EPISODE

EXTRA: Russian Oligarchs, Putin, and Sam and Shaan's Thoughts on Ukraine

Mar 03, 2022·47:00·Sam & Shaan·with Ben Wilson·Listen·AppleSpotify
0:0023:3047:00
13 moments · 119 paragraphs · synced to the second
SAM

This guy, this Ukrainian guy, their, their leader, this guy is badass. Have you seen like him just wearing like green t-shirts giving press conferences? Yeah, he, he's amazing. This guy's amazing.

SHAAN

This guy's, uh, I don't know much about him. I don't know what's going on. I don't know what's like kind of media portrayal versus whatever else, but the guy does come across like a goddamn hero.

SAM

All right. Let me tell you a quick story. I don't know if you're going to like this topic, so I want to get it out of the way. If you like it, we could spend the whole time on it, but I'm not sure if you're going to be into this. All right. So, yeah. Yeah. So it's about the most popular thing going on right now, the Ukraine-Russian conflict. It's not exactly about Ukraine, but it's about Russia. So something that I've always been interested in is the Russian oligarchs. So have you ever studied those folks?

SHAAN

Not studied, but, you know. Okay, tell me about it.

SAM

Okay, so this starts— I'm reading a thing, so you're going to see me look off. This starts on November 3rd, 1995, in a remote Siberian town called Surgut. Basically what happened in this small cabin, an auction took place for the right to lend the cash-strapped Russian government tens of millions of dollars. So basically in '95, the Russian government wasn't doing so hot and they needed money. And so they got these banks to come to this meeting and they said, we need some money, we need to borrow some money. And also as collateral, we're going to put up shares of some of the large state-owned companies, because at this point Russia was basically going from being a communist nation to being a private country. And so they still had some like state-owned oil companies, mineral companies, basically like If you think of ExxonMobil, they like the government, like owned that. And at this point they were trying to figure out how do we make this so private individuals can do this. And so at this meeting, basically only 2 bidders showed up. And if more bidders wanted to come, it was kind of a pain in the ass because conveniently there were no more flights. The airport shut down and you couldn't even book a flight to come into, into this small town. By the way, your camera's— Okay, you're there. And so basically what happened at this, like, small cabin is one company made a bid to buy a— or to loan money to the government. They loaned it. They loaned something like $500 million, and that was like $100,000 above the opening bid. So people were bidding to loan money. And so this bank loaned money to the government. And then the government had to pay back the loan at a certain point, like something like a year later. And if they didn't, the bank then was given the collateral. So the shares in this company to auction off and they could keep 30% of the profits. So obviously the government didn't pay back the money and there's like a lot of like wondering why they didn't pay up, pay it back. Basically, the idea is that the current president was like, Obviously, this is all like, we're all planning this, so don't pay this back and give us a little bit of whatever.

SHAAN

So they don't pay it back. You're saying it's collusion, that basically there was a handshake, wink wink agreement basically of what's going to happen here.

SAM

Yes. And so the government doesn't pay back the loans. And so now this bank is basically now has a minority ownership in like 12 large state-owned corporations. And they basically holler at 8 to 10 guys, guys who are already relatively successful. And they basically said, do you want to make a bid on this company? I'm going to make sure no one else bids on this company, but I'll give it to you. You interested? And that's exactly what happened.

SHAAN

And why would they do that? Why would they hook up these individuals in that way?

SAM

They did it for 3 different reasons. The first reason, and a lot of this is just like hearsay, The first reason is the person who was president at the time. Who was it, Ben? What was his name? It was the fat guy who had a heart attack.

Boris Yeltsin.

SAM

Yes. He was basically said to these 8 or 10 businessmen, I'm going to hook you up. You guys hook me up when I'm, when I'm, when I'm in office, hook it up. I'm going to hook you up, whatever. So that's one theory. The second theory is that they wanted experienced managers in, in to run these companies. And the third theory basically is even though these 8 to 10 oligarchs put bids on these companies and basically they bought the equivalent of ExxonMobil. So we're talking about like a company that's worth billions of dollars. They paid $100 million for this company. And so these managers, these oligarchs, these 8 to 10 folks, a lot of them were mildly successful, but they were all in on the government. They were all friends and friends. You know, they're all homies. They basically— they did take on risk. So like these companies did have debt. And like they had to go and like collude with other people and fire the rest of the managers at the company. So it was basically a, almost like a PE thing, but it was like pretty dirty.

SHAAN

All right. And then I forgot to tell you this, but this is the most important thing. Uh, I can't believe we didn't talk about this earlier, to be honest with you, because if you're listening to this and you like what you're hearing right now and you haven't gone and subscribed to the My First Million podcast, wherever you get your podcast, then that's the thing you gotta do. There's nothing more important than doing that right now. And don't do it because I said to do it. Do it because you want to do it. Do it because that's who you are.

SAM

And the government was like, yeah, we need— we want like these mercenaries to be in power because if they make these companies better, our, you know, our government's going to be better. The Russia is going to be better. And so they basically— profits after, after this whole deal, profits to these companies grow by 50x, market caps go up by 100x. And so there's— here's an example. The reason I got interested in this is there's this guy named Roman Abramovich. What's his name, Ben? How do you say his last name?

I think it's Abramovich.

SAM

We're going to call him Roman.

SHAAN

So Roman even knows what the hell you're talking about right now is impressive. And he's like a— he's like a part of your brain that's like outside of your body. And you're like, brain, what's that name?

SAM

Oh, Roman's famous. Roman owns— we're just going to call Roman. He owns Chelsea, the soccer team. So he's like a famous guy and he owns like this, like, you know, 200-foot yacht. He's like a big deal. And basically he paid $100 million. Him and his partner Boris paid $100 million and they've just— they came up with a little bit of money and then they went and hollered at like other rich people and they said, hey, loan us some money, let's buy this company. They paid $100 million for a company that is now like the 8th or 10th largest oil company in the world. So imagine paying. In the mid-'90s, imagine paying $100 million for ExxonMobil.

SHAAN

Right.

SAM

Insane. And so these companies explode. Now, they explode partially because basically what these owners did, these 8 to 10 oligarchs, what they did was they purposely tanked the company so it sucked for a long time, and then they bought out the rest of the minority shareholders. So it was, again, cronyism there. And second, these were government-run companies, so they were shit. And so these private individuals, they did a pretty good job of making them better, and they became far more profitable. And this created like 8 to 10 guys that were worth like up to $40 billion. So, at one point, one of them was worth $83 billion. And, you know, things have changed, but it created so much wealth between these few folks. And it also like trickled down. So, here's the craziest part is that a bunch of the managers of the company. So basically, there was like the pre— there was like the Minister of Oil or something like that as a government official. He becomes— he sets up this— these— one of these companies. He eventually becomes president of one of the companies and now is worth $8 billion, even though he was like a government official. So I thought it was interesting because I actually wanted to read a book about these folks because I'm like, oh, who's this, like, rich guy that owns Chelsea Football? Let me, like, go and learn from him. And what I realized is, like, I pretty much can't learn from him. I mean, I could maybe learn some stuff, but like, his process is not, like, replicable. I can't replicate it because he was like 38 and Russia had just fallen and he basically turned $0 into— he's worth now like $20 billion all through this cronyism. But I thought it was incredibly interesting. Have you not heard about these folks?

SHAAN

I've never heard any of that in my life. It's crazy. It's like a— it's like the Big Bang for like Russian rich oligarchs. It's like there was this one meeting and it kicked off this series of events. That like, you know, seems kind of unfathomable how that would be allowed to happen or just happen. But then they also consolidated power, right? Like, didn't Putin basically like take all their money and consolidate their power?

SAM

Here's the second interesting part of the story. And I actually learned this from listening to Ben's podcast. So basically Putin was considered like the anti-corrupt guy for a minute. Like when he was elected, he was like, you know, I'm not going to stand for that nonsense. And he made an example of one of the guys, one of the billionaires. His last name starts with a K. I'm not going to try to pronounce it. It's a challenge. He put this guy in jail for 14 years and he literally put him in. So in Russia, for some reason, they put you in these like cages and you could like take pictures of these folks. Have you ever seen that? Like a, like a Russian serial killer picture or anything?

SHAAN

Like, wait, so it's like visible from the outside, you mean?

SAM

Yeah, it's like the mugshot, but it's like literally a cage that sits on you and people can come and like take pictures. It's weird. And anyway, this guy was worth at the time like $15 billion. And Putin arrested him for not paying taxes, things like that, and put him in jail for 14 years. And he goes to the other guys, he goes, you want that to happen to you? No. All right, let's play. And so a lot of people think that Putin is the richest man in the world. And he owns one of the most expensive homes in Russia and in the world. It's like a billion-dollar, $2 billion house. And people are like, well, How'd you do that?

SHAAN

It's a lot of people think— dollar house.

SAM

Yeah. Ben was telling me all about it.

SHAAN

There is a billion dollar house. Wow. I didn't even realize that.

SAM

It's, it's got like, it's got skyscraper.

It's yeah. It is like this whole complex. It's got private beaches. It's got like pools on pools.

SAM

It's got guest houses.

Basically got a hotel on it. It's like a house is maybe not the right way to think of it, but it is a house. It's a private residence for Putin.

SAM

And, but basically, there's no proof of this, but a lot of people— because even when the Panama Papers released, they couldn't find Putin's accounts. But basically, uh, a lot of people are like, well, so he made an example out of this one guy, uh, and he went to the rest and goes, y'all want to play? Let's play. And, and, and now Roman, by the way—

SHAAN

I was really hoping you'd attempt a Putin accent there. Kind of disappointed, not gonna lie. The story is good, but it's just missing that little something. I think you are, Ben, giving it a shot. Ben, I think you have a little, a little bit of the Russian twang in your speaking.

You could— yes, they say me, I— they tell me I speak good in Russian accent. I will try. Is this like racist?

SAM

Can I do this? Is this okay? I don't know, don't worry, it's borderline. I don't think it's a race.

SHAAN

This—

we are—

SHAAN

we have the, the cancellation vaccination. You're allowed to do a, uh, a funny, funny accent here, and people—

SAM

as long as it's Russian.

SHAAN

If you're listening and you took that too seriously, just swipe over and delete the podcast and go on with your life.

SAM

And to wrap this up, basically, the way that these guys all work now is a lot of these oligarchs are part of, like, the peacekeeping. Like, they're part of— they're helping Putin, like, negotiate peace. So, like, the inner— the way that this shit's intertwined is just bananas. It's crazy. And I was, like, trying to learn about these folks, and I was like, "Oh, well, like, there's nothing to learn here. I can't do this. Like, this is just crazy." And these guys are so wealthy. And so it's trickled down. But if you basically— A lot of them, when that happened, were in their 30s, like 35, 38 years old. And that's why I got interested in this, because I was— I remember years ago reading about these folks. I'm like, how does a 38-year-old become worth $3 billion? What the hell? How did a 38-year-old become CEO of a diamond mining company?

SHAAN

And it was a stupid question. What does the word oligarch actually mean?

SAM

I think it just means when there's a small group of people that are in power. But basically it's sort of like a cartel, basically. Yeah. Not— well, it's like, what do you say, Ben?

It's just like typically the way that it is classically defined is over here you have a monarchy, which is ruled by a single man. Over here you have democracy, which is ruled by everyone. Oligarchy sits in the middle of like rule by a few people. Right.

SAM

Yeah. But when we talk about Russian oligarchies, a lot of times people will say that just means like Russian rich people. Russian wealthy rich people. The way that I'm using it is that there was literally like 9 guys who were given like these 12 companies. And now amongst those 9 guys, there was like dozens more where like Roman was like, hey, I need a homie, I need a cousin to come and run this thing, hook it up. And so there's like— it's trickled down beyond that. And so now there's hundreds of them. Quick interruption. Do me a favor, scroll down and you're going to see a link to The Hustle. So if you want to stay up to date on the tech and business news you need to know, check out The Hustle. It's a daily email. I used to help write it. I love it. So check it out. Scroll down below.

SHAAN

I'm on a Business Insider, uh, news story about Putin's wealth right now just because I wanted to see the billion-dollar house. So the house, $1.35 billion. It's a crazy palace with 3 helicopter landing pads and stuff like that. But the thumbnail was Putin doing basically like a Bowflex. So he's He's like, you know, he's basically saying he's got both cables. He's like clearly about to do like a pec fly. And that was the thumbnail they chose. Not one of his palace or his cars or anything like that. They chose Putin wearing $3,200— no, wearing cashmere sweats that cost $1,400 and then a matching top, which just looks like a Hanes t-shirt for his workout outfit total, which was $3,200. And it's just like every picture is hilarious. It's like him cheersing with the champagne. It's like only power photos, which is Really funny.

SAM

And keep in mind, this is a guy who before this, he was in the KGB. So it's like the CIA of America. So this is a government-salaried person for the last 30 years.

SHAAN

So this is crazy. Yeah. Ben, how did you feel? So you did the How to Take Over the World episodes about Putin and, uh, and I called you up about this. I was like, Ben, re-release the episodes. A lot of people are curious about Putin right now. Release the, like, just re-upload them as new episodes. Well, you kind of research this guy a lot. What, I mean, can we talk about this like Russia-Ukraine thing for a second?

Yeah, absolutely.

SHAAN

So like, what's y'all's reaction to this? And I guess like, you know, the disclaimers is we're not experts, we're just friends talking about like, yo, did you hear what's going on? What'd you think about this? Uh, so Ben, what, what did you think? Cause you've spent a lot of time reading about this guy.

Yeah. My reaction, um, is probably different from most people's. Um, I think most people who listen to my podcast view it as like an anti-Putin podcast, like think it's pretty hard on him. And I think in some ways it is, calls him out for some of the bad things he's done, including murdering people and like maybe doing a false flag domestic terror attack on the Russian people. So like it's not a pro-Putin podcast. Having said that, I think a lot of people's reaction has just been like, Putin is Hitler. He's going to keep marching through countries until we stop him. Like all he wants is right, more power, more territory. He's a megalomaniac who's doing this just because he's tripping. And, um, I think that what they're missing a lot of the psychology of Putin, of, um, uh, of this is someone who was, as Sam said, a part of the KGB, right? So he's a part of the Soviet Empire when it's a big empire. He watches it fall from grace and then he watches his country get looted. In the, in the mid to late '90s and kind of says to himself, all right, well, America was supposed to come in and make the situation better. I'm never trusting these guys again. Right. And so then he's watching Ukraine get pulled closer and closer into, um, the European Union and NATO orbit and American orbit. And they're basically saying, okay, yeah, they're aligning with us, but that's their prerogative. And don't worry about it. This is not, we're not going to like invade Russia or anything. And he's basically saying, No, like, that's his red line. I will never trust you guys again. And that doesn't make what he's doing right, but I think it is important to understand where he's coming from, so the motivation, so that we can make the right decisions.

SHAAN

And what do you mean by America, uh, America was supposed to come in and fix— what do you mean by that exactly? So you're saying post-World War or something?

No, so it was essentially, um, as the Soviet Union is, is coming down, uh, I can't remember the name of it, but there was some essentially like committee with a bunch of Harvard guys who come into Moscow and are like, hey, we're the experts, this is how you do capitalism, essentially. And initially there's like some optimism, right, of okay, well, America seems pretty great, Soviet Union has not been great, and so we're excited about this capitalism stuff.

SHAAN

And turns out it goes just— they just wear the sweatshirts, never went to Harvard. Got him.

SAM

That's right.

They were, they were pulling a Ben. They were wearing the Georgetown Law sweatshirt, but they didn't go to Georgetown Law. They, uh, and, uh, so things, um, the, the Russian economy really crashed during the '90s. And so that's, that's what I'm talking about.

SHAAN

Gotcha. Okay. So he's like, I've, I, I, you know, fool me once, shit, you know, shame, shame on whoever the fuck. Okay. So that was your reaction to this as you were sort of thinking about that. Sam, what was your reaction as you kind of saw this all play play out?

SAM

My reaction. Let's talk about this from a— I mean, first of all, I was like, you know, screw Putin, not a fan. But let's talk about from a business or like a management perspective. When I saw— when I've seen all this go through or happen, I've been watching a lot of videos on Reddit. And admittedly, like, that's a USA— that's an American website. So I'm trying to figure out like what the truth is. I'm seeing these— I'm seeing two things. One, I'm seeing videos of like POWs Russian POWs, and they're like, "I didn't want to be here." They go, "We don't want to be here. We were tricked. We thought we were going to practice. We didn't know what was going on." And they also say, "We thought you guys were gonna open us— welcome us with open arms. We thought that you were gonna love us. What are you doing? Like, why are you being angry at us?" And so, um, I see— and they also show the tanks, and the tanks are shit. They're like from the '80s and '90s. They're bad. And their weapons suck. And so I'm seeing, A, I— like, they're— they just— and they were a little chubby, and people don't have nice haircuts like they do in American military. They're just undisciplined. It just doesn't seem like it's a well-oiled machine. That's what I'm seeing. And second—

SHAAN

These are the most random observations about this whole thing. It's like Reddit videos of guys being like, "I thought this was a practice war!" "That's what they've been saying, dude!" "Who are, like, these chubby-faced soldiers in 1980s tanks? Like, what?" Yeah.

SAM

I mean, look, when you see that, you're like, "Oh, this— you're—" Like, I was afraid of you, but like, maybe I shouldn't be. Like, you're out of shape. And the second thing is this guy, this Ukrainian guy, their, their leader. This guy is badass. Have you seen like him just wearing like green t-shirts giving press conferences? Yeah, he, he's amazing. This guy's amazing.

SHAAN

This guy's a— I don't know much about him. I don't know what's going on. I don't know what's like kind of media portrayal versus whatever else, but the guy does come across like a goddamn hero. Hero. When you think of the word a hero, what do you think of? It's like, you know, the president who says, you know, not— I'm not just ordering you to war, I'm going to the front lines. And by the way, this guy's the finance minister, he's here. This guy's, you know, this is my press secretary, he— here, hold this gun. You don't know how to do it, you have it backwards, doesn't matter, stand here. And like basically sending out a video being like, you know, hey Putin, you know, go fuck yourself, or like bring it on. Basically like the only thing cooler he could have done as if he was like, Putin, meet me at the border, you and me, unarmed, hand-to-hand combat. You win, you get my country. I win, I get your country. That's the only one level up this guy could have done as far as being, you know, the real-life Macho Man Randy Savage, which is kind of the way he was coming across as a— when I was like a real hero, like very brave, incredibly.

SAM

And what I'm learning, what I'm trying to, you know, when I watch the news, I try to figure out beyond like, this is bad and I want to help, the thought is like, how can I use this to improve? And my takeaway here is what Putin has done. They say like he's like— they showed him with giving a press conference and he was on this huge table and his generals were like literally 20 feet down on this table and he was kind of by himself. And that was kind of a representation of him being a little distant. Yeah. And whereas this guy was like literally on the streets toasting coffee in the morning and My takeaway is in order to get someone to do something, you have to make them want to do it. You can't force them to do it because if you force them to do it, it's good. It's a short-lived, short-term thing. Right. And with the Ukrainians, there was a poll where 90% of them support this guy and they are all in the streets. They're all like pouring Styrofoam into bottles with gasoline because that's how you make napalm and they're using it for Molotov cocktails. Yeah. And they like It sounds weird, but it seems like they're happy in the sense of like they have a sense of purpose and they have a community and they have a mission. Maybe not happy is the right word, but like, uh, purpose-driven. And that's the takeaway that I have from this is if I'm gonna convince people to do stuff like run a work at a company or whatever, you need to make them want to do it, not force them to do it.

SHAAN

Yeah, that's, uh, that's a, that's a great point. They definitely have like sort of the, the spirit. Right now. Um, and the morale in the rally, there's sort of like a rally going on right now. And, you know, especially under these circumstances, you know, it definitely like adversity is something that pulls people together. So, you know, it's definitely done that for them or it'll break you apart depending on what your sense of purpose is.

SAM

And so this guy's killing it, man. Yeah. This guy's, it's been real, it's been a, it's a, it's a really good, I don't think we've had that in America for a while. It's been, it's a really good example of Wonderful leadership. This guy is killing it. And he also uses really cute phrases like he says something like these soundbites. He's like, I don't need— he goes, he goes, America offered me a lift to get out of here. I don't need a lift. I need armor-piercing bullets. Yeah, that's what he said. And I'm like, oh my God, dude, you are Rambo. You are wonderful. He's saying all the great stuff and that shit's important. And there's a reason why. Like, have you ever heard about where they describe old Roman emperors as orders? You know, people who could speak well, like, yeah, now I understand why. Yeah, totally.

SHAAN

There, dude, I've been, uh, so I don't normally read the news or watch the news at all. Uh, I like never, never turn it on. Don't read the newspaper. Don't go to CNN. I don't do any of it. And, uh, and people sometimes like, I don't know, make fun of me or sort of tell me I'm an idiot for that. Uh, just yesterday some guy was like, you know, terrible life choice. You know, you gotta, you gotta be in tune with the world's realities. And I just think you don't. In my head, I'm like, if you think the news is the world's reality, like, you know, you're watching the world's worst reality show. And, um, but I, you know, I didn't say anything to him cuz, you know, let him do his thing. Obviously, you know, the news is, is making him a happy, cheerful person. So, so I, I've always had this mindset, which is like, don't get pulled. Like basically I find that when people get really into government and politics, the, the phrase that my trainer said to me that makes more sense, he's like, these people can't govern themselves, but they want to talk about, you know, what the government could do. And it's like, most people fail to even govern themselves. You can't get yourself to do what you should do. Why are you so worried about what everybody else should do if you can't even get yourself to do it? And I've always sort of taken that as like a way to not get sucked into— like, 2016, I had friends who were crying about Trump and all this stuff. And, you know, I said, like, I get it, it's not who I would have voted for, but, um, I just don't worry about that. Like, this is not— I don't worry about the government, I worry about governing myself. The exceptions being, oh, there's a pandemic. I should probably like figure out what's actually going on. What is the recommended course of action? Um, although that basically, you know, was, was not really paid off because we got a bunch of bad information. Um, you know, at first the second thing was, okay, there's a war going on. And this was my first experience really like watching a war break out. Like there's been wars that have just been going on forever, like India and Pakistan at the border, or like, you know, Israel, Palestine, there's skirmishes all the time. And Afghanistan, like, you know, I didn't even realize we were in it till we pulled out, you know, like, as ignorant as that sounds, like, it just wasn't top of mind and it didn't— you didn't see it play out day by day. This is the first time I've really seen it play out day by day. So there's definitely like a kind of a crazy thing to see. I mean, just to see, like, um, just to see people basically take a stand was like kind of like inspirational. Then to see like experts coming out like on the internet, like being like, hey civilians, this is how you like do urban warfare from your, your bedroom window. And like there's this guy, he's like an urban warfare expert. He's like, you need to drag all your furniture out into the streets into this S pattern. Your goal is to make it so that their vehicles cannot easily like roam your streets. They need to be making all these different turns, everything, desks, lamps, toss it all into the middle of the street. Secondly, you know, drink water because you know, you can't go 3 days without water, so make sure you're hydrating, otherwise you can't fight anybody. Third, here's how you make a Molotov cocktail. Fourth, and he just had this like checklist. I was like, holy shit, is this real life?

SAM

Um, and then you see that's crazy, man.

SHAAN

You see like, you know, there's like what you see in the news versus I'm in these like Telegram channels where people, people are posting videos from like on the ground. And so you see like totally different perspectives.

SAM

How'd you get in those?

SHAAN

Uh, Ben had linked me to two of, I was show, I was sharing some links with him. He's like, check this out. There's a Telegram group where you could just get it. It's all in. Ukrainian, like I can't understand. I don't read, I can't read the text. I can only watch the videos. Um, or just like the heartbreak. Like there's a video that was going viral of this dad, just like, cause you know, they did a conscription, right? Like everybody between the ages of 18 and 60, all men, like you're now in the army. And, um, there's a dad saying goodbye to his daughter, like knowing he may not, it may not ever see her again. And she doesn't understand. She's like a 4-year-old kid. And like, I have a 2-year-old daughter. So that was just like, you know, I was just like, you know, shattered by that. And just that was like, you see that and you're like, this is wrong. This is so wrong. What's going on? Like, it just hit in a different way. And I had heard on the All In podcast, they were talking about this. They go, they go, yeah, like right now the US sentiment is like, no, don't, don't go fight other people's wars. Like, don't send our human lives into that. And then the guy, Dave Friedberg, had said something. He was like, you know, I wonder how that'll change as the like sort of media starts to come out, as you start to see videos of like atrocities and kids and women, and people are gonna have a different reaction when they see that. And that's exactly like literally the first video I saw that was such a heartbreak. I was like, we gotta do something. I gotta donate some money.

SAM

I gotta do that same video.

SHAAN

I gotta do something here. And so it's just been crazy to see kind of how it's all playing out. Like crazy is really the only way I could describe it. Like it's crazy that this is happening. It's crazy the way it happens. It's crazy that like life gets turned upside down for people. Like all the things I care about on a day-to-day basis instantly would be out the window if something like this happened. Then you see the financial side. Like this is crazy that this war is like— I forgot somebody said this, like, um, banks, not tanks. It's like we're basically fighting Russia with financial warfare. It's, it's crazy.

SAM

It's way worse. Like, because I was, I was telling Ben, I'm like, Putin screwed up the only thing that really matters. Rule number one, don't fuck with the money. Yeah. Like, if you mess with the money— paper Putin. Yeah. Like, because money is like the most important. Money is more important than lives often, or at least, you know, that's a perception. And so, like, yeah, it's screwed up. And I want to tell you a point. I want to pump your ego. So do you know who— you said something, you didn't say it as eloquently as I'm about to explain, but Nassim Taleb, how do you say his name? I'm bad at names. Taleb. Okay. So he tweeted something really good. So basically he is the guy who— Antifragile. I forget what else he did. Black Swan. Black Swan. Yeah. And he's kind of an oddball, but he's eccentric is a better word. And he basically says like, don't read the news. That's like what he has said. That he said that for a long time. And he's like, don't read things. He says like, don't, don't, don't read the news. Only read things if it's like 50 years old. That's his whole point. And he tweeted out this yesterday.

SHAAN

He's like, except my book coming this March, buy it, preorder now.

SAM

Yes. And he tweeted this out yesterday and he goes, most days, 99.9% of the news is noise. The last few days, it's all signal. Newspaper reading is useless except in crisis. And I actually totally agree with that. And that's what you said. I read the news every day, but I actually think it's kind of pointless. Until it's like an urgent, urgent thing. And that bar, the threshold of what's considered urgent is actually really high.

SHAAN

Yeah. And also there's a way to like, you can use the news to inform yourself, to gather information to like, in my case, it's just like have empathy for what's going on and just not think about this intellectually. Um, but the news can also use you and you have to like figure out where that line is. Are you, are you using the news right now to gather what you wanna gather? Or is the news using you as like eyeballs that they're going to drain for the— like, you bet your ass, like, you know, Fox and CNN, every news channel, like, this is their— like, I'm not saying they don't care about what's going on, but this is their payday, right? This is when they get their spikes. This is when they say, we have 24/7 news coverage. Stay here. Don't move. Don't change the channel. We are going to send you drip by drip, play-by-play updates. And it's like, that's actually not the healthiest, you know, like most productive way that you can live your life is by like getting hooked onto their 24/7, you know, play-by-play update of this war. So, you know, that's the kind of like caveat.

SAM

So this last point I'll make, but basically one of my heroes, he's on my wall here, you can't see him, is Ted Turner. And Ted Turner started CNN. I think he started it in like 1981, but it was kind of a failure. It lost a lot of money until 1989, 1990. When America— or sorry, when Iraq invaded Kuwait. And the reason why is he sent over a bunch of news stations, news reporters. And it was one of the first times that a news reporter could, because of technology, could film something and it be aired live. And so it was one of the first wars that was viewed live and it changed people's sentiment of the war and it made CNN a huge company that one year. And that's kind of like what's going to happen now, except instead of a news instead of like a publisher, it's going to be Facebook and Twitter. They're just going to crush for like the next couple of years because we're glued to it.

SHAAN

And dude, there's a— can I give you the kind of like the finance or crypto angle of what's going on here? So, so basically the West is doing this like financial warfare and they're like, okay, economic sanctions. So we're going to make it hard to trade. We're going to make it hard to, to buy and sell goods. And then they're doing a form of like, you know, they froze, they froze them out of SWIFT or kicked them off of SWIFT. Okay. So now you can't. Now you can't do international transfers. And then they froze the central bank assets, which was like the craziest move. That was the financial nuke. So that was where all of a sudden, you know, they had $650 billion of reserves and they needed those reserves. Why? Because their local currency is crashing. So I think the ruble lost— what was it, like 40% in the last day? That's crazy. So, you know, the average citizen is the one who's paying the price, right? Putin basically attacked his own citizens here because the currency is crashing. Nobody wants to hold this currency anymore. There's a bank, you know, people are lined up to get money out of the bank. So normally the way the government props up their currency to prevent it from spiraling to zero is they will buy it back using their reserve assets. They hold dollars, they hold euros, they hold gold, they hold some crypto, and they'll use that to buy back the ruble. But because it got frozen, they can't do that. And so that's going to cause the currency to go downfall. So I think this time crypto is not going to play as big of a story. But you kind of have to bet that any country out there who's watching this is probably going to say, well, we probably don't want the US to be able to just freeze all our assets. So why are we holding the dollar as reserve? Why are we holding any currency that one country can— one country or an alliance can basically freeze our assets or cut us off or take us out of the banking system? So I think you're going to see a pretty big move first by, you know, the quote unquote bad guys, basically, quote, first by the folks that are afraid of the West to get out of the dollar and get more, get more heavily into crypto because this is a wake-up call. Oh, wow. They can just cut— they would do this. They'll cut us off completely. They'll freeze our accounts. And so I think in the next few years, you're going to see different regimes like switch over to digital currencies that can't be controlled by any one country.

SAM

For a bunch of uneducated dumbasses, I think we did pretty good with this one.

SHAAN

Yeah, we probably just said one thing, or maybe it's Ben's Russian accent. Like, that'll be where everyone just decides, you know, we're assholes and cancels us. But other than that, you know, whatever.

SAM

I think it's good. So I thought the Ukraine stuff was awesome. Did you— do you agree, Ben?

Yeah, I thought it was really interesting.

SAM

I thought this is the most interesting news story. This is all I want to talk about. So I thought it was interesting, and, and I think it's cool. I think it's cool that we actually talk about it.

SHAAN

It's funny, dude. I So, you know, people don't want it either way. So you— I didn't— if you don't talk about it, it's like, dude, how are you not talking about this? What do you— you know, why are you, uh, you think your thing is important? There's a war going on. Like, I tweeted something else out. I was like, oh, this is really cool how this has happened, some tech thing. And some— this guy's like, bro, kind of insensitive, don't you think? There's a war happening. I was like, oh, am I just supposed to not speak about anything else? Okay. And then you talk about the war, it's like, oh, Oh, now you're a war expert.

SAM

Well, you wrote something in the Milk Road that was great. You said, I think the opening line was, we're not going to mention the Bitcoin price today because it's not really that important. And I know what you guys are thinking, like, stay in your lane, Milk Road. And the truth is, we know our purpose, but we want to talk about— and I forget, you went into like a bunch of different stuff, but I thought that was a really good line. What did people say about the Milk Road writing about This, uh, let's see, I'm gonna—

SHAAN

I'll open up the— this thing is the, like, feedback thing is so, uh, helpful but also, you know, like, daunting at the same time. Uh, did you see—

SAM

while you're pulling this up, I'll say something. Did you see when I tweeted out, uh, are there any pro-Putin people here? What is your opinion? I want to hear your perspective because everyone I know is, is anti-Putin. And a lot of people got pissed at me for asking that, and I thought that was crazy.

SHAAN

Yeah. I tweeted something else similar like that. I was like, hey, so, you know, just trying to like, you know, educate myself. Like, um, what would be, and I think I said it something like, um, I forgot what exactly I said, but I was basically asking like, what's the, what would be the most kind of like pro-Russian reason for the invasion? Or no, first I was like, do, do the average people in Russia, does the average person in Russia, um, support this? Right. Um, and then I was like, you know, second question is, is basically like, what would, uh, what would be the like strongest justification for doing this? You know, or, you know, if, if you're, if you're like in Russia's camp and, um, you know, I didn't get too much flack for it because I like had to like hedge it like crazy, but it's so crazy that you have to like really, um, like soften everything so much. Yeah. I guess you don't have to, but, uh, if you don't, you know, you're definitely gonna like, the, the discussion becomes about You rather than just being able to be intellectually curious and say, I'm trying to understand, I'm trying to learn, I'm trying to think for myself. And I'm not saying I disagree with anything. I just want to actually like understand all the perspectives that, you know, that exist.

SAM

So I said— steelmanning. I want to steel—

SHAAN

steelman this shit for you, dog. I wrote, what would be the most pro-Russian invasion reason? Basically, if you tried really hard to think about why this is justified, what would you come up with? And, uh, and you know, then I got a bunch of answers. I got 26 answers to that. And I was like, okay, that's cool. That's helpful to, uh, to hear.

SAM

And what about the Milk Road? What were the replies? Did anyone tell you to fuck off? I'm hoping. What do they— what do they say to LeBron James when LeBron James gave his opinion on some stuff? Everyone's like, dribble. Just shut up and dribble, LeBron. Yeah. What did anyone—

SHAAN

they want to know? Shut up and podcast. What are they going to tell me to do?

SAM

Shut up and type, Sean, or I don't know. I'm going to read the first—

SHAAN

I'm going to read the first 3 good, like, good reviews. Like, we have a system. It's like 1, 1 milk cup, like the emoji, like "1 milk is terrible, 3 milks is average, or 5 milks is great." So, "The tone, the analysis, the new war insights, humor, this has it all." That's 5. Another 5 one. "I like the insight into the conflict going on right now." Another one, I think you wrote this, "Struck absolutely the right tone." Sam, is that you?

SAM

Or is that a different Sam? That's not me. I replied. I said, "This is really good." Okay, great.

SHAAN

"Great newsletter today. Way to have a perspective and a sense of humanity." I'm glad you avoided the business as usual and dove into how crypto is involved in this. And then they complain about one, like, I made this analogy because I'd said this thing, which was like, I love crypto when it's like helping the underdog, right? Like when it banks the unbanked or when people's currency is inflating and they can move into this to preserve their wealth. But like, there's an idea that, oh, Russia could use crypto to get around these sanctions. That sucks. And then I was like, oh, shit, how do I feel? It's a moral dilemma in a way.. And, um, and I was like, then I realized, you know, like technology is neutral. It's neither good nor evil. Uh, it's just used. I was like, you know, the example of a car, like you can use a car to, you know, drop off your mother at the hospital when she needs help, or you could use a car as a getaway vehicle to get away from the, you know, crime scene. It doesn't make a car good or evil in either case. It's sort of like amoral. Um, and so some people were, some guys like disagreeing with that. All right, let me see if there's a 1-star review.

SAM

Yeah. Was there any negativity?

SHAAN

I literally— wow, this might be the highest rated one we've had. Oh, here we go. Here we go. Here's one. You should effing stick to crypto and stay out of politics. Okay. Number 1, awful. Shut up and dribble. This one. One Milk, awful. Oh, I can't miss the opportunity to suck on some political ass. What do you think?

SAM

You typically hear someone say you'd kiss it, not suck on it.

SHAAN

It's like, I don't even know what to say.

SAM

This is kind of gross. I don't even know.

SHAAN

I don't even know what to make of that. And they did the thing where every other letter is capitalized, you know, like, oh my God. Oh man. Reading your own comments. I'm not sure this is even useful. I might just, uh, leave this up so people have an outlet, but it's like, here, go yell into this shoebox. I'm not reading this stuff anymore.

SAM

I check all of it.

SHAAN

Uh, we have a VA right now. We check it all cuz it's new. But like, we have a VA who basically will just summarize the, like, here was your score and here's like the, the like kind of valid criticism and the valid like compliments. Um, so I'm just gonna read that from now on and not the, like the raw stuff unless I really need to go hate my life.

SAM

Yeah, there's a bunch of, I'm actually for this Maven thing I'm doing, I'm talking about feedback. I'm like, not all feedback's important. Like for example, um, if people complain about pricing, I'm like, I don't really listen to that. I, I don't care what they say about price cuz I'm not gonna change. Another thing is like, if they say like, well, I wish you would've sent that email. This is what we used to get in The Hustle. Like, send that email earlier. Sometimes I'm like, all right, I'll, we'll do it. But then once we started sending at 6:00 AM and I would get complaints, I'd be like, I'm not listening to this anymore. We're, I'm not, we're not doing it. And so it, it is hard to figure out what is actually important and what's not. And for a lot of feedback, it's actually not important.

SHAAN

Totally. It's all noise or it'll whiplash you. You do one thing and then they'll say one thing, you do the other. I remember at Twitch this happened. We went to an exec offsite and they're like, all right, so the feedback amongst the execs to the CEO and the CEO was like, you didn't listen to our input enough. Like we felt out of the loop. You guys just decided it was too top down. And then the next offsite was 3 months. So they spent that whole offsite gathering, like, what do you guys think? What are your opinions? What would you do? Like trying to get like the bottoms up. 3 months later it was like, okay, let's read out the feedback from last time. You know, what's happened in the last 3 months? Like, God, can you guys just make a decision already? You're the leader. You're supposed to just make a call. Like, why do you keep asking us? You're supposed to have the answers. It's like, wow. It's like, it's like really extreme whiplash of like, you know, you never, never happy one way or the other. And the, the best answer I got was like, if you take 10 pieces of feedback, they're all informative. 9 will inform you. They'll like, they'll tell you about the person. It's not about you. It'll tell you about them. And then 1 will tell you something interesting or insightful about you. You have to figure out What's the 1 outta 10 and what's the 9 that's just about this person? Like some guy tweeted some feedback about my course, like saying it was, oh, it's going great. Like, you know, it's been awesome, blah, blah, blah. He was talking about like, I love the energy. Like Sean, just, it's like a performance. It's not just like, here's some slides. And the guy, and so some guy replies, he goes, oh, it's a performance. It's all about energy. Uh, so basically you, you know, nothing insightful, probably just a big motivational talk, huh? Stuff you could have just found on the internet. And then the guy, the original guy responds, he's like, Well, yeah, like, you know, 80% of anything you could just go Google and find. But reality is most people are not gonna know what to Google, even if they've, they're not gonna go take the time to Google. So it's great to like have it all packed in. And the guy's like, yeah, yeah, yeah. All I heard is I paying just, I'm paying $950 just to hear Sean pump me up. Yeah. It's like, all right, so that's, that's about him.

SAM

That's not about, uh, it's not about the course. The biggest thing when, when The Hustle, when we first, I remember we, we hired two, it was just me and, uh, another guy and we hired two or three interns.. And so these weren't even full-time employees. And we used to, from the beginning, we did this thing where every, I think Wednesday, we would go out to lunch. And I remember, I remember the first time we had other people in that office, I said, all right, well, what do you guys want to do for lunch? And I got 3 or 4 different answers. And I was like, oh, lesson learned, never ask. And so from that point on, it was— We're going here. And I said, here's what we'll do. Every week, someone else, there's a decision maker. But you can't ask. You just, you decide, right? And I found that people are just happier that way and life's easier. And oftentimes it's like that with feedback where it's just like, I'll listen to sometimes, but most of the time I'm just doing what I want to do and I'm just going to deal with the consequences, right?

Um, good night. Yeah. Can I ask you a random question about Milk Road? Is who designed the, the like milk jar?

SHAAN

Who did that little graphic? Uh, I don't know. Ben got that made, uh, or he found that somewhere. I think he got it made. From— there's a guy who we featured their, their DAO. So it's pretty cool. There's a bunch of designers that got together in this DAO, I think it's called Vector DAO. It's basically like high-level designers, and they basically created like an ad hoc agency. So companies come to them, they pay them, and then like anybody in the DAO can like take the project and like form a little guild, like 5 people that form a team, and they'll go design the thing. And basically, it's like an agency that was like They don't have a hiring and firing process. You just sort of join and you can either contribute or not contribute at the end of the day. And so, uh, the thing is cool, but it's pretty expensive. It's pretty pricey. So I think when we were featuring it, we talked to some guy, Ben met some guy, and then one of the people in Vectored, I was like, yo, I just like to, like, I like the milk road and your thing's so ugly. Like I gotta, I gotta improve it.

SAM

So are they Indian, Sean? Are they Indian?

SHAAN

I don't think they're Indian. No, they, uh, and then, and then Ben, every, what Ben does is he's like, he'll just post something. He'll be like, hey, what do you, I made this design. What do you think of this? And the guy's like, Ben, I know what you're doing. You just keep showing me stuff that's so ugly that like, I can't help myself but go fix it. Like, fine, I'll fix it again. And he's done that twice now.

SAM

So I just did a reverse Google image search and there's an article written in the India Times and it's using your logo.

SHAAN

So, so maybe, so maybe that one is, maybe that icon is one that had been found instead of the design. But the guy designed like all the like banners and the, the breaks in the like, in the email itself, like the format of the design of the email. Wow.

SAM

And look, why do you ask that?

Because I really like the formatting and the design, and it's really simple. Like, it's basically just that little milk jar and like that color blue. Yeah. And I find it really simple but attractive and memorable.

SHAAN

Oh, thank you.

SAM

Wow. That's flattering.

SHAAN

Are you describing Sean or the logo? Why am I blushing right now?

Katie's gotta watch out.

SAM

She's gotta watch her back. All right. That's the episode, I think, right?

SHAAN

Yeah. We're 17 minutes. Sam's like, I got a hard stop at the hour. And then I'm like, just, we just keep talking about random useless stuff.