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Speaker 0 asserts that 'They suck don't like leeches.' He continues, 'They suck tired of they start out the most popular person in the world, make a lot of money, dig house, cars, everything, end up with penniless.' He also states, 'It is conspiracy that that you do it on purpose.' In summary, the statements describe a cycle where people rise to peak popularity, accumulate wealth and possessions such as houses and cars, and then end up penniless, with a claim that this outcome is part of a conspiracy carried out on purpose. The perspective highlights cynicism toward social dynamics.

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My mother used to criticize us, saying that we young people lacked awareness of our surroundings and history. She would often say, "You think you just fell out of a coconut tree?" She emphasized that we should understand the context in which we exist and acknowledge what came before us.

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The speakers discuss the pressures that come with being in the public eye and having wealth. Speaker 1 notes that revealing personal material isn’t hard, but revealing it and then being told you’re a spoiled white rich kid makes it difficult, implying judgments from others based on background. Speaker 0 responds by asking if this is something Speaker 1 has faced personally, to which Speaker 2 confirms the world’s judgment and acknowledges the challenge of being the son of a public figure who faces assumptions about him. Speaker 2 explains that he understands what it’s like to be the son of a prominent figure and to have people make assumptions, describing it as very difficult. Speaker 0 asks how he handled it, and Speaker 2 recalls the 1960s atmosphere with plenty of drugs but emphasizes the need to block out extraneous noise. He says this is the first time the young man is receiving a lot of attention, with both his father and grandfather in the picture, and people will say whatever they want. They note that others don’t understand what he has experienced or why he has acted as he has. The conversation highlights that simply being born into wealth does not shield anyone from issues, and suggests that people often misunderstand human complexity. Speaker 1 adds a contrast, pointing out that tabloids or social circles criticize wealthy individuals (citing the Kardashians as an example of shopping yet complaining about air conditioning) while not harshly judging them for similar behavior. The group discusses the reaction to a film about drug use and personal struggle, noting that people have said things about it despite its topic. Speaker 2 emphasizes staying focused on their goals and what they do. Speaker 0 reflects on their project’s purpose and reiterates focus. Speaker 2 recounts telling his son during the movie’s production that he doesn’t care about external validation or whether anyone sees the film; he says, “We’re winning,” because they are dedicating themselves to their work and positive outcomes are emerging. Finally, Speaker 2 mentions an NPR appearance where listeners called in to express gratitude for sharing their story and describing how it helped them with their own struggles, underscoring the potential positive impact of their efforts.

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A small group in our nation's capital benefited from government rewards while the people bore the cost. Washington thrived, but the people did not share its wealth.

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The speaker discusses the importance of restraining oneself from spending money and instead focusing on remembering and cherishing memories. They mention that it is better to have memories than to have a lot of money. The speaker also emphasizes the need to break free from the obsession with money and instead value experiences and relationships. They repeat these points multiple times throughout the video.

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The best way to behave when you have capital is like you don't. Great CEOs institute a culture of a lack of capital, even if they have it. This applies corporately, at the household, and on a personal level. The smartest people, when they accumulate capital, will still act like they are preserving it and execute expenses and investments with great discipline.

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They don't care about us.

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The speaker's mother used to say, "I don't know what's wrong with you young people. You think you just fell out of a coconut tree?" The speaker explains that this saying meant that people exist in the context of all in which they live and what came before them.

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Everybody knows that the dice are loaded and fixed. The poor save food, while the rich get rich. Everybody knows that's how we go.

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The speaker states that they wanted to be a burglar and perhaps a rapist when they grew up.

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The speaker discusses the main problems their generation faced growing up, stating that poverty led many to believe crime was the only path to wealth. They claim that most people involved in killing do it for money. The speaker says they know murderers and victims, and that killing is part of daily life.

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They don't really care about us.

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- Role models and influences: The speaker looked to elders and artisans in the community as mentors, including those who built artwork, carried tradition (chanting, drumming), or made items. Family examples included beadwork, basketry, and a father who made blowguns. Despite hardship, these elders remained focused on work and achievement, not poverty. Experiences of discrimination, such as being asked to sit in the back at a cafe in Philadelphia, were acknowledged, as were the sacrifices involved in public service. The speaker references Chief Martin, a predecessor who served in the military and then worked for the people, noting that public service requires sacrificing family and personal desires. The overarching message is that observing role models who worked with their hands and minds to overcome adversity inspired perseverance and responsibility. - Meaning and practice of representation: Representation begins with everyday actions, not just titles—being a giver and community-minded, helping others, and remembering where one comes from. The speaker recalls a generational ethic of work and giving to youth, influenced by parents who uplifted others despite poverty. In formal terms, representation extends beyond local impact to county, state, national, and federal levels, including the possibility of walking the halls of Congress to represent the community’s interests and do the necessary work for its betterment. - Steps for allies and understanding: The speaker advocates for a government-to-government relationship and networking across local, city, county, state, and federal levels to share who they are and why they act as they do. Emphasis is placed on respecting different perspectives and optics—acknowledging that one side may not see what the other sees—and the importance of mutual respect in all interactions. The core idea is that effective allyship and understanding come from open, respectful dialogue that recognizes diverse experiences and viewpoints.

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The speaker emphasizes the importance of paying a fair share, specifically targeting the wealthy and big corporations. They express their commitment to ensuring that the wealthy pay their fair share and highlight the need for everyone to contribute their fair share. The speaker concludes by stating that paying a fair share is a matter of basic fairness.

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I won't be controlled like others. Only God controls me. I don't take orders from anyone else. My mom sacrificed for me. I serve only God.

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The speaker states that if the FBI had been asking questions about human trafficking, they would have known. The speaker raised their son as a Christian. The speaker believes their son may do things people don't like, but he would never be involved in human trafficking.

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The speaker questions why they don't increase the price of their beverages, like their competitors, to increase profit, especially since the company is successful and debt-free. The speaker then answers their own question, suggesting they keep prices lower as a way of giving back, particularly considering some customers may struggle to pay rent.

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The family avoids the spotlight, prioritizing business. Their motto, "to be and not to seem," guides them to focus on substance over fame. They rarely give interviews, and when they do, it's about business, institutions, or philanthropy. Personal lives and politics are kept private.

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The speaker discusses the importance of restraining oneself from spending money and instead focusing on saving. They mention that it is better to remember experiences rather than material possessions. The speaker also emphasizes the need to break the habit of spending money and suggests that it is possible to save money by not buying unnecessary things. Overall, the speaker encourages the audience to prioritize their financial well-being and avoid unnecessary expenses.

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Gangsters are responsible for taking care of their families, including sending their kids to college and school, and providing food for them. Some argue that if gangsters were in charge of the world and this country, things would be different.

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Money can't buy longevity, although wealthy people fund longevity research. The speaker won't prioritize longevity research while malaria exists, as that would be self-centered. The speaker feels lucky to have had an incredible career at Microsoft and to now be fulfilled by foundation work. The speaker also feels lucky to have great kids. Overall, there is very little that the speaker wishes money could buy, because the speaker has basically everything they want.

The BigDeal

The #1 Money Habit Most People NEVER Do | Scott Galloway
Guests: Scott Galloway
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Scott Galloway sits with Codie Sanchez to dissect the economic forces shaping opportunity, wealth transfer, and the pressures on younger generations. He traces how wealth has concentrated over decades—with housing, stocks, and education increasingly privileging older, wealthier cohorts—arguing that a deliberate pattern of transferring wealth from the young to the old underpins much of American policy and everyday life. The conversation centers on actionable guidance for young people: cultivate a savings muscle, focus on a marketable skill, and prioritize diversification to reduce risk. Throughout, Galloway emphasizes the role of policy in leveling the playing field, advocating for measures like means-testing Social Security, alternative minimum taxes, and targeted support for younger workers, while acknowledging the complexity of deficits, debt, and growth. He cautions against romanticizing extreme wealth as a universal path, urging practical steps that build economic security without ignoring broader social costs. A core thread is how the modern economy rewards mobility and ownership—yet makes it harder for non-elite entrants to access housing, higher education, and stable wealth. The discussion moves to the dynamics of private capital, antitrust, and the concentration of power in tech, media, and finance, with nuanced takes on private equity and the benefits and pitfalls of VC-driven growth. The hosts and guests probe how to prepare for a lifetime of work amid rapid technological change, including the value of corporate experience, the trade-offs between speed and balance, and the importance of social and community anchors—churches, leagues, or nonprofits—as guardrails for younger people. They also explore self-dacroned resilience, the psychology of failure and rejection, and the role of long-run planning in dating, careers, and family-building. The episode closes with a candid reflection on how biography, culture, and policy intersect to shape opportunity, personal finance, and the ability to navigate risk with discipline and purpose.

This Past Weekend

A Coroner | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #459
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Theo Von interviews Toby Savoy, a death investigator and coroner in Lafayette, Louisiana, about the day‑to‑day work, cases, and the culture surrounding death in a rural parish. Savoy explains that in Louisiana a coroner’s office functions as an elected medical‑legal authority, with death investigators like him handling most on‑scene work. Calls come from Sheriff’s offices, city police, hospitals, and nursing homes, and cases are categorized as natural, accidental, homicide, or suicide. Many natural deaths can be released over the phone without an on‑scene visit, but officers and detectives may accompany investigations in suspicious cases. When on scene, they carry a gear bag and collect toxicology samples, often drawing blood from the heart or accessing eye fluid (vitreous humor) via a horizontal needle to avoid clotting; if needed, they can sample liver tissue. They also examine the residence and surroundings to understand the decedent’s life and circumstances, not just the body. Savoy recounts cases from bayous with bodies floating in water, where decomposition and animal scavenging can obscure cause, to a single case where an elderly couple’s routine was misread as foul play and subsequent autopsy clarified the death. He stresses collaboration with law enforcement, noting that deputies and detectives bring historical context and informants, while coroner‑level medical knowledge helps interpret signs of trauma or medical death. He describes the practical reality of scene work, such as how sometimes soldiers or inexperienced responders have to be guided away from disturbing evidence, and how the body bag and chain of custody are critical to preserving evidence. He also shares vivid anecdotes: a body with arms removed found in a ditch, a foot recovered weeks later in a case, and mass‑death scenes involving boaters or wrecks where federal agencies cooperate. The discussion shifts to death by overdose, with Savoy noting fentanyl and crystal meth have driven a surge in ODs across all ages, and explaining how the opioid crisis stemmed in part from the now‑well‑documented Press Ganey pain‑control push in hospitals that encouraged aggressive analgesia and contributed to widespread prescription opioid addiction. He contrasts crack era deaths with fentanyl, explaining fentanyl’s potency and the growing problem of fentanyl laced with other drugs like xylazine (“tranq”). He discusses the role coroner’s offices play in evaluating drug involvement, toxicity, and multiple substances, and mentions the rise in polypharmacy and the prevalence of dual diagnoses requiring rehab or psychiatric care, which the system often fails to provide in a timely way. Savoy speaks candidly about the emotional toll: tragedies during holidays, the pain of losing young people to drugs or gun violence, and the personal responsibility he feels to try to help families despite the limitations of the system. Savoy covers the ordinary and the extreme: the constant threat to officers on scene, the logistics of autopsy and disease, the sometimes grisly realities of animal involvement in death, and the steady need for compassion, humor, and resilience. Savoy reflects on the human side—how the job shapes his faith, his coping through music, and his ongoing commitment to reduce preventable deaths by educating families and communities. He closes with a sense of Louisiana’s character: a place where death is common, but life and humor persist, and where every day is a gift.

Moonshots With Peter Diamandis

Inside Magic Johnson’s Billion-Dollar Empire | EP #163
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Magic Johnson, the first person to franchise Starbucks and involved in numerous businesses, shares his journey from aspiring NBA player to successful entrepreneur. He discusses his HIV diagnosis 30 years ago, revealing the emotional moment he told his pregnant wife, Cookie, who vowed to support him. Johnson emphasizes the importance of public funding for health research, stating it transcends political affiliations and is vital for saving lives. He reflects on his business ventures, including owning 125 Starbucks locations, Burger King franchises, and his role as a minority owner of the Washington Commanders. Johnson highlights his commitment to uplifting underserved communities through job creation and access to fitness and business opportunities. He also shares personal anecdotes about his upbringing, stressing the significance of family values and education. Johnson's philosophy centers on giving back and helping others, inspired by his parents' teachings. He concludes by advocating for a dual focus on profit and social impact in business, encouraging leaders to continue making positive contributions to society.

The Tim Ferriss Show

Beating Blackjack and Roulette, Beating the Stock Market, and More
Guests: Edward Thorp
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Tim Ferriss welcomes Edward Thorp, a renowned blackjack player and investor, known for his influential books "Beat the Dealer" and "Beat the Market." Thorp shares his background, growing up in Chicago during the Great Depression, moving to California, and earning degrees in physics and mathematics. His curiosity led him to blackjack, where he developed a system to beat the game using mathematical principles. In 1958, after a successful blackjack experience in Las Vegas, Thorp realized he could devise a winning strategy. He sought publication for his findings and connected with Claude Shannon at MIT, who helped him publish his work, which gained significant attention. Thorp later tested his system, proving its effectiveness by winning substantial amounts in blackjack. Transitioning to investing, Thorp began managing money after making profits from gambling and book royalties. He co-authored "Beat the Market" with Sheen Khasuf, which laid the groundwork for his hedge fund strategies. His hedge fund achieved consistent profitability over 29 years, utilizing mathematical finance ideas to minimize risk while maximizing returns. Thorp emphasizes the importance of long-term investing, advocating for buying and holding equities. He discusses the pitfalls of short-term thinking and the value of understanding investment risks. He also highlights the significance of independent thinking and the dangers of following the crowd, illustrated by his experience with Bernie Madoff's fraud. In terms of health and fitness, Thorp shares his journey from weightlifting to marathon running, emphasizing the importance of adaptability and listening to one's body as one ages. He encourages a balanced approach to exercise and health, which has contributed to his longevity. Thorp concludes by reflecting on the concept of "having enough," sharing a story about Joseph Heller's perspective on wealth and fulfillment. He advocates for a life focused on meaningful experiences rather than the relentless pursuit of money.
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