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whisper.cpp transcription of Brewster Kahle's DEVCon5 talk Money and Debt and Digital Contracts
[00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:07.760] I was very impressed with Prague last year.
[00:00:07.760 --> 00:00:12.960] I was very impressed because there was a lot of thinking going on about what should we
[00:00:12.960 --> 00:00:14.500] do?
[00:00:14.500 --> 00:00:16.080] What's the point here?
[00:00:16.080 --> 00:00:18.200] How could this thing go wrong?
[00:00:18.200 --> 00:00:22.400] How could we learn from the .com guys that seem to have screwed things up?
[00:00:22.400 --> 00:00:28.320] The internet guys, or those guys in the financial crisis, how did they screw things up?
[00:00:28.320 --> 00:00:31.320] How can we learn from to grow from?
[00:00:31.320 --> 00:00:37.160] I'm taking that as the starting point for this talk to try to suggest something you
[00:00:37.160 --> 00:00:41.440] might want to think about and look at anew.
[00:00:41.440 --> 00:00:46.080] I'm going to talk about money, debt, and smart contracts.
[00:00:46.080 --> 00:00:49.360] The internet archive, you think, well, gosh, what is this internet archive?
[00:00:49.360 --> 00:00:52.360] It's a nonprofit in San Francisco.
[00:00:52.360 --> 00:01:00.600] Kind of Wikipedia-ish, but a lot smaller, and the idea is to bring universal access to
[00:01:00.600 --> 00:01:01.600] all knowledge.
[00:01:01.600 --> 00:01:08.960] So that's probably, if you know of me at all, I started and run this organization and you
[00:01:08.960 --> 00:01:12.080] should please come and visit us in San Francisco.
[00:01:12.080 --> 00:01:15.920] We have open lunches, all sorts of fun things.
[00:01:15.920 --> 00:01:20.080] But if you don't know about the internet archive, you may know of the Wayback Machine,
[00:01:20.080 --> 00:01:27.840] which has old web pages and to try to preserve the memory that has come before on the internet.
[00:01:27.840 --> 00:01:33.040] I may be here because I hang out with smart guys and sort of internet pioneers sort in
[00:01:33.040 --> 00:01:38.800] terms of the internet hall of fame, and that's probably why I got an indoor.
[00:01:38.800 --> 00:01:41.120] Maybe it's the decentralized web.
[00:01:41.120 --> 00:01:47.080] Can we make the worldwide web work without having a reliance on any particular piece
[00:01:47.080 --> 00:01:48.720] of hardware being up or down?
[00:01:48.720 --> 00:01:51.800] Can we make a peer-to-peer back end for the web?
[00:01:51.800 --> 00:01:57.040] So it really helped trying to support the promotion of locking the web open.
[00:01:57.040 --> 00:02:01.360] But I'm expert in all of those things, so I'm going to talk to you about something I'm
[00:02:01.360 --> 00:02:05.240] not an expert in, and actually I know who I'm talking to, the experts in this, but I'm
[00:02:05.240 --> 00:02:10.480] hoping I'm going to give you a new perspective in the area of debt.
[00:02:10.480 --> 00:02:14.120] My story starts by my having won the internet lottery.
[00:02:14.120 --> 00:02:20.040] I sold companies, I became artificially wealthy, and I was trying to figure out what the heck
[00:02:20.040 --> 00:02:22.040] is money.
[00:02:22.040 --> 00:02:29.000] So I started reading books, and my favorite book from that era was called Frozen Desire.
[00:02:29.000 --> 00:02:33.720] So this guy, James Buck, and he goes over the history of money, and he goes and says,
[00:02:33.720 --> 00:02:35.400] what is money?
[00:02:35.400 --> 00:02:40.840] It's frozen desire, and it talks all about money, money, money, and how it works, and
[00:02:40.840 --> 00:02:45.000] how you finance debt wars, and on and on.
[00:02:45.000 --> 00:02:47.200] It's a very interesting book.
[00:02:47.200 --> 00:02:51.000] It occurred to me, it's like, no, no, maybe it's not really money that's the important
[00:02:51.000 --> 00:02:52.000] part.
[00:02:52.000 --> 00:02:54.200] Maybe it's debt.
[00:02:54.200 --> 00:02:56.080] Maybe it's debt.
[00:02:56.080 --> 00:03:03.040] And it turns out that money and debt mostly create each other.
[00:03:03.040 --> 00:03:06.280] And I'm going to stay on this for a moment because I think it's going to be important
[00:03:06.280 --> 00:03:09.520] in our crypto world.
[00:03:09.520 --> 00:03:14.360] Almost always, even in the crypto communities, they talk about money like gold and things
[00:03:14.360 --> 00:03:17.320] like that, where it doesn't go into, there isn't debt.
[00:03:17.320 --> 00:03:23.880] But if you take currency, the American currency, or any of the world currencies, about 5%
[00:03:23.880 --> 00:03:29.920] is money, and the rest is money and debt create each other.
[00:03:29.920 --> 00:03:33.800] The way that you get more money is you create debt obligations.
[00:03:33.800 --> 00:03:38.920] If you go and say, well, I'm against being in debt, really what you're saying is I want
[00:03:38.920 --> 00:03:42.240] somebody else to be in debt because I have money.
[00:03:42.240 --> 00:03:44.840] If I have money, somebody else has debt.
[00:03:44.840 --> 00:03:46.240] They create each other.
[00:03:46.240 --> 00:03:52.400] They exist in a one-to-one relationship almost, except for about 5%.
[00:03:52.400 --> 00:03:54.600] That is, I find, very interesting.
[00:03:54.600 --> 00:03:59.160] So whenever I hear of these bankers, these economists going on and on about, we want
[00:03:59.160 --> 00:04:01.960] to increase liquidity out there.
[00:04:01.960 --> 00:04:07.640] What they really want to increase the money supply, just try out a thought experiment.
[00:04:07.640 --> 00:04:12.120] Whether they say money, just insert the word debt.
[00:04:12.120 --> 00:04:16.160] And you will also understand what they're saying, and actually much more precisely.
[00:04:16.160 --> 00:04:20.520] When they say they want to increase the money supply, they want to increase the amount of
[00:04:20.520 --> 00:04:22.360] debt supply.
[00:04:22.360 --> 00:04:25.680] They want to go and liquidity more money out there.
[00:04:25.680 --> 00:04:27.160] They want more debt.
[00:04:27.160 --> 00:04:32.800] So what debt is, and it's always debt with interest, it's a slope.
[00:04:32.800 --> 00:04:35.920] And money goes from debtors to creditors.
[00:04:35.920 --> 00:04:36.920] It's a slope.
[00:04:36.920 --> 00:04:42.240] You can change what the slope is, and you can change how much there is.
[00:04:42.240 --> 00:04:45.480] And when they're trying to increase the money supply, they're trying to increase the amount
[00:04:45.480 --> 00:04:46.720] of debt.
[00:04:46.720 --> 00:04:51.360] So that just increases the amount that's going from debtors to creditors.
[00:04:51.360 --> 00:04:57.440] And then there's interest rates where you can go and tilt it the slide more.
[00:04:57.440 --> 00:04:59.440] But it's all going one way.
[00:04:59.440 --> 00:05:01.760] I'm not saying that debt is bad.
[00:05:01.760 --> 00:05:03.600] It just is.
[00:05:03.600 --> 00:05:08.000] But debt exists, and it has existed for as long as there has been writing, which I'll
[00:05:08.000 --> 00:05:10.640] get to in a minute.
[00:05:10.640 --> 00:05:14.600] So if you're trying to look for lines of control and trying to predict how the future
[00:05:14.600 --> 00:05:18.760] will behold, I always try to figure out what's the root causes out there.
[00:05:18.760 --> 00:05:23.960] I would suggest don't follow the money, as they said in all the President's men, a famous
[00:05:23.960 --> 00:05:28.440] movie about the Watergate investigation.
[00:05:28.440 --> 00:05:30.560] Follow the debt.
[00:05:30.560 --> 00:05:31.560] Follow debt.
[00:05:31.560 --> 00:05:34.000] And obligated to whom?
[00:05:34.000 --> 00:05:39.760] That's going to be the more important part of how all of this works.
[00:05:39.760 --> 00:05:48.720] And this, I would suggest, be the most indicative of what's going to happen in the future.
[00:05:48.720 --> 00:05:54.700] At that point, a book came out called Debt, the first 5,000 years by David Graeber.
[00:05:54.700 --> 00:05:58.640] This is the most important book I've read in the last 20 years.
[00:05:58.640 --> 00:05:59.640] It blew my mind.
[00:05:59.640 --> 00:06:05.880] It basically chopped pillars out from underneath my whole belief system.
[00:06:05.880 --> 00:06:11.280] This guy basically wrote, it's across the 5,000 years history across the whole world.
[00:06:11.280 --> 00:06:17.880] It's kind of an amazing book, and tried to detail the history of debt, and how did it
[00:06:17.880 --> 00:06:20.000] work in different cultures?
[00:06:20.000 --> 00:06:23.680] And it works very differently in different cultures, and there's a lot more possibilities
[00:06:23.680 --> 00:06:24.680] out there.
[00:06:24.680 --> 00:06:29.000] A brilliant man, a wonderful read, highly, highly recommend it.
[00:06:29.000 --> 00:06:37.440] It basically goes on this structure of how does debt evolve, and how does obligation?
[00:06:37.440 --> 00:06:40.720] Let me define debt precisely.
[00:06:40.720 --> 00:06:44.680] Debt is quantified obligation.
[00:06:44.680 --> 00:06:50.160] So there's obligations we all have to our friends, our mothers, but quantified obligations
[00:06:50.160 --> 00:06:51.160] is debt.
[00:06:51.160 --> 00:06:55.200] And another characteristic of almost all debt is it's transferable.
[00:06:55.200 --> 00:06:58.000] So it's transferable actually by the creditor.
[00:06:58.000 --> 00:06:59.800] The creditor can give it to somebody else.
[00:06:59.800 --> 00:07:03.040] So you might be in debt to somebody, and then they suddenly put it to somebody else, and
[00:07:03.040 --> 00:07:04.560] now you're in debt to somebody else.
[00:07:04.560 --> 00:07:07.320] So a really peculiar device.
[00:07:07.320 --> 00:07:15.680] But I highly recommend this book in terms of how does value exchange move among people.
[00:07:15.680 --> 00:07:19.080] And you guys are all in this field, so recommend it.
[00:07:19.080 --> 00:07:23.760] So basically I said, all right, if that's what's crushing our people, we now had the,
[00:07:23.760 --> 00:07:24.760] it was 2008.
[00:07:24.760 --> 00:07:27.000] There's a housing crisis.
[00:07:27.000 --> 00:07:30.000] The people at the Internet Archive were having real trouble because of rent.
[00:07:30.000 --> 00:07:33.160] I tried to figure out why was rent so high.
[00:07:33.160 --> 00:07:36.720] It turns out it was debt service on the apartment buildings.
[00:07:36.720 --> 00:07:42.360] If you could make debt-free apartment buildings, you could have rent that's one-third of market-based
[00:07:42.360 --> 00:07:43.360] rent.
[00:07:43.360 --> 00:07:48.760] I said, great, why don't we go and try to make debt-free housing happen by going, having
[00:07:48.760 --> 00:07:49.760] a structure?
[00:07:49.760 --> 00:07:51.120] I need to be able to create a bank.
[00:07:51.120 --> 00:07:52.960] So I created a bank.
[00:07:52.960 --> 00:07:56.640] I created a credit union called the Internet Credit Union.
[00:07:56.640 --> 00:08:02.400] And we ran it for a while, and boy, the regulators really, really didn't like it.
[00:08:02.400 --> 00:08:06.160] Boy, just go start a bank.
[00:08:06.160 --> 00:08:07.160] Yeah.
[00:08:07.160 --> 00:08:09.560] They basically didn't want us around.
[00:08:09.560 --> 00:08:11.840] So they crushed us out of existence.
[00:08:11.840 --> 00:08:16.960] And unfortunately, Trade Hill, which was a Bitcoin company, because we were the only
[00:08:16.960 --> 00:08:19.360] credit union that would go and deal with them.
[00:08:19.360 --> 00:08:24.640] We went when they crushed out us out of existence, they went out of existence too.
[00:08:24.640 --> 00:08:29.280] So I learned a lot about how the banking system worked, and it is really that bad.
[00:08:29.280 --> 00:08:33.080] If you think it's bad, you're right.
[00:08:33.080 --> 00:08:38.760] In terms of how electronic funds transfers work, ACH transfers, it's insecure, it's fraud
[00:08:38.760 --> 00:08:41.920] written, it's a real problem.
[00:08:41.920 --> 00:08:45.600] So we tried to do a bank, and that didn't work.
[00:08:45.600 --> 00:08:47.080] We're very early in Bitcoin.
[00:08:47.080 --> 00:08:50.600] At the Internet Archive, we basically paid our employees in Bitcoin.
[00:08:50.600 --> 00:08:54.560] This I think is a picture of the first Bitcoin ATM.
[00:08:54.560 --> 00:08:59.240] It's an open cash box with a wallet.
[00:08:59.240 --> 00:09:03.600] So you basically can just go and change your money back and forth to the Bitcoin.
[00:09:03.600 --> 00:09:04.600] Okay.
[00:09:04.600 --> 00:09:07.440] A lot of the Bitcoin people didn't like it because it trusted people.
[00:09:07.440 --> 00:09:09.760] But anyway, it worked.
[00:09:09.760 --> 00:09:15.680] And so that was our part of our exploration with Bitcoin.
[00:09:15.680 --> 00:09:19.000] And then this book.
[00:09:19.000 --> 00:09:22.080] This is where David Graber got his ideas on the early part.
[00:09:22.080 --> 00:09:26.280] And the year I think is where the things are going to get interesting for you.
[00:09:26.280 --> 00:09:29.160] The title of this is "And Forgive Them Their Dats."
[00:09:29.160 --> 00:09:34.440] It's a line from the Lord's Prayer, "And Forgive Them Their Dats," and they will forgive
[00:09:34.440 --> 00:09:35.960] their debts against you.
[00:09:35.960 --> 00:09:38.640] And they meant it literally.
[00:09:38.640 --> 00:09:46.880] And basically this is a history book of what happened during the Sumerians, Babylonians,
[00:09:46.880 --> 00:09:54.360] Akkadians, basically the Bronze Age near East, how their financial system worked.
[00:09:54.360 --> 00:09:57.680] They were the first to invent debt with interest.
[00:09:57.680 --> 00:10:04.600] With debt with interest, what happens is you slide things from debtors to creditors.
[00:10:04.600 --> 00:10:07.040] Debtors become everybody.
[00:10:07.040 --> 00:10:08.560] They lose their farms.
[00:10:08.560 --> 00:10:09.920] They become in debt.
[00:10:09.920 --> 00:10:12.560] They leave the land.
[00:10:12.560 --> 00:10:16.920] They end up with their wives and children as debt servants.
[00:10:16.920 --> 00:10:22.600] And basically society breaks down.
[00:10:22.600 --> 00:10:25.560] If you allow this to go too far, it breaks down.
[00:10:25.560 --> 00:10:27.880] And it breaks down quickly.
[00:10:27.880 --> 00:10:32.000] So what they invented was a debt forgiveness system.
[00:10:32.000 --> 00:10:39.080] Every 25 to 50 years, they would basically go and declare debts gone.
[00:10:39.080 --> 00:10:41.120] They wiped the slate clean.
[00:10:41.120 --> 00:10:42.120] That's a literal term.
[00:10:42.120 --> 00:10:43.120] They were on slate.
[00:10:43.120 --> 00:10:46.240] The Sumerians wiped the slate clean and you were out of debt.
[00:10:46.240 --> 00:10:48.280] It usually came with the beginning of a monarch.
[00:10:48.280 --> 00:10:51.400] A new monarch would come in and say, "You're all out of debt.
[00:10:51.400 --> 00:10:53.680] You don't owe the government any money.
[00:10:53.680 --> 00:10:59.360] You get your farms back so people could move back onto their farms.
[00:10:59.360 --> 00:11:07.120] The children and the wives are released from their servitude and they would do this every
[00:11:07.120 --> 00:11:08.600] 25 to 50 years.
[00:11:08.600 --> 00:11:16.280] If they did not do this, then the society would go exponentially more and more unequal
[00:11:16.280 --> 00:11:19.760] until people revolted and there was civil war.
[00:11:19.760 --> 00:11:26.920] Every civil war for 3,000 years was a debt war according to this scholar.
[00:11:26.920 --> 00:11:27.920] Interesting.
[00:11:27.920 --> 00:11:29.760] They never heard this.
[00:11:29.760 --> 00:11:34.600] So the Hebrews developed a system called Jubilee.
[00:11:34.600 --> 00:11:40.300] Jubilee is every 50 years there would be debt forgiveness and you would go and let people
[00:11:40.300 --> 00:11:42.460] have their lands back.
[00:11:42.460 --> 00:11:49.400] You would go and take things away from the oligarchs and give them back to the peasants.
[00:11:49.400 --> 00:11:50.840] Can you imagine that now?
[00:11:50.840 --> 00:11:53.880] But if you don't do this, bad things happen.
[00:11:53.880 --> 00:11:57.680] So let me say, gosh, I haven't heard that before.
[00:11:57.680 --> 00:12:00.240] You have, but it was new to me.
[00:12:00.240 --> 00:12:05.440] There were some things that were very interesting to me in grinding this idea home and I'm going
[00:12:05.440 --> 00:12:08.280] to then come back around how it works in Ethereum.
[00:12:08.280 --> 00:12:13.080] The Liberty Bell, with a famous thing in the Liberty Bell of the United States, founding
[00:12:13.080 --> 00:12:16.880] of the country, it says, "perclaim Liberty out throughout the land and the inhabitants
[00:12:16.880 --> 00:12:18.840] thereof."
[00:12:18.840 --> 00:12:24.200] The rest of that line is actually Leviticus 25, 10.
[00:12:24.200 --> 00:12:26.920] It says, "And it shall be a Jubilee unto you.
[00:12:26.920 --> 00:12:32.000] Each of you will return to your family property and your own clan."
[00:12:32.000 --> 00:12:37.560] So what Liberty meant in the early part of the United States was freedom from debt, was
[00:12:37.560 --> 00:12:42.080] freedom from these obligations that they were escaping in other lands.
[00:12:42.080 --> 00:12:44.120] Okay, another one.
[00:12:44.120 --> 00:12:45.640] The Rosetta Stone.
[00:12:45.640 --> 00:12:48.800] We know the Rosetta Stone is how we broke hieroglyphics.
[00:12:48.800 --> 00:12:49.800] We understand hieroglyphics.
[00:12:49.800 --> 00:12:52.120] Do you know what it said?
[00:12:52.120 --> 00:12:53.800] You know what the proclamation was?
[00:12:53.800 --> 00:12:55.560] It was a government proclamation.
[00:12:55.560 --> 00:12:56.880] Okay, you guessed it.
[00:12:56.880 --> 00:12:58.720] It was debt forgiveness.
[00:12:58.720 --> 00:13:01.520] It's basically structured debt forgiveness.
[00:13:01.520 --> 00:13:06.360] That was what was worth carving in stone and distributing it out through the empire during
[00:13:06.360 --> 00:13:09.040] the Ptolemaic period.
[00:13:09.040 --> 00:13:12.560] So we see it starting to be again and again.
[00:13:12.560 --> 00:13:16.200] Jesus is in his first sermon in Nazareth.
[00:13:16.200 --> 00:13:18.360] Okay, I'm not a Bible thumper guy here.
[00:13:18.360 --> 00:13:20.000] I'm just a historian.
[00:13:20.000 --> 00:13:27.720] But Jesus in his first sermon coming back to Nazareth, he declared a Jubilee year.
[00:13:27.720 --> 00:13:32.800] He declared, there is this guy who basically said, "All you oligarchs have to give all
[00:13:32.800 --> 00:13:37.640] your money, basically back to the people you've shafted out of all of that over the last
[00:13:37.640 --> 00:13:39.440] 50 years."
[00:13:39.440 --> 00:13:41.720] And it's not just me interpreting this.
[00:13:41.720 --> 00:13:44.520] It's actually this is from the Vatican little footnote.
[00:13:44.520 --> 00:13:47.160] This is what it is Jesus said.
[00:13:47.160 --> 00:13:49.960] And that's enough to get you killed.
[00:13:49.960 --> 00:13:58.800] So if you go forward a bit more to the Spartans, the Spartans had real troubles with wealth
[00:13:58.800 --> 00:14:00.080] inequality.
[00:14:00.080 --> 00:14:03.800] And there were two Spartan kings that promised reform.
[00:14:03.800 --> 00:14:06.600] They were killed or exiled.
[00:14:06.600 --> 00:14:11.200] So they basically said, "Yes, we're going to basically do debt forgiveness, land redistribution
[00:14:11.200 --> 00:14:12.520] that will work."
[00:14:12.520 --> 00:14:15.600] If you don't do this, things collapse.
[00:14:15.600 --> 00:14:18.360] Sparta collapsed.
[00:14:18.360 --> 00:14:24.640] And the United States is in this process of basically at war with itself, with massive
[00:14:24.640 --> 00:14:26.200] wealth inequality.
[00:14:26.200 --> 00:14:29.880] Yet we have not really broached the subject of debt forgiveness.
[00:14:29.880 --> 00:14:35.680] So debt with interest, the lesson out of this is if you do not have a reset mechanism,
[00:14:35.680 --> 00:14:40.480] it leads to societal collapse in civil war every time.
[00:14:40.480 --> 00:14:44.920] It's a way of interpreting the Maoist revolution, the Bolshevik revolution.
[00:14:44.920 --> 00:14:49.560] Take away any ideological terms, just think of it as just how do you go and equalize
[00:14:49.560 --> 00:14:54.720] after you've ended up with massively unequal wealth inequality.
[00:14:54.720 --> 00:14:57.880] So what, why am I talking about this here?
[00:14:57.880 --> 00:15:01.280] Well crypto, you guys are designing a new system.
[00:15:01.280 --> 00:15:02.720] It's a beautiful system.
[00:15:02.720 --> 00:15:03.920] It's based on math.
[00:15:03.920 --> 00:15:05.080] It's not based on regulation.
[00:15:05.080 --> 00:15:07.120] It's got all sorts of interesting properties.
[00:15:07.120 --> 00:15:08.120] I love it.
[00:15:08.120 --> 00:15:09.120] Been involved in it.
[00:15:09.120 --> 00:15:10.120] Terrific.
[00:15:10.120 --> 00:15:11.440] Will crypto be different?
[00:15:11.440 --> 00:15:16.800] Well, whenever I read this wonderful book, Digital Cash by Finn Bolton, that's wonderful
[00:15:16.800 --> 00:15:22.840] book about the history and the dreams of cryptocurrencies, and it never talks about debt.
[00:15:22.840 --> 00:15:26.920] In fact, I've talked to several people here and they say, "Well, it can't happen with
[00:15:26.920 --> 00:15:29.040] Bitcoin and it can't happen with the Ethereum."
[00:15:29.040 --> 00:15:37.200] I suggest it can and it will because it evolves into this, such that 95% of the money out there
[00:15:37.200 --> 00:15:39.880] in the world is matched with debt.
[00:15:39.880 --> 00:15:43.320] 95% is sort of the Bitcoin equivalent.
[00:15:43.320 --> 00:15:49.480] So I think there's at least a major possibility that there's going to be lending and there's
[00:15:49.480 --> 00:15:53.560] going to be derivatives and the like that are going to hang on to this.
[00:15:53.560 --> 00:15:58.720] And one of the things, the reason why we're going to get that is because of smart contracts.
[00:15:58.720 --> 00:16:06.040] Smart contracts allow you to quantify and enforce certain obligations.
[00:16:06.040 --> 00:16:13.520] So actually, I would suggest the Ethereum community, you guys, we guys, are building the actual
[00:16:13.520 --> 00:16:18.280] mechanisms that we're going to be able to do this type of thing.
[00:16:18.280 --> 00:16:23.800] But the weird thing about it is there's almost no reset button.
[00:16:23.800 --> 00:16:26.680] We think of regulation as bad, right?
[00:16:26.680 --> 00:16:28.880] Government is, you know, they screw things up.
[00:16:28.880 --> 00:16:31.320] Well, they have been a bit of a reset button.
[00:16:31.320 --> 00:16:34.480] Boy, if they screw things up and often they're working for the wrong people, for all the
[00:16:34.480 --> 00:16:38.200] wrong reasons, you know, there's issues there.
[00:16:38.200 --> 00:16:45.400] But if we make a system that is debt with interest that has no reset, then at least historically
[00:16:45.400 --> 00:16:49.800] we can run into some severe, severe problems.
[00:16:49.800 --> 00:16:59.320] So that's the basic point of this talk is to say that the evolution of money, beguat debt,
[00:16:59.320 --> 00:17:02.080] money and debt beguat each other.
[00:17:02.080 --> 00:17:06.240] That debt with interest goes exponential.
[00:17:06.240 --> 00:17:11.880] If there's no reset mechanism, then there's societal collapse and civil war.
[00:17:11.880 --> 00:17:16.800] Basically, you have very few winners and lots and lots and lots of losers.
[00:17:16.800 --> 00:17:20.880] And that's not a very stable environment.
[00:17:20.880 --> 00:17:27.480] I wonder, and I just posed to you, that as we're designing a next generation internet
[00:17:27.480 --> 00:17:34.200] money, how money and value is exchanged with smart contracts, that the debt system is
[00:17:34.200 --> 00:17:38.440] something we can't just go and say, "Oh, well, we'll just won't do it," because it
[00:17:38.440 --> 00:17:40.680] will probably be built in some way.
[00:17:40.680 --> 00:17:45.880] How do we go and build our systems that will serve a large number of people over time?
[00:17:45.880 --> 00:17:50.440] I look at the microfinance system where it was like, "Hey, isn't it great?
[00:17:50.440 --> 00:17:52.560] Let's go and put a lot of poor people in debt."
[00:17:52.560 --> 00:17:58.320] And so they did, and that's gone really wrong in a lot of circumstances.
[00:17:58.320 --> 00:18:05.960] And there's in cases of India going and giving peasants the right to not pay back their debts
[00:18:05.960 --> 00:18:10.920] in microfinance because they were committing suicide at a too high a rate.
[00:18:10.920 --> 00:18:15.000] So even these systems that seem great at the time, they're awesome.
[00:18:15.000 --> 00:18:17.040] They have some downsides to them.
[00:18:17.040 --> 00:18:19.520] I speak to you as an internet pioneer.
[00:18:19.520 --> 00:18:23.280] It didn't all turn out quite the way we thought it would.
[00:18:23.280 --> 00:18:28.240] And so let's go and see if we can learn from those things, but also what are the precursors
[00:18:28.240 --> 00:18:31.200] to the systems that you're building?
[00:18:31.200 --> 00:18:33.720] What should this mean for Ethereum?
[00:18:33.720 --> 00:18:35.560] I don't know the answer to that.
[00:18:35.560 --> 00:18:37.440] Really, I don't.
[00:18:37.440 --> 00:18:42.640] What I wanted to do this, and I really appreciate your time, is for you to think it through
[00:18:42.640 --> 00:18:43.640] a little bit.
[00:18:43.640 --> 00:18:44.640] Spend a shower on it.
[00:18:44.640 --> 00:18:47.040] Spend a commute, right?
[00:18:47.040 --> 00:18:51.720] You know, I've just sort of, okay, what does this mean in terms of debt, and how can it
[00:18:51.720 --> 00:18:53.120] go out of control?
[00:18:53.120 --> 00:18:59.080] How is the system that I'm doing kind of locking in a set of losers that may be exponentially
[00:18:59.080 --> 00:19:00.080] increasing?
[00:19:00.080 --> 00:19:04.960] When I hear somebody really enthusiastically saying I'm going to go and make better for
[00:19:04.960 --> 00:19:11.480] billions of people, just go and look at it again and go and say, well, is that true?
[00:19:11.480 --> 00:19:15.640] How did it play out before when certain other people have said the same things?
[00:19:15.640 --> 00:19:17.600] It's not to say we shouldn't do it.
[00:19:17.600 --> 00:19:19.480] It's just our chance now.
[00:19:19.480 --> 00:19:20.840] It's early enough.
[00:19:20.840 --> 00:19:25.000] People like you guys that are building these systems, we can do something about it.
[00:19:25.000 --> 00:19:28.760] Let's not come to regret what we are building now.
[00:19:28.760 --> 00:19:32.480] Thank you very much.
[00:19:32.480 --> 00:19:42.600] I have 26 seconds for a question.
[00:19:42.600 --> 00:19:44.960] Yes?
[00:19:44.960 --> 00:19:49.400] What do you think the precursor is?
[00:19:49.400 --> 00:19:52.920] What do you think the precursor is?
[00:19:52.920 --> 00:19:56.440] What's the precursor for debt forgiveness now?
[00:19:56.440 --> 00:19:57.440] Desperation.
[00:19:57.440 --> 00:20:00.840] Usually, it only comes about when people are really desperate.
[00:20:00.840 --> 00:20:07.200] We had a chance in the United States when the debt, the housing debt happened, and we
[00:20:07.200 --> 00:20:10.600] could have gone and forgiven the housing debt and kept people in their homes.
[00:20:10.600 --> 00:20:11.600] We didn't.
[00:20:11.600 --> 00:20:12.600] We bailed out the banks.
[00:20:12.600 --> 00:20:14.560] We didn't bail out the homeowners.
[00:20:14.560 --> 00:20:18.440] Now a lot of those homes are now owned by Berkshire Hathaway.
[00:20:18.440 --> 00:20:22.040] They're rented back to those people.
[00:20:22.040 --> 00:20:23.240] It's a level of desperation.
[00:20:23.240 --> 00:20:25.880] It's going on right now with student debt in the United States.
[00:20:25.880 --> 00:20:26.880] Yes?
[00:20:26.880 --> 00:20:31.240] I will read the books, but I was wondering if you could give us a little summary, though,
[00:20:31.240 --> 00:20:37.000] of from the perspective of the people that are holding all of the debt and it's getting
[00:20:37.000 --> 00:20:39.360] forgiven, this is a terrible thing.
[00:20:39.360 --> 00:20:43.760] You were saying these pardon kings, two of them were killed and so forth.
[00:20:43.760 --> 00:20:50.360] But how does a society get to a point where it does this non-civil war peaceful forgiveness
[00:20:50.360 --> 00:20:51.360] of debt?
[00:20:51.360 --> 00:20:52.880] What are the conditions that make that happen?
[00:20:52.880 --> 00:20:58.320] In the United States, in the early 20th century, well, in the 20th century, we had the Bolshevik
[00:20:58.320 --> 00:20:59.840] revolution, the Mao revolution.
[00:20:59.840 --> 00:21:02.440] In the United States, we had the New Deal.
[00:21:02.440 --> 00:21:07.920] The New Deal, the oligarchs hated the New Deal.
[00:21:07.920 --> 00:21:15.480] The New Deal of FDR, there was a 95% incremental tax rate.
[00:21:15.480 --> 00:21:20.000] My grandfather complained that if he made another dollar, 95 cents of it went to the
[00:21:20.000 --> 00:21:22.080] government, he hated it.
[00:21:22.080 --> 00:21:23.080] He did just fine.
[00:21:23.080 --> 00:21:27.280] Don't cry for my grandfather.
[00:21:27.280 --> 00:21:33.000] What the United States did is they basically taxed their way into restoring a middle class.
[00:21:33.000 --> 00:21:36.400] We had a gilded age and we crushed it.
[00:21:36.400 --> 00:21:42.360] The United States I grew up with, sorry, had a middle class.
[00:21:42.360 --> 00:21:45.640] The United States I live in now, it's disappearing.
[00:21:45.640 --> 00:21:50.520] It is horrible and it erodes.
[00:21:50.520 --> 00:21:53.160] You can do it without a civil war.
[00:21:53.160 --> 00:21:58.280] You can just do it by having somebody powerful enough that wants to preserve society and
[00:21:58.280 --> 00:22:02.240] keep people from all moving away from their lands, which is what's going on now in the
[00:22:02.240 --> 00:22:03.240] United States.
[00:22:03.240 --> 00:22:03.240] Okay.
[00:22:03.240 --> 00:22:03.240] Thank you.
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