let's bust right to Roger.

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Roger, where does this pod find you?

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I'm in California, where it is still fire season, but we are enjoying a lovely early autumn day to. Nice.

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Good to hear it. So the big news today, today we have the DOJ suing Google for violating antitrust laws. So give us a sense of the action today and provide us with some context.

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So the Department of Justice has been pursuing Google in several ways for several years.

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And today the announcement is that they're going to sue Google with respect to search and to the monetization of search and the documents for the case. Reveal relatively little that is new, but describe patterns of behavior that have been around us for so long that few people question. The legitimacy of Google's business practices and the country is undergoing a reappraisal of economic policy, specifically with respect to the concentration of economic power and whether we should revive antitrust law to try to restore competition in the hope that it will also be something that helps democracy.

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My understanding antitrust law is it's not in among it's illegal to be a monopoly. It's illegal to abuse your monopoly power. Tell us how Google abuses their monopoly power.

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So if we think about economic policy broadly defined, there was a time when Monopoly itself was considered to be un-American. In fact, that really goes back to the founding of the country, that one of the things that the early Americans associated with monarchy was monopoly. And the choice to focus on capitalism, as defined by Adam Smith in 1776, was that it was inherently. Pro-democracy that lots and lots of small businesses competing with each other highly distribute economic power would be something that would help to further the American dream.

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Today, we are 40 years into a period of time when a different philosophy has prevailed, when essentially the notion was put forward by Robert Bork and others in the 70s, that concentration of economic power was not a problem so long as consumers didn't suffer higher prices.

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Hmm.

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That led to the extraordinary economic growth that occurred from 1980 to 2000 and to the extraordinary concentration of wealth that has taken place since 2000. And we're at a point now where prosperity is so unevenly experienced within the economy that. The vast majority of the population doesn't benefit from a long economic periods of economic growth. So if you're Google. This has been a perfect situation, the company gets started in the days immediately before 9/11, it enjoys after 9/11 the support of the government to build this civilian surveillance system.

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It builds what Shoshana Zubov describes as surveillance capitalism. This notion that you gather all the known data about the people who use your product, you use that initially to predict their behavior. You then sell those predictions to advertisers. You build an extraordinary business around that. You then create parallel and ancillary products that leverage the data that address different parts of the human experience and you gradually increase the efficiency. Of the economy capturing most of the economic gains for yourself by using algorithms to standardize human behavior.

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If you think about it, it's the sort of thing that only works if you have something that approaches monopoly skill. And in Google's case, you can see that in the case of this DOJ case relative to search. But it the same thing is true at browsers. The same thing is true in maps. Same thing is true in video and especially in the infrastructure that supports the online advertising economy. And so I think as far as the users of Internet products, we've all become accustomed to the notion that Google dominates and search.

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They dominate in browsers. They dominated video, they dominated maps.

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There are alternatives, but in many ways it's hard to get at them.

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It requires an ornery personality, which, by the way, I bring to this particular party because I have for the last three years, made avoiding Google into a life of work. And I treat it like a video game where you may remember Frogger, where you had to get across the river by hopping it from a log to log. And I treat this whole experience like Frogger. And I tried to the other logs, the logs going by the products you use instead of Google, Google thriver and you're trying to avoid falling into the river.

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It turns out to be incredibly difficult. And it took a year before I had weaned myself from everything but YouTube. And as somebody who is a musician as well as what I do in the daytime, I can't avoid YouTube because that's where all the music is.

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So the economic the economic harm of a monopoly seems pretty straightforward, right? Small companies can't get out of the crib. Big companies are prematurely euthanized. You've spoken about some of the innovation suffers, right?

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Being from a consumer perspective, you have fewer choices.

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Yep. Yep. And we don't we don't miss what we don't have or with. We don't know what we're missing, so to speak. You've talked about some of the other harms, though, in much more broader, even more frightening harms. What what are some of those speak to the speak to how Google and monopoly power is undermining our democracy and tearing at our fabric of our society.

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When I think about how Internet platforms went wrong, Monopoly underlies all of it, because with market power comes the ability to control other things. But there are privacy issues that have been raised and safety issues. And if we're thinking about democracy for thinking about public health, the safety issues of Internet platforms are what drive that. It is this notion that in order to build an advertising based business model, they have found ways to both grab our attention and hold it.

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And they play on the weakest elements of human psychology. Core to that is this idea that they will use their algorithms to promote content that is most likely to engage us emotionally. Right. If you want to do that, you want to appeal to fear and you want to appeal to outrage, because those are essentially the triggers of flight or fight, which is a survival instinct. Now, what content does that hate speech, disinformation and conspiracy theories. And so the algorithms will wind up promoting that kind of content and giving excessive power, both political power and other power.

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To the most extreme voices on their platforms, they've essentially made their information spaces a contest. Between facts and opinions, and they've given opinions, a massive advantage and so should be no surprise that that's undermined journalism. A situation was made worse by Google and Facebook and Twitter, inserting themselves between publishers and their audience and then using their ad tools to essentially siphon the economics away. But then you've seen directly in case of politics, the algorithms amplifying disinformation in ways that have caused our politics to be no longer.

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A battle of value systems against a shared set of facts, but rather a battle of essentially completely different realities, and there is no opportunity for compromise, no opportunity for constructive engagement. Now, overlay the pandemic here. Disinformation about covid conspiracy theories about vaccines have been layered on top of the disinformation related election to create a catastrophe so that our public health response to Koven. Was undermined by the exact same tools that have been undermining our democratic processes for the last four years, and that perfect storm took place in plain sight.

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And I think that that is going to remain the world we live in until policymakers implement through the law and through regulation. Requirements that they behave differently. Let's be hopeful and I've had my heart broken before, and I think you have to that that we're going to make some progress, they're going to be found guilty or they're going to their courts are going to say, all right, Google. All right, Facebook. There's a problem here. Let's move to the remedy side.

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What do you think of the most what technologies? What what is it? Rewriting our antitrust laws is of breaking them up as a new regulation. Is it a perp walk? What are the remedies here?

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Yes. So like you, my heart's been broken more times than I care to count. Yeah, I believe that we need to have a regulatory program with three distinct elements antitrust, privacy and safety. Antitrust is a structural remedy. It's super important. I really believe that the country loses out in terms of innovation, in terms of consumer choice, in terms of many different value things, because our tech industry, in fact, our whole economy is far too concentrated.

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It's more concentrated, spent any time in a century. Hmm. So we definitely need to do that. And I'll come back to that in a moment. But I want to touch on the other two first so we have context.

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The privacy issues are also super important because at the heart, Google, Facebook and increasingly Amazon or in the surveillance business. And the basic accepted notion is that any corporation that touches a piece of data can claim that piece of data as an asset and do with it as they wish. And this has given rise to what Shoshana's Zubov calls surveillance capitalism, where everything that is known about us every time we travel, every time we use a financial instrument or a credit card, any time we get a medical test or use an app or travel around the web or just every location we're in with our phone, all that data winds up in a marketplace.

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And when it is combined with the data that people like Google and Facebook have, it creates what Tristan Harris calls a data voodoo doll.

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It's our whole lives in digital form.

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Zubov believes and I agree that that data voodoo doll is simply a digital body part. And as such, we should view it as a human right, not an asset. You're not allowed to trade. You're not allowed to sell a kidney. Mm hmm. Why should you be allowed to sell your personal data? And especially why should anybody be able to just take it, claim ownership of it and use it without your permission? Right. So we need to have a very serious debate and much better stuff going on there.

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The safety piece is the one that gets the least discussion in many ways is the one that has the most potential for remedying harm already done. Silicon Valley operates with this notion of the minimum viable product, this idea that you create something new, you ship it into the marketplace and then test it, see how it goes, make changes, put it back out, test again, make more changes. The explicit assumption is that quality assurance is the job of the people who use the product that any harm experienced by those people or by other people who don't use the product but are affected by it, that that is not the responsibility of the company creating the harm, if you think about it.

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This is the only sector of engineering that I can think of where the engineers are not accountable for how they do in the building trades, the architect, the builder, the subcontractors are all responsible for their work.

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In fact, they're personally responsible for. In the medical field, if you make a pharmaceutical, you have to demonstrate safety before you're even allowed to ship the product and if you have a problem after that, you're accountable for. Chemical industry, at one time, it was OK for the chemical industry to pour waste wherever it was could be so they would pour mercury into fresh water or spew toxic fumes into the atmosphere. The country said, you know what, that's not going to work.

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It now is a set of rules both to prevent future harm and to remediate harm already been done.

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And I think the intersection of those three things is the framework that needs to be applied to tech, that it's OK to ship a minimal viable product, but you have to take responsibility for any harm that ensues. And it has to be at the individual engineer level because you have to change incentives and behavior. So the notion is, if suddenly. You're a product exhibits bias, and that deprives somebody of a job and that somebody sues. You're one of the people on the hook for that that's going to cause you as an engineer to be a lot more careful now they're going to push back and say, oh, but that's going to slow everything down.

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I'm going. Yeah, it is going to slow everything down, but in a way that serves the interests of humanity. And there's more to the safety thing than that. You know, we have Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act that is a safe harbor for Internet platforms that has been abused horribly. The First Amendment has been abused horribly. And we need to change incentives by clarifying that the people in this industry have some duty of care. They must take responsibility for what they do and there have to be economic disincentives for doing harm.

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Now, if you do that in combination with privacy regulation and antitrust, then you can accomplish two things. The first is to mitigate past bad behavior and limit future bad behavior by the existing players, by changing their business policy to their incentives. But every bit of support, you can encourage new generations of technology companies with new business models. I'm incredibly excited by that, that the level of monopolization that the industry has experienced over the last decade has meant that every new company has to operate with more or less the same value system because their end goal is to get acquired.

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Right. And so you see predatory business models everywhere. I mean, it's it's insane. I mean, you expect it with Robin Hood on Wall Street. Right. But but Uber and Lyft and Door Dash are so predatory to the people who drive their their sexploitation economy.

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Right. Spotify towards the musicians. Everything is exploitative. And, you know, in the old days, most of my career, most of your career technology was about empowering the people who used. And I want us to get back to that. I think that, you know, this notion of distributed identity, where people have control and where they actually get to have sanctuaries in their life, where people are not looking at them, that that will be a very exciting world.

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And I think it will be as we try to rebuild our democracy, rebuilding our economy around lots and lots of smaller business opportunities. You know, in the model I envision, there may not be a new Google or a new Facebook thing, but there will be thousands and thousands of really successful companies and they'll be all over the place.

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Right. They don't have to be in one small geographic area anymore. So to me, what I want to accomplish with antitrust is two things. I want to use it to encourage competition, to essentially create protected spaces.

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Where startups can try things that you couldn't try in a world dominated by a handful of giants, and then I want to make sure that the handful of giants have a need to not just change their business model, but to change their business practices so that they cannot do what the local telcos that were spun off from AT&T wound up doing in reconsolidate.

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The breaking up of these companies is the last step. Before you do that, you have to make sure that Good Housekeeping ideas like if you operate a marketplace, you may not so participate in it.

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So Amazon can't sell its own products into the marketplace and less regulation, an antitrust right. And Google and Facebook cannot favor their own products in there.

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Yeah, Apple, Apple TV plus Apple Music. Exactly.

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So they're all of those things in there. Those are all Good Housekeeping rules. And, you know, this is the place where Apple gets brought into the same conversation because they clearly have been less attentive to those issues than they should have been. But the antitrust issues that Apple faces are materially less significant to their business than they are to the other three, and they are less of a threat to the economy than the other three. But nonetheless, Apple's got real issues and as far as I can tell, is going to be forced to adjust its business pretty substantially.

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And anyway, when you've done all these other things, when you've reintroduced competition, when you have eliminated the ability of monopolists to essentially buy or create new things and pass along the benefits of monopoly to those things, when you've done all those things, then you break them up and you at that point have a much more diverse economy. And I think that's going to unleash a period of growth and innovation that will exceed anything we've ever seen before. Yes, sir.

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I mean, we're brothers from another mother around this stuff. Some of the some of the stuff around kadence in order, I wonder. Well, let me say a couple of things.

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One, the idea I like the idea of holding figuring out a mechanism for attributing specific actions to an individual. I wonder what that would mean, though, in terms of general corporate law, because even the you know, the guy or the gal that came up with Joe Camel, they said, all right, it's a corporation. The company can be sued, the company can be fined, but we protect the employees. They have this thing called a corporate shield that I think has served probably more good than bad.

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I think there should be a an ability to pierce that shield for the officers, you know, the CEO and his or her direct reports so that they think twice before the slow roll and knowing, you know, some of the emails we've seen from Mark Zuckerberg in discovery have shown that they're not they're just at a minimum, they're not very earnest about the steps they've been taken and also that they recognize the harm they've been doing.

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And also my sense is a lot of what we're talking about and tell me where I got this wrong we would get to with severe antitrust, like taking these companies. They just wouldn't have the power to do the harm they do, because when faced with more competition there and advertiser would have the luxury of selecting different options based on good and bad behaviors, that we would get a lot of that better behavior with just more competition. Am I being too simplistic about just we should just busted a breakup, take these four firms.

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And by the way, I think we could do this across Big Pharma, Big AG, this same virus that's infected us around the curse of bigness is Professor Tim Wu calls it. I think it's infected a ton of industries. It's just this is the one that gets the most attention because it does the most harm. But why wouldn't we just bust a move to antitrust and see where that gets us?

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So, Scott, I. I think you are right about antitrust relative to the economy as a whole. And I began with precisely the same view of how to solve things that you just presented in the past couple of years. I started to ask questions about the nature of human rights relative to privacy and related to the harms from the business model. And frankly, from the culture of tech that could not really be addressed through antitrust law and, you know, I think it's possible that antitrust law don't aggressively enough will, in fact, take care of everything.

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But the culture of Silicon Valley right now encourages entrepreneurs to create predatory business models and to cut corners everywhere. You think about Uber and Lyft or Airbnb, their starting premise was that the law did not apply to them. And if you think about Robin Hood, if we still lived in a world where brokers had a fiduciary responsibility to their client, could Robin Hood exist? Because if you think about it, you know, game of buying options, trading.

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Hmm. Is a strategy with predictable horror. And in a world where you're forced to be a fiduciary, that wouldn't arise. But we've long since gotten away from that. And I think what you're describing and what I'm describing is essentially we ran an experiment for 40 years of deregulating everything and trusting the market to allocate resources. What we forgot in that decision is that for capitalism to thrive, it needs to have some organization that sets and enforces rules. And traditionally, at least in our capitalism, that has been the role of government.

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It sets the rules and enforces them fairly.

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And by deregulating and defunding the government's role in the economy steadily for 40 years, we have produced what might well have been a predictable outcome, which is massive concentration of economic power, where consumers have few, if any, rights. And the country is going through a period of self-assessment right now. I mean, we've you know, we've got a pandemic. We have an economic collapse that's driven by that. And then we have the murder of George Foyt, which is causing us to reflect on our racist past and our racist present.

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So these things are causing us to ask what are our priorities? My sense I spent a lot of time in Washington is that the people in Washington really believe that we have to repair democracy first. That means voting rights. It means getting the census right. But it needs something more than that. It also means restoring a world where we have one set of facts. And politics is about bringing different value systems to bear against that common set of facts.

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And if we're going to do that, I mean, if we want to make any progress on any substantive issue, whether it's climate change, gun violence, public health doesn't make a difference what the issue is. You have to do something about Internet platforms. I don't see any way for antitrust law to pull that off. That requires you to think through the incentives of the industry. And to think through some business practices that are unique to this industry, the surveillance piece which they're now spreading to other industries but began here and then also this issue of whether you have an obligation to respect the right of self-determination of the people who use your product, because that is conspicuously lacking here.

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And again, I would argue that engineers in every other field are accountable when their products fail.

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You always open my eyes and stuff whenever I speak to you and I. You touched on a couple of things I want to talk about. One, I'd love to know if you think just two thirds should be removed or if it should be updated. And I also want to talk a little bit about Uber versus Airbnb, because I don't see the two as analogous. So let's start. There are two thirty removed or updated.

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So I would like to update I think it is core to any kind of safety regulation that you have to make the safe harbor. Conditional on good faith and determined efforts to protect the safety and the self-determination of not just the people who use your products, but anyone who's affected by them, which is essentially common to any other industry, it just happens to 30 provides a safe harbor here that has been interpreted very, very broadly. Airbnb versus Uber, I see Airbnb.

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Ah, I see Uber, and this is part of we started with this what are called manufacturing based economy, the service economy. We went to an innovation economy unlock for manufacturing and service products with the introduction of digital to, unfortunately, an exploitation economy. We exploit or arbitrage our rage. We exploit or arbitrage this permanent underclass of four and a half million driver partners. I do see Airbnb is different. I see them, as you know, they say the share economy is about Arbitraging Silow assets.

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Uber is not arbitrage in cars. It's arbitraging four and a half million people who are desperate for flexibility because they don't have access to the same opportunities as is other people. And I see Airbnb as in fact, arbitraging apartments and that the hosts actually make a better living than the drivers. You see, the two is analogous.

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I see aspects of them as being identical in other aspects and being very different.

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So they both started with the premise that the existing laws did not apply to them and they would ask forgiveness rather than beg permission.

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So not pay taxes, not pay hotel taxes, skirt laws and imposed. You can stay. You're not supposed to stay longer than seven nights. They would just ignore that without getting a hotel license, just kind of flout local civic regulations.

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Well, not just that they've flouted civil rights regulations. I mean, you know, there are really serious issues of. Racial bias. And er, at least that is my understanding, but let's move on to the other piece of this. Right, which is that er B and B created, as Hooper did, an illusion in the minds of participants about what the real economic model was. And the result is that there were more than a few people who invested in real estate to participate in that arbitrage you describe.

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Yeah. So they would buy a condo or an apartment and uses an Airbnb place arbitrage between the daily rate, if you will, and the ownership rate. And that that had a very, very negative impact on real estate prices, therefore, housing prices in many of the most important cities in our country.

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Well, it's a transfer of wealth from residents or renters to travelers ride. Travelers have more options at a lower price. Better value can rent a two bedroom in a great part of Manhattan or in Honolulu. And but the apartment owners in Honolulu see their rents go up because Jane, who had one Airbnb, found it was a great, great arbitrage and rented six apartments late and turned them into Airbnb is right. Right.

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Isn't some of that accomplished with shouldn't it be accomplished with taxation or just a higher minimum wage in the case of Uber minimum wage? That's not why you're working for us. But a certain number of hours, much higher minimum wage. And with Airbnb saying we are we have a housing problem, we have a housing stock problem, so we need you to pay those hotel taxes. It does feel like regulation.

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I think. I think I think Uber is is broken. And I don't I don't know how you it seems to me the entire business model is preying on. There's 20000 people at headquarters, four and a half million private partners who are desperate for flexible work, desperate to make some money, and are almost willing to kind of use their car as a payday loan. And it always ends up badly for them, whereas Airbnb does feel to me like there's a there's a pony and there are some.

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Yeah, let me let me agree with that. I mean, I believe that there could be a really, really interesting business in ride sharing among the.

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Argument that I made to a Michael the one time I met him many years ago was that I thought that Uber needed to either own the cars. Or employ the drivers or it had no vertical and that the the big flaw in this whole thing was that it's been a transfer of wealth from investors and drivers to the passengers and that the company has not been intellectually honest either, certainly not with the outside world. And I'd say probably not with itself about the viability of the strategy as it's been implemented.

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You know, they're spending, what, 250 million dollars to get Proposition 22 passed in California, which essentially locks into the LA. A sharecropping class, the issue that's involved here, I mean, the timing of it is perfect because the country really is asking questions about what kind of society do we want to live in. And the thing I take great hope from is that people are waiting in line five, seven, nine, 10 hours to vote.

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You see a level of engagement in our democracy that is unlike anything that you and I have seen since we were kids. And from that, I take great hope. And, you know, we've had a 40 year period where capital has had every possible break. And if we spent the next 40 years where consumers, you know, citizens and people who live here got every single break, that would be justice.

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And if I could wave a magic wand, it would be to get everybody to read either Juniper's history of the United States or any one of half a dozen others that give you the context for why the present moment is so out of bounds relative to our culture. And the United States has always lived around a mythology, and we've always been way too focused on, you know, things that weren't real, you know, these imagined virtues of the country. And every once in a while, we're forced to look at ourselves in the raw.

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And we're having one of those moments now. And when you're in that position, the point is not to talk about how bad we are, but rather to talk about what the opportunity is and how many good things we could do together. What are the things that we have in common? What are the things that we could create if we cooperate instead of fought with each other? And I find it ironic that the most extreme voices in the Republican Party are always harkening back to the.

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50S as some idyllic period, and I look at that and go, wow, that was the period when Americans believed in collective action.

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We had very high tax rates and we invested a Tomaro in public corporate tax rates are 70 percent or taxes on millionaires or 70 plus percent.

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My point was we invested in public goods like education, like health care, like transportation and middle class.

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And for the last 40 years, what have we done? We've been converting those public assets as public goods into private wealth. And, you know, bridges collapse and hospitals cannot adjust to a pandemic. Our supply chains are so thin we can't make personal protective equipment in a pandemic. We can't do enough tests. You know, it mean it's all of these things are not those are not signs of something working. Well, those are signs of something desperately in need of change.

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And this is the moment where we begin to choose what the future will be like. And the elections just the starting point. And in my mind, what's really great about the world that I live in is that very brilliant people have looked at every aspect of this and have some really cool ideas, not all of which are compatible with each other.

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But we can have a debate and we can collectively choose, and it's not going to happen overnight. This is this is a project that will take a generation or two. And that's the way it works in this country when it works well. And so I'm hopeful that the future will be much brighter than the past, because we really have the ability to say, you know what, these guys have had their day and that it's like playing a video game.

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They've won, declare victory. I mean, that's all that antitrust laws, antitrust law is you want.

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It's well done. We're going to break you up. Well done. Well, it's the prize at the end.

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And the thing that people forget in tech is that antitrust law, the application of it, has triggered almost every major way. Starting in 1956, when we locked AT&T into this narrow space that effectively created an independent computer industry. We were the only country in the world that had one that wasn't tied to its telephone company. We also took the transistor and put it in the public domain, which created Silicon Valley. The IBM case made software a separate industry data cell.

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Right. And it could go on to Carter phone, which created data networking, then the second AT&T case. I mean, you just look each time and so investors should be embracing.

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And so now we need to oxygenate the economy. You loosely speaking, the way I distill your argument down is there's always a usually healthy tension between capital and labor and capitalism and kicking the shit out of labor for the last four decades.

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Yes, it just and it's has gotten totally out of control. And even I would argue that there's the innovator class versus government. We've decided that it needs to be an innovator to put us on Mars versus NASA, that it's going to be a vaccine that saves us. We don't need to invest in the CDC. There's just been there really are some tensions that are out of whack. I want to finish up by talking to I've known you for a while, Roger.

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And one of the things that I don't think people appreciate is that most of the people in this fight have a vested interest in the fight beyond just trying to be good citizens. And you generally just bring citizenship to this. You are you are you don't own stocks. You haven't shorted them in these companies. It would be much easier for you to to maintain. I mean, I constantly get into Twitter wars with people. And the one thing that it tends to my haters have in common is a zip code, and that is they're all in San Francisco and you live there.

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I can't imagine the amount of shit you get on a regular basis. You're not a politician looking to be elected. You're not a professor looking for tenure. I don't really think you've written a book, but I don't think know that's not that important. You you are genuinely doing this because you think it's you think it's the right thing and you want to pay it forward, so to speak. I just a couple of questions for you.

[00:39:34]

Who are your heroes when you look it's thought leaders when you look at elected officials, who do you think we need to rally behind?

[00:39:40]

So, you know, in in the area of activism, the people who really stand out for me, Shoshana's Zubov is a hero of mine and her work is extraordinary. There's a woman out here who's a dear friend of mine named Judy Estra, who is one of the great technologists in the history of Silicon Valley and has helped me really become an effective voice on these things. There are in the various domains, you know, whether it's Safiya Noble or Joy while money in algorithmic justice, whether it's Cathy O'Neill, also in the algorithm space, whether it's it's Danielle Citron or Mary Anne Franks looking at the legal things.

[00:40:25]

I mean, there's a common thing that I'm pointing out here is that most of the really great people in my world are women. And so I follow them really closely. And it turns out in politics, something similar to that is true, although it's not it's not one hundred percent. You know, obviously, David Cicilline on the antitrust subcommittee is amazing. And the Democrat, Jan Schakowsky, who runs the Consumer Protection Subcommittee of Energy and Commerce, you know, you're going to see her a lot in twenty, twenty one because she's got both privacy and safety under her mandate.

[00:40:59]

Elizabeth Warren has been amazing on this stuff. In California, we have Anna Eshoo and Jackie Speier, who represent Google and Facebook and YouTube, respectively, and yet are absolutely front and center in this fight. Nancy Pelosi, who's been fantastic on it. So Lofgren and Adam Schiff, there have been a lot of members of Congress who've done really fine work around this. Yes, Senator Mark Warner and Senator Richard Blumenthal have been really important leaders and Ed Markey from Massachusetts.

[00:41:31]

So it's there there are a lot of people that I really, really admire there if I step back.

[00:41:36]

There's a man named Clarence Jones who was Martin Luther King's lawyer, and he's the guy who smuggled a letter out of Birmingham jail. He also did speeches. So he wrote the new portion of the I Have a Dream speech from the from the Washington Monument or Lincoln Memorial. He's been my mentor for my activism. He's one of the people I really, really look up to. And the leaders of the civil rights movement have always inspired me. And at present, that's Derrick Johnson at the NAACP and Rashad Robinson at Color of Change.

[00:42:11]

It's Jessica Gonzalez at Free Press, my dear friend Jonathan Greenblatt at ADL, and especially Sacha Baron Cohen, who has used his celebrity as the most powerful way.

[00:42:27]

And so, to answer your earlier point, I have a different set of friends now than I had.

[00:42:33]

You know, it is interesting, you know, when sounds like a more interesting set of, well, Silicon Valley people are wonderful and we see the world differently. We have different value systems and those are in conflict. And I'm not willing to just go with the flow.

[00:42:47]

And so that that tension is here and there's plenty of people here who are not interested in my point of view anymore. And that's their right. But, you know, I have persisted in the face of all kinds of pushback.

[00:43:05]

And you're right, I really feel like this country has been incredibly kind to me. And I owe it my best effort to give the next generation a chance equal to the one I had. And, you know, I don't know that I'm going to get there, but I'm doing my best. Roger McNamee is an American businessman, investor, venture capitalists and musician who's the founding partner of the venture capital firm Elevation Partners and author of Zuks Waking Up to the Facebook Catastrophe.

[00:43:35]

He joins us from his home in San Francisco. Roger, you continue to be an inspiration for me. I want to be as successful as you. I want to be as fearless as you. I want to be as thoughtful as you.

[00:43:47]

You you have a nice means of making your point without ever antagonizing or disparaging people. I think there's a really nice grace you're being. Do you bring to an important argument. So keep up the good work, brother. Thank you very much. A friend back at. Stay with us. We'll be right back. So take it from me. What's a social dilemma on Netflix, not only entertaining but important? In the documentary, tech insiders explain how social media is engineered to exploit users data for profit.

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[00:46:51]

Welcome back. It's time for office hours as a reminder, if you'd like to submit a question, please email a voice recording to office hours at Section Forbes.com. You know, you want to office hours, that section for dotcom, question number one.

[00:47:07]

Hey, Scott is poll here from London, a big fan of the podcast. Please keep it going. I wanted to ask a quick question today around the stock market, recent content that suggests that the stock market is while overinflated. That's my opinion also. And I take from your comments that you believe a crash is pretty imminent if that happens. I wanted to know whether you've got your eye on any particular companies that you believe have huge potential, but currently their share price is too high.

[00:47:37]

Will you be going out and purchasing stocks when the share price falls? My understanding is that to date exclusively invested in the big four. The other any of the companies that catch your eye and are just currently priced too high. Thanks, Scott.

[00:47:51]

Thanks, Paul, from London. Thoughtful questions. So first off, there is some wisdom to our, I think some credibility to the notion that you always want to be in the market. It is very difficult to time the market because, well, I think the market is overvalued and frothy right now. The obvious question will be, well, why would you sell? It's difficult to know when to sell. And there is something to be said for always being in the market, because the analysis of the research shows if there's just like 11 or 12 days you missed in the last 10 years, you'd miss half the gains.

[00:48:25]

And so it's difficult to decide, OK, I'm going to be smarter than everybody else and put a bunch of cash on the sidelines, which earns no money and then move back in. I think what you can do is be a little bit more diversified such that if the Nasdaq sheds 70 or 80 percent of its value, you don't get hurt quite as bad. Anyways, the question, what stocks would I buy if they were trading at more reasonable multiples?

[00:48:49]

So I think Disney is already there. I think that's a great stock trading at what I call a cyclically impaired price. The stock I don't think it's gone up much in the last five or even maybe 10 years. And that has huge assets.

[00:49:03]

I think Zoome and Peloton this remote, this does shift is dramatic shift to remote and whether it's moving from the real estate of gyms or the sweat industrial complex moving to work from home. I think Peloton is a fantastic company and there's a floor on it because I think if it were to get below a certain price, Apple would likely acquire at Zoome obviously seems to have kind of run away with remote communications and anything, you know, Amazon at anything below where it is.

[00:49:31]

I would probably buy more just because I it's hard for me to imagine a company that's just firing on all twelve thousand cylinders the way Amazon is. And quite frankly, and I hate to say this, probably some of the fossil fuel companies, I think that when you look at the dividend in the fact that, OK, while we have two million electric vehicles on the road, there's one point two internal combustion engines and you might have a moral problem.

[00:49:54]

And I respect that wanting to have moral clarity around your investments. But I think even the fossil fuel guys are beginning to look ridiculously cheap. And if they got any cheaper than this on a risk adjusted basis, they would be good investments. But I would largely invest around trends around the movement, from university learning to edtech, insurance, tech, fintech, anything that takes advantage of the massive the massive transition in capital, both human and financial, from one huge asset class, and that's commercial real estate to residential.

[00:50:26]

What does that mean? If Restoration Hardware stock came down? It's gone from about 70 to four hundred in the last six months of that stock came back. I'd buy it if some of the home builders came down, I'd probably buy them because I think we're going to see people decide to spend more of their money on home and we'll even see their employers give them more money for their homes. I think so. Anyways, a bunch of companies I like if they got cheaper.

[00:50:46]

Difficult to know when to send such. You have that dry capital. My advice is be diversified. If you're my age such you don't get hit quite as hard and do what you're doing and that is do some research and buy the stock and then put it away. I like to buy stocks and own them for a long time because I think it is very hard to trade stocks anyway is a thoughtful question. Thank you, Paul. Next question.

[00:51:07]

Hi, my name is Scott from Buffalo, New York. What are your thoughts on moving into industries that have seen recent digital communication acceleration like health care with telehealth and mortgage with remote online notarization? These trends don't appear like they will be changing once the pandemic subsides. And Zoom or one of its competitors already seems to be a centerpiece in these processes. Thanks.

[00:51:28]

It's an interesting idea to go vertical in certain niches, right? The idea of them becoming starting to offer health care, I presume health, not just idea, just blows my mind.

[00:51:41]

Sume, health, or would they rather just be the infrastructure? You know, Cisco never went into e-commerce. They decided to sell the routers. I think it's a pretty good business being the infrastructure play they are. If I were going to go shopping and I assume I would probably go by, acquire a telco and see if I could offer general telco services. So I think there's probably places I think they want to go, if you will. I think their acquisitions want to be more around infrastructure and communications and technology as opposed to specific industry verticals.

[00:52:17]

But that I don't know. I don't know. I'm I'm learning from you, Scott. That's that's an interesting idea. Gangster move.

[00:52:23]

They buy ninety eight point six or they buy one medical or they buy what is one of the bigger kind of remote medicine companies and start a vertical called Zoome Health. The question is, what is Xoom bring to that party other than, I guess, a certain amount of ubiquity? But I think those companies are going to use Zoom anyway, so I'd have to think about it.

[00:52:45]

I have to think about it. But with a market cap of one hundred fifty seven billion dollars, they should absolutely go shopping. I just wonder if they buy a small telco like a Telefonica out of Spain and take those prices way down and see if they can begin to disrupt the traditional telecom market. I think a company like AT&T and Verizon, I think they are becoming impaired. These stupid acquisitions of AOL, Yahoo! And Time Warner, they clearly overpaid and they're going to be so distracted, trying to clean up, trying to scoop up all the shit of these failed acquisitions.

[00:53:19]

I wonder if they'll if they're not making the requisite investments in their technology and if a company like Zoome could come in and leapfrog and offer AT&T services for dramatically less money, it seems like those guys are kind of ripe or sticking their chin out anyways. So long winded way of saying I haven't really thought about it other than to say they should absolutely open up the checkbook and start thinking about whether they're going to go horizontal. And that's by other telcos, if you will, or other communications companies or if they're going to go vertical and get into specific niches.

[00:53:50]

But my mind is blown. Scott, you've inspired you've inspired an interesting question that has catalyzed a lot of thought. Let me come back in a few weeks with a better answer. Scott from Buffalo, next question.

[00:54:00]

Hey, progeny, this is Matt in from London as well. Mike, I wanted to get your perspective on the latest developments in the crypto space. You've been pretty bearish on Bitcoin in the past, given the Fed is printing trillions of dollars now to prop up the U.S. economy with no real end to the current crisis in sight, combined with the news that increasingly bigger players in finance and tech such as MicroStrategy and most recently Jack Dorsey Square, are now making significant investments in Bitcoin as a hedge against inflation.

[00:54:25]

Has your opinion on the prospects for Bitcoin changed? We'd love to hear your thoughts on how you see the future of Bitcoin developing over the next few years and its potential to disrupt the legacy financial landscape. I love your show. Might keep up the good work.

[00:54:36]

Chase Matt from London, thanks for the call. It seems like we're big in the UK. Is it because when I was a kid, I was a dual citizen. No joke. My mom got me dual citizenship. Why? Because Reagan invaded Grenada. My mom was worried I was going to be drafted, so she got me dual citizenship. She is a British citizen. And what do you know? About three months after I was granted dual citizenship, I got a letter, a letter from the queen saying I needed to register for conscription because they had just declared war on Argentina in the Falkland Islands and they were sending out letters and get ready for the draft.

[00:55:07]

Boy, was my mom bomb. Talk about the mother of all unintended consequences.

[00:55:12]

But anyways, I'm clearly big in the UK. Their dog is clearly big in the UK. So back to your question. October eight, twenty twenty Square announced it had purchased approximately 50 million dollars worth of Bitcoin, and if the stock hadn't skyrocketed, the board and investors would have been what the fuck? We don't need you to buy Bitcoin, Four-Square said in a statement that I believe is a cryptocurrency as an instrument of economic empowerment and provides a way for the world to participate in a global monetary system.

[00:55:41]

Hmm. In September of twenty twenty. Not to be outdone, MicroStrategy purchased 175 million dollars worth of Bitcoin. To date. The company has purchased almost a half a billion dollars in Bitcoin. That is because Michael Saylor, who I think is a genius I've known Michael for a while, has basically gone in all in on Bitcoin. He does a fantastic hour, did a fantastic podcast type in Michael Saler podcast Bitcoin that really illuminated or I thought brought home some of the power of Bitcoin.

[00:56:12]

I have been, as you pointed out, a bit of a Bitcoin bear, and that is some of it is one I don't know. You call it ignorance, bias. I don't understand it. So I don't want to like it. And I'm also, I think, a little bit pissed off that I didn't participate in its massive run up. It's a currency, as far as I can tell. The thing that Michael Saylor said that really struck me was that this is something you can trade 24 hours a day, that it provides more liquidity and therefore more stability.

[00:56:40]

I don't understand the mining. I don't understand how supply can be limited, but I don't believe the network has been hacked. I do believe it's an interesting hedge. And and that's where I go, and that is I am thinking for the first time, then I might buy some Bitcoin because I'm at a stage in my life where after having been run over by a truck, actually, that's not true. Run over by a fucking truck in two with the dotcom explosion.

[00:57:05]

And then again in 2008, I finally started making some money in my 30s, mostly because of my white, bald heterosexual born in the right place at the right time. I thought, OK, OK, I'm going to be wealthy. I can almost care for the restaurant alive. Kaboom. No longer wealthier, economically secure.

[00:57:22]

Scratch my way back. The dog comes back 2007 almost there again. Kub boom. And now I am back or I feel I'm in a better place. But there's only so many more sonic booms of wealth destruction I can, I can endure. And I met. I'm at an age now where there's just not that much time to make it back. So I'm getting much more. My horns are being drawn in and one of the ways you draw in your horns is through diversification.

[00:57:48]

Now, Bitcoin, despite what Bitcoin bulls will say, I think it's more linked to the market than they would likely profess. I'm pretty sure it took a pretty big hit in March lows. So there's something going on here where there is nowhere to hide that all asset classes are somewhat linked now in our intra digital economy. But I do think there's an opportunity with Bitcoin that it could for some freakish reason, the same way it went from one hundred bucks to twelve thousand, that it could go to one hundred thousand dollars.

[00:58:19]

So I'm thinking and again, I was anchor off, I can never buy a stock where it is. I immediately start thinking I want it twenty percent off of where it is. But for some reason in the back of my mind, I have this notion that if it gets below nine thousand bucks, I might take not a huge amount of my net worth, but a meaningful amount and put it in Bitcoin, because I do think it's it is different.

[00:58:39]

It is a form of diversification. Yeah, it does have it's not pure alpha. That's bullshit. There are some beta there. There's some link. But I do like it and I do think there is a non-zero probability it could go up 10x. I wouldn't put more in it than you are willing to lose 90 percent I don't think goes to zero. But this thing just feels odd to me. The thing I don't like about it is you have to put it on some sort of thumb drive and you can lose that thumb drive.

[00:59:05]

I lose everything. And so the notion that I would have all my Bitcoin on something I could lose scares the shit out of me. But that's neither here nor there a bottom line.

[00:59:13]

I am looking at Bitcoin for the first time. Matt from London, thanks for the call. Keep sending in your questions again. If you'd like to submit one, please email a voice recording to office hours at Section four Dotcom. Just to wrap up today's episode, I'm going to reinforce a moment of inspiration that Roger brought up, and that is these voting lines. And I believe that the Republican Party has basically said we're the white patriarchy and the white patriarchy has worked for a long time and a lot of societies.

[00:59:50]

And we're asking you to support us. And unfortunately, America, as sheer numbers, no longer supports the white patriarchy because it's gotten less white and less patriarchal. So we are moving to flat out voter suppression. And that is a terrible accusation. And I believe the data is on my side. The communities of color communities that have been economically disenfranchised have purposefully and deliberately been choked of resources such that they no longer have access to what is one of the key functions or attributes or benefits of our society.

[01:00:26]

And that is the right to vote. And I just I just think it's wonderful. I think it's inspiring. I think if you want to feel better about America, to just look at these images of people waiting eight hours in line, I think of 9/11 and I think of the flight that ultimately ended up crashing in a Pennsylvania field. And that is because planes now have phones on them when the plane was commandeered or hijacked, if you will, by the terrorists.

[01:00:58]

People began calling their loved ones. And a couple of things happened, one or a couple of things registered when they did kind of forensics on these calls. The first is once they realized they were on a plane that was headed for imminent doom, they didn't call to settle grievances.

[01:01:15]

They didn't call to they didn't call to give last rites. They basically called with one thing, and that is to tell people that they loved how much they loved them. Full stop. That was the common theme across all of these calls.

[01:01:28]

And so what did they do with this information? What do they do when they knew that, OK, this wasn't like previous hijackings, they weren't heading to Cuba, they were heading towards their imminent death. They thought, OK, what do we do? Do we hope that they changed their mind? We hope that fighter jets show up and somehow guide the plane down to a safe landing. Or do we crash through the cockpit door using a meal cart, using a meal cart and attempt to basically take the plane down, knowing that that would kill all of us?

[01:01:57]

Certainly, but knowing we would probably save people on the other side. So you have two or three hundred people in the back faced with this terrible decision, what to do. So how did they make this decision? How did they make this decision? And what is a moment of incredible stress, of an unprecedented situation? How do they how do they decide what they're going to do? They voted. Our producers are Carolyn Chagrinned and Tuberose, if you like what you heard, please follow, download and subscribe.

[01:02:31]

Thanks for listening.

[01:02:32]

We'll catch you next week with another episode of the show from Section four and the Westwood One podcast network.