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Jocko Willink: War, Leadership, and Discipline | Lex Fridman Podcast #197


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The following is a conversation with Jaco Willink, a retired U.S. Navy SEAL, coauthor of Extreme
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Ownership, Dichotomy of Leadership, Discipline Equals Freedom, and many other excellent books,
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and he's the host of Jaco's podcast. Jaco spent 20 years in the SEAL teams. He was the commander
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of SEAL Team 3's Task Unit Bruiser that became the most highly decorated Special Operations unit
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of the Iraq War. This conversation was intense and to the point. We agreed to talk again,
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probably many times, and what I find very interesting, aside from the talk of leadership,
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is the conversation about military tactics of specific battles in history.
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I do happen to at times mention that I'm Russian. This is what I mean, that I got a bit of that
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Russian soul. But of course who I really am is an American. This country gave me the opportunity,
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the freedom to become and to be who I am, to stand as an individual. This seemingly
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simple freedom to be a sovereign human being in the face of all the beauty and cruelty of life
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is why I love this country. Much of life can be unfair, unjust, even tragic. But this is the
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country where if I'm clever enough or card enough and just get lucky enough I have a chance to dream
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big and make my dream a reality. The United States welcomed me, my family, and millions of immigrants
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throughout its history so that we can make something meaningful of ourselves. To love,
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to dream, to create, to find joy and meaning. It lets me be the weird kid I am who wears a suit,
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talks about love, and has a fascination with robots. I know some people these days have an
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aversion to pride and love for their country. I don't. I love America. I also love humanity.
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I believe these two, patriotism and humanism, are not in conflict, much like loving your family and
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loving your country are not in conflict. They are all manifestations of the human spirit,
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longing to strive for a better world. I was born a Russian, but I believe I will die an American.
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A proud American. Hopefully not too soon, but life is short. I already had one hell of a fun journey,
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so I'm ready to go when it's time. This is the Lex Friedman podcast and here is my conversation
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with Jaco Willink. Is it tragic or beautiful to you that some of the closest bonds that have formed
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between people are through war often. I think it's both, both tragic and beautiful and for the
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obvious reasons. What are the obvious reasons? Why is it so obvious? Well, it's tragic because
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a lot of people die and it's beautiful because you form bonds with people that are very difficult
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to break once you've been through them. What is it about the trauma of war that makes bonds
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difficult to break? Because what you realize when you're in a war is that the people that are next
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to you, you rely on them and they're relying on you to survive. And without them, you will not
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survive. And when you realize that you need to work together as a team to, to live, that forms
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a very strong bond. And there's nothing like that team outside of the realm of war. I don't know
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because I've, there's a lot of things that I haven't experienced in my life, but I think the
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pressure and the consequences of war, there could be similar situations in survival scenarios,
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in various atrocities where people need to work together in order to survive. And I think you
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could probably get something that was similar. There's a very particular nature to the kind of
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war that World War II was, especially for the Soviet Union, where it didn't just influence
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the lives of people. It created culture, the music, the poetry, the literature. It's in the,
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it's in the way people think. It's in the way people see the world. It's in the way they talk
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even still to this day. And of course, I was talking about the directly relationship between
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two soldiers, but there's something about the depth of human connection that results from the
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almost like reverberations of war. Like generations later, you're still close to other humans.
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There's a coldness towards other humans like in Russia, but once you open up, it's depth. You
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seek depth of connection versus like breadth of a career kind of thinking, how can I make friends
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with this? I can move into this direction. What can this person benefit me? Instead, you seek
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a depth of human connection and appreciation that brings a lot. And maybe I'm romanticizing war here,
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but it feels like that's inextricably connected to World War II for Russians. Does that resonate
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at all? So if you look at military training, what they do is they take people in the military
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from the civilian world. They bring them into the military and they put them through bootcamp,
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which is the stereotypical thing that you see on TV. You're going to get yelled at.
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You're going to get screamed at. You're going to get, you're going to get put in the mud and
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you're going to be made to do hard things together. And what does that do with those
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civilians? Well, it gives them a common background. It gives them a common suffering
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that they've been through together and they form some sort of connection, some sort of bond.
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Now to make that bond a little bit stronger, after you get done with bootcamp, they send you
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to advanced infantry school and you suffer some more together. And when you suffer more together,
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now you're in a smaller group too, because now it's infantry. It's not supply people anymore or
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logisticians. It's strictly people that are going to fight. They're infantrymen.
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So they go through a school together and now they get a little bit tighter, get done with that. And
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maybe you go to an airborne division. So you go to airborne school and now you all
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overcome this fear of jumping out of an airplane together and you celebrate surviving that.
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Then maybe you get done with that. And now you go at an airborne division. Now you're an even tighter
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group because you've suffered together. What comes next is special forces training or ranger training.
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And what they do is they put you in these situations where you're going to suffer together and you're
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going to build these bonds because as I said earlier, you have to rely on each other to survive.
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And by the way, not everyone does, not everyone makes it through this training. So you sort of
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have these memories of people that didn't make it. You share that connection as well.
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And you can keep going down this road until you go into combat with a military unit and
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military units that go through combat, have an even tighter bond. And the harder the combat that
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they go through, the tighter the bond is going to be. So I think when you talk about what the
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Soviet Union went through in World War II, there was a shared suffering to survive. And so the
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entire nation has that common thread. And that's probably the thing that you sense or feel when you
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refer back to the bond that resonates all the way back to World War II.
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So in your podcast and your writing, you talk about some of the most fascinating things I listen
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to you talk about in terms of military conflict is tactics and sort of the details of combat.
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But allow me to stick on World War II for a second. There's a particular aspect to that war,
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I don't know if you can speak to it, where twice the number of civilians died than military personnel.
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So the Soviet Union, especially. My grandfather was a machine gunner in Ukraine as the Germans were
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marching towards Moscow. There's this important push in 1941 where they were trying to get before
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the winter to Moscow. And what Stalin was doing, he was trying to get to Moscow. He was trying to
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get to Moscow. And what Stalin was doing is he was basically throwing bodies to slow the attack.
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And what that meant is everybody understood that your job was, you have this heavy machine guns,
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it's very, it's almost unreasonable to be able to be mobile in any kind of way with them.
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So you're thrown at the front and you're just nonstop shooting and 95 plus percent of people
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are just dead. All the soldiers are just dead. And then you just go back and back and you're trying
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to protect as many civilians as you can throughout this whole process, but you don't. And so you have
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millions of civilians that die along the way into this march. Is there something you could say about
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this complete, perhaps it's naive of me to say, but a war that lacks tactics, that lacks strategy
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and is purely about just no consideration of human life and just throwing bodies and bullets
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into a mix together where millions die. And that in particular felt much less like conflict
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and much more like torture or suffering. It didn't come off as torture only that interestingly
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enough, as you probably know, my grandfather, including everybody else, volunteered. They were
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proud to do this. They were proud to march to their death for country, for love of country.
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But the question on the civilian side, when more civilians die, the military personnel,
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what do you make of that? It's awful. It's awful when a soldier dies. It's awful when a civilian
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dies. It's awful when 10 civilians or 10 soldiers. And it's even more awful when millions and millions
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of soldiers and civilians die. I think it's safe to say that the Soviet Union was facing an
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existential threat to their existence against the Nazis. So to not fight would be to die as well,
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maybe die a death a few years later, maybe die a different way. But
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the choice was die now, trying or die later on your knees. And I think the choice was pretty clear.
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As far as the tactics go, I mean, there is this is attrition warfare. That's what that is. We are
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going to keep, you know, you said throwing bodies at the problem. That's attrition warfare. And the
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Soviet Union had a lot of bodies, more than the Germans. And when you fight with attrition warfare,
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whoever has more men and material will eventually win. It's an awful, it's an awful way. But that's
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the that's that's what the strategy was. You often talk about leadership.
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Let's put the evils of Hitler aside. The boldness of Hitler in making some of the strategic
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decisions he did was considered by many military historians quite brilliant, early in the war,
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or insane and brilliant. Stalin, on the other hand, I think university is seen as somebody who is
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terrible military strategist, especially early in the war. He did not see all the possible
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trajectories that the war could take. Is there something you could say about failure of leadership,
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Stalin, also the United Kingdom before Churchill, and also FDR on the United States side, who
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basically, was trying to turn a blind eye to everything that was happening over over there,
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with a perspective of we just want to make, we want to keep America's interest
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as the primary interest and everything else, let other countries work out their problems.
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You know, I think one of the things with Hitler was in the beginning of the war,
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he listened to his friends, his family, and he listened to his friends. He listened to
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his generals. And therefore, they did pretty well with that. I think as the war went on,
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he believed that he was smarter than he was, and made decisions that were bad, that cost him dearly.
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You know, I mean, case in point, as everyone knows, going and attacking the Soviet Union,
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while you're still fighting a war on the other front is not not a good move.
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There's an example of yeah, bad leadership, letting your ego get in the way believing that you can do
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things that you that are beyond your capabilities. But, you know, as you mentioned in the beginning
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with Blitzkrieg, those were really dynamic and bold moves. And they worked. And that what does
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that do? That fuels your ego and makes you think that you can win.
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Many people consider that war a just war. What do you think makes a just war?
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I think you have the Nazis, and the Imperial Japanese trying to impose their will on other
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nations and other peoples. And when that happens, I think on a grand scale, people look at that. And
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believe it's just to step in and do something about it.
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Is there some gray area here?
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There's, there's nothing but gray area.
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The United States has been involved in a lot of military conflict since then.
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How do you draw the line to the gray area? What, what war should we engage in and not?
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I know you don't get a lot of questions about that, but I think it's important that you
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I know you don't get into politics much. But what the decision to go to war,
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you have to look at the situation that you're going into. And you have to make sure that you have
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the will to go to war. And the will to go to war means that you are willing to kill people.
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And when I say people, I don't just mean enemy, because in war,
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civilians are going to die, women and children are going to die. Every a lot of people are
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going to die. And so you and you are going to kill them. Doesn't matter what kind of
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smart munitions you have. Doesn't matter how disciplined your soldiers are. When you go into
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a war, civilians are going to die and you have to understand that. And the other thing that
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you have to understand is that your troops are also going to die. And it seems like sometimes
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we're a little bit naive about the calculation of what that's going to look like.
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And maybe we think, well, not that many civilians and maybe not that many of our our personnel are
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going to die. And that's where you get into sticky situations. And, you know, another thing when you
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were talking about the Soviet Union versus the Nazis, that's total war. That's what that is. And
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we don't engage in that very often. It's total war. It's we will do absolutely anything to win.
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And America doesn't fight like that very often. In fact, the last time we fought like that was
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World War Two. We it was total war. We will do whatever it takes to up to and including
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the atomic bomb to destroy the enemy. So those are the kind of things you need to think about
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before you go to war. And I don't think we think about that very often.
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I don't think we think about that very often. You know, even the United States, the atomic bomb,
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nuclear weapons is an interesting one because there's a lot of
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there's a lot of hesitation on that. There's a lot of critics of that decision as it was happening.
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So even America, you could imagine other countries like Germany would not be so hesitant
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to use nuclear weapons. It's interesting to think about in deciding military strategy to inject
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ethics into it, into morality. It's not just about winning the war, but should we do this
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and doing the calculation of human life. Usually those decisions are made by leaders,
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not by the soldier that's going to be implementing
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that decision. Do you put some responsibility, I should even say blame on the leaders
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and not doing that kind of calculation here? You could say that about the Vietnam War,
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you could say that about even the war that you were involved with in Iraq.
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Is there some criticism here that you could apply to leaders for failing not to consider
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that the broader moral questions? Yes.
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Natural, like all leaders will make these mistakes or should leaders not make these mistakes?
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Leaders are going to make mistakes. It's impossible to know what's going to happen in war,
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just like it's impossible to know what's going to happen in life.
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You make decisions based on the information that you have at the time and you will make mistakes.
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If you fail to admit that you made a mistake, that's where I have a more significant problem
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than someone that makes a mistake and says, hey, this is the mistake that I made. This is the
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intelligence that I thought we were utilizing and it actually is not what I thought it was going to
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be. And here's the new direction that we're going in. We don't have enough of that type of ownership
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in leadership globally. Just saying I made a mistake
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that resulted in a loss at scale of human life, being able to say that.
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Being able to say that. And when you don't say that, you end up with a more loss of human life.
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Can I ask you about the loss of human life? How does killing a human being change you?
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What does it mean to kill a human being? What does it feel like to kill a human being?
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Well, I mean, I guess you'd have to look at what circumstances a person's in when this is taking
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place. If you've got someone that's in a, a fit of rage that goes and kills somebody,
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you know, they're going to come out of it and think, wow, I've just really messed up.
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If you've got a, someone that is a sociopath, right? They're not going to feel anything.
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And that person deserved to die. And that's why they died. If you've got a soldier who feels like
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they're trying to protect their friends, they'll move through that. If you've got a soldier that's
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doing it because they want some kind of personal glory, they'll probably not feel good about it
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later. So I think it depends on the situation. I think it depends on the psychology of the
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individual that's going through it. He said, move through that.
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Is there some calculation here that a soldier, when they kill another soldier,
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a realization that is just another human being,
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I mean, is there some heavy burden to that aspect that it's ultimately just human on human?
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I think it depends a lot on the scenario. I know that when I was in Iraq fighting,
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we, we talk a lot about the dehumanization of the enemy and it's something that the
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governments will do. I mean, governments will do that to each other. I mean, the Japanese dehumanized
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the Americans and the Americans dehumanized the Japanese and the Americans dehumanized the Nazis
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and the Nazis dehumanized the Americans so that to remove as much of that human on human killing
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aspect that you're talking about. And what I would say is that the Japanese
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human killing aspect that you're talking about. And what I, what I've said is that
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in, when we were in Iraq, we didn't have to dehumanize the enemy because the,
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the enemy dehumanized themselves through their actions, through their behaviors.
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When, when we know that they are torturing and raping and murdering the local populace,
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they've been dehumanized. And so as far as looking at them and thinking, oh, this is a,
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you know, a human, another human that's, that's on the level of, you know, my, my uncle or my brother,
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I didn't, I didn't think of them out that way. I thought of them as,
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as murdering, raping, evil, subhumans.
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Yeah. Rock is different and America's position is different. You're right. That America has not
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been involved in a war where it's quite like two humans fighting, like teenage boys fighting
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against each other. And you've got to remember that America
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has not been involved in a war where it's quite like two humans fighting, like teenage boys fighting
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against each other. And you've got to remember, I mean, we're, we're seeing these Iraqi kids
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that are living under this sadistic, sadistic terror, the Iraqi women that are being raped
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and so on the one side we become the, the Iraqi populace is very humanized to us because we're
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talking to them. We've got interpreters, we understand we're seeing them day after day,
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the same individuals. And so we form a bond with the local populace and yet we see what the
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insurgents are doing. And so it's again, not difficult to dehumanize people that behave in
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that manner. Yeah. I suppose I'm, I worry about the dehumanization at a much larger scale when
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it's not the kind of case that you're talking about. Even now, hopefully I'm not fear mongering,
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but there's a sense in which there's the drums of war slowly starting to build with China.
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There, in the best case, it would be a cold war of, there's a dehumanization aspect that's
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happening with China currently, which is they're the other and they're after stealing all of your
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data. There's a cybersecurity, it starts with cybersecurity and it worries me because it
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creates the other out of a very large population that may ultimately lead to conflict.
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In the worst case, hot conflict that would no longer be the situation you are in in Iraq
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and more similar to the Soviet Union conflict with Germany that it's kids and then they're
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dehumanized to where you're at scale slaughtering them or at least hurting their quality of life
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in a way that's maybe, you know, suffering has many forms. It doesn't have to be through just
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a hot war. It could be through starvation, through camps, all those kinds of things.
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And I worry about that. We kind of tend to think that these wars are behind us
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and I'm not always so sure that's the case. And at least in the way that, it ultimately starts
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with hate and it, again, hopefully I'm not being too dramatic, but I see that there's a kind of
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brewing of, it starts with dehumanization that turns to hate of the other. You see that with
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China, you see it a little bit with Russia and you have an early podcast with between the
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where you break down the tactics of the Chechen war versus Russia. It's fascinating. But that's
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the kind of conflicts I'm referring to. And I don't know. There's a, I know you're a bit of
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a musician. I love, I love Dire Straits song called Brothers in Arms. I don't know if you
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know that one. And there's a line in it. I think they play it quite often at military funerals,
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which I just recently learned, but it's this powerful song that has a line, we're fools to
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make war on our brothers in arms. Do you think there's some sense in which at the leadership
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level, but just as human beings, we're perhaps foolish and engaging in military conflict
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as much as we have, or as fool, a very inappropriate word here.
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00:27:33.200
Well, I think that using the term brothers in arms means the people that are on my side,
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right? So it doesn't make sense to start wars with people that are on your side. So that's,
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that might just be the way the lyrics are written so that it fit the song or whatever.
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00:27:50.240
I think broadly what you're asking me is, is war foolish? Yeah. And I would say the answer is yes.
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And if you can avoid it, you absolutely should. But if there is a bear or a wolf that is trying
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to get into your house, is it foolish to shoot that bear or shoot that wolf? I think that's
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the answer. Is it foolish to shoot that bear or shoot that wolf? I think the answer is pretty
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obvious. So when you're threatened or your family are threatened or your way of life is threatened,
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00:28:29.040
then you have to do something to try and defend your family, your way of life. It should be the
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00:28:36.640
last resort. You had a conversation with Jordan Peterson where he asked you a question
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00:28:49.520
in terms of war being the last resort, whether you would like your kids to grow up in peace
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in a time of no war. You said yes, but, and so happens Jordan didn't let you finish. Can you,
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can you elaborate what follows the but? Well, you, you and I have been talking about the fact that
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struggle brings people together and, and brings out the best and, and the worst, brings out the
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worst in people. War brings out the worst in people. It also brings out the best in people.
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So would you want your kid to go and enter in a wrestling tournament where
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00:29:32.960
you paid all the other kids off and your kid won? Or you enter them in a jujitsu tournament where
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00:29:43.040
they're a purple belt and you know that everyone that they're going to fight against is a white
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belt. And so they get the, they get the big W, they get the win, but they don't really get tested
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and they don't really struggle. And if you don't struggle, you don't grow. So that's the, but
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right. Um, the, the absolute best times of my life were in combat and the worst times of my life were
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in combat. And so even though I wouldn't want any of my children to suffer through the worst of times
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00:30:21.600
at the same time, the but is I would want them to have the opportunity to feel that bond that
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you're referring to earlier and to see human beings that are willing to sacrifice their
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00:30:35.120
lives for their friends. You mentioned the worst. What are some of the worst aspects of
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00:30:42.400
when you were in Iraq? Well, what are the things that, um, the hardest on you having my guys killed?
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Is there, uh, absurd cruelty to it? Was it due to mistakes or natural consequences of, of fighting?
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Is there any difference? Is that at the end is just losing? Those are brothers in arms.
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00:31:13.280
There's a million different ways to get killed in the war and you can go out on an operation and you
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can do everything wrong and you can survive and you can go out in an operation and do everything
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00:31:23.680
perfect and you can get killed. Is there some aspect which makes it worse when there is mistakes
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00:31:30.400
made? Well, yeah, if there's mistakes made, then you're going to sit there and beat yourself up
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eternally for mistakes that were made. But to you, the things that hurt is just losing,
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losing people close to you. Yes. Are you yourself afraid of death? No.
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00:31:52.080
Are you yourself afraid of death? No. Do you think about it? Does it make sense to you that this
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thing ends? Like do you, uh, the Stoics contemplated death. It gives flavor to life.
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It makes you appreciate, there's something about finiteness of life that makes it, that makes it
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00:32:14.640
this, uh, Jocko Discipline Go drink, sour apple that I'm enjoying is delicious. Makes it taste
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00:32:23.920
better because I'm going to die one day. And I think about that a lot. Do you think about it?
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00:32:32.880
Other than I know that it's going to end. I mean, but I don't think about it on a daily basis. I
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think about the fact I think about, I know that I'm lucky to be here. I know that many people
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sacrificed to give me this opportunity to be here. So, but I don't dwell on it.
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What about when you were in combat? Nothing. There's, there's tactics,
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there's strategy, there's the mission. And then your mortality is not part of the calculation.
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00:33:10.080
I think you get to a point where you accept the fact that you can die. Like I, I, you know,
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00:33:16.320
like I said, you can do everything right. You roll out the gate, you hit an ID, a triple stack
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00:33:20.800
subsurface ID and you're dead. You're done. And there's nothing that's going to stop that. It's
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going to happen. And I think if you're scared of that or you're thinking about that, it's going to
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inhibit your ability to do your job properly. And I think it's also going to drive you crazy.
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The thing that I thought about more was that happening to my guys. And that's the gut wrenching
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terror that you feel when, when operations happen. Can I ask you about love of country? It's, it
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continues to just how much I've studied Stalin recently in the past few years. It continues to
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surprise me, not surprise me. It's just tragic in some kind of way. I'm not sure exactly if I could
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put words to it, but how many people and still do, but at the time were willing, loved Stalin
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00:34:16.720
and were willing to die for country for the love of country. And I too, maybe because I was born
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00:34:25.200
there and now I am a red blooded American. I love nationalism is a bad word, but I love the love of
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00:34:36.560
country. It gives, it somehow gives a meaning like a brotherhood, like we're in this together.
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00:34:43.920
I love that's why I love the Olympics. That's just the, the unity of it. It takes a step out of the
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00:34:56.560
selfish pursuits of any one particular ant and looks at us as a big ant colony and it's inspiring.
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00:35:04.000
It's it's exciting, but at the same time, it seems to get us to do horrible things.
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00:35:11.200
If, if manipulated by charismatic leaders, what do you make of this love of country? Is it a,
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00:35:20.480
is it a bad thing? Is it a thing that gets in the way or is it a good thing?
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00:35:26.160
Well, I think like anything else, if it's balanced correctly,
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00:35:30.560
it's great. And if it goes to some extreme level, then it becomes a negative.
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00:35:35.440
And I think it, I think it's probably sourced in some sort of animalistic tribalism that we all
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00:35:43.200
have to be part of a tribe. And this is a real big tribe that you get to be a part of. And all
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00:35:49.440
you have to do is kind of show up. And so when someone says, Hey, we're going to play hockey
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00:35:54.400
against the Russians, well, we're going to cheer for the American boys.
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00:36:00.720
So my, my area of work is artificial intelligence. It'd be interesting to ask your thoughts about
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00:36:08.720
something, which is autonomous weapon systems. US has now officially released the report saying
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00:36:17.600
that they're open to, not open, they're engaging in, in adding more and more autonomy and artificial
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00:36:25.520
intelligence into its weapon systems because China is doing it. So there's, these are the first steps
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00:36:31.040
in something that AI folks worry about, which is a race, an AI race in the space of autonomous
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00:36:41.120
weapons that can run away too quickly. Is that something, I don't know if in general,
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00:36:48.240
if you have thoughts about weapon systems that make autonomous decisions
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00:36:53.360
at the small scale of just targeting where to shoot and at the largest scale of military strategy
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00:37:00.320
of just being given a mission of destroy this particular target, this particular, say terrorist
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00:37:07.600
human being, and then figure out what is the right bombing campaign on your own to accomplish
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00:37:13.760
this task that minimizes civilian death. And then just loading that in and letting the AI system
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00:37:20.400
automatically decide that. What are your general thoughts about it? Do you, do you worry about it?
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00:37:27.280
Because there's the positive effects that in the best version of that world, you kill fewer
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00:37:34.640
civilians, you kill, hurt fewer of your own human beings. But at the negative side of that,
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you might lose the thing we kind of talked about, which is the basic humanity, even in the individual
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00:37:51.360
soldier of what is right and what is wrong and not making huge mistakes that hurt thousands
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00:37:58.800
or millions of people. I guess what you're asking me is if they could make a machine that could
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00:38:04.560
do more surgical attacks on enemy individuals, would I be for it? Yes, I would be for it.
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The problem is if you've ever used machines of any kind, their initial design may not be,
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00:38:23.280
there's unintended consequences. There's ways in the machine actually behaves that you realize
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00:38:32.160
there's bugs in this thing. So do we not put protocols in place to prevent something from
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00:38:38.640
going too far outside the boundaries of what we wanted to execute? You do. But the question is,
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00:38:45.440
this is the first time in human history you can create things, machines, toaster, microwave oven,
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00:38:53.200
that's smarter than you in this particular task. I mean, it's not yet there. What you're learning a
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00:39:00.320
lot with military strategies, humans are actually really damn smart. It's very hard to improve on a
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human. And so most actual drones that are unmanned are still piloted by humans. It's very difficult
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to do every aspect of war. But it's not out of the realm of possibility that machines will start
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doing those things better in certain things, certain more precise targeting of the enemy.
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00:39:35.360
The question is, so what happens when you start to rely on the machine to do some of the task
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00:39:42.080
is you get lazy. You forget what it is like to do that task or more importantly, you lose the
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00:39:51.280
knowledge of the intricacies of that task and you forget the ways it can go wrong. So the protocols
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00:39:57.520
may not be sufficient to constrain the power of the ways that things go wrong, especially when
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00:40:05.800
things are moving really quickly, especially when the ethics of the two sides aren't perfectly
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00:40:12.800
aligned. When people are some certain sides, like on the Chinese side, may be more willing to take
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00:40:19.520
risks for dangerous consequences than others. So what happened on the bioweapon side
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00:40:27.520
is internationally, maybe you can speak to this more, but my sense, what I was told,
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00:40:32.400
there is a sense globally that bioweapons are not going to be used. They're unethical. There's a
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00:40:40.240
sense like we're not going to engage in this. And with AI currently, China and US said, green light,
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00:40:49.560
all go ahead. It's totally ethical. If it can decrease the loss of human life, why not?
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00:40:59.160
And my worry is that it's much easier to design weapons that are effective than design weapons
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00:41:12.840
who have the depth of ethics and morals that humans do, which I think we don't as human
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00:41:21.120
beings don't acknowledge enough that even like the cold calculated killing of others,
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00:41:26.400
like precise, effective execution of a mission still has ethics in it. At every level, you know
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00:41:35.280
what's right and what's wrong. And I don't know if you take that away, you're not going to make
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00:41:40.520
huge mistakes that you regret. Is that something you don't worry about?
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00:41:48.480
I don't really worry about it. But as you design something, like I said, you put protocols in place
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00:41:56.120
and from what I am hearing you say, or trying to hear you say, there's be a point where our
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protocols wouldn't be sufficient to stop the machine from doing something that was unethical.
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00:42:10.040
I'm kind of worried that this is something you don't worry about. Because a lot of people I
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00:42:20.560
respect don't worry about it. And I don't know what to do about that. A lot of generals don't
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00:42:25.880
worry about it. A lot of people who know much more about war, like you than me, don't worry about it.
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00:42:32.840
And that worries me.
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00:42:34.120
Well, that's because you have a vision into the shortfalls of AI. And I don't. I don't have a
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00:42:42.480
vision of the shortfalls of AI. I don't know enough about it. As far as I'm concerned, you put
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00:42:47.640
a on off switch somewhere, you put a kill switch on a system. And if it starts going awry, you hit
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00:42:55.720
the kill switch, and that's it. So if you know, when you look at me and say, well, there's no
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00:43:00.920
possible way to put a kill switch, that would be 100% effective. And here's, you draw those concerns
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00:43:05.640
to me. And we could talk through it and say, okay, well, here's where we should draw the line.
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00:43:10.800
Yeah.
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00:43:11.240
I mean, it's like, again, for the Soviet Union, Chernobyl meltdown, there was always the ability,
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00:43:18.840
I believe, to have a kill switch. The problem is, the more power you give to the machine,
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00:43:24.720
the more opportunity you give to the human supervising that machine to make a mistake
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00:43:34.560
and not shut off the switch at the right time. So yes, the solution, I mean, you're putting the
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00:43:41.120
responsibility still in the human hands. And I think that's the correct place to put it. There
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00:43:44.840
should be good protocols, good leadership, good execution, competency all around. Your
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00:43:50.320
protocols should consider the basic failures of human nature, the human factor of how things go
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00:43:55.800
wrong. So there should be multiple people supervising the system, all those things. But
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00:43:59.880
I am just very skeptical of greater and greater power in the machine that can create war, that
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00:44:07.640
cannot lead to death. Yeah. And that's why, like I said, and like you just said, you have protocols
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00:44:14.200
in place that are a kill switch. And if you think about the amount of nuclear weapons that we've had
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00:44:19.520
on planet Earth for the past however many years, and there's been no rogue element that said,
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00:44:29.120
you know what, I'm going to shoot this thing. There's been no protocol that took place where
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00:44:33.160
all of a sudden we said, oh no. I mean, there's been escalations, but the protocols worked,
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00:44:40.800
have worked so far. Now, that's a scary thing to think about, that we rely on these protocols to
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00:44:47.480
stop some rogue element out there from launching a missile that could kill millions of people and
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00:44:54.080
trigger a global war. So yeah, the protocols should be strict. Okay. Can I ask a Jack O Wonka
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00:45:04.280
ridiculous question? If human civilization goes extinct, what would be the reason? You mentioned
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00:45:11.200
nuclear war. Do you worry about this? The reason I bring that up, a lot of people in the
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00:45:17.400
AI community worry about artificial general intelligence. So super intelligent AI systems
link |
00:45:23.240
creating a lot of damage. Autonomous weapon systems is one possibility. A lot of folks
link |
00:45:28.600
recently, especially with this pandemic, if you want to be terrified, listen, somebody I talked
link |
00:45:34.960
to recently, Sam Harris, he did a four hour podcast on how bioengineering of viruses is likely
link |
00:45:43.120
to destroy human civilization. I recommend that highly if you were too optimistic about the
link |
00:45:48.880
future of the human species. So apparently in the space of bioengineering is becoming easier and
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00:45:55.080
easier and easier to engineer viruses, engineer pathogens. This is the world's most depressing
link |
00:46:06.880
question. Is there something in particular you worry about? Like that we should be thinking as
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00:46:13.600
a human species about? Yeah, I'm sorry to disappoint you again with my lack of worry for all these
link |
00:46:21.640
problems, but I don't worry too much about it. You know what? We've made it through a bunch of
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00:46:30.840
wickets so far as a species and we'll make it through some more or we won't. And if we don't
link |
00:46:37.320
make it through some of these wickets and someone decides that what they're going to do over the
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00:46:41.760
weekend is create some crazy virus that spreads and kills everybody. Yeah. You know what? I'm
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00:46:49.400
usually extremely optimistic about this stuff. I am now I'm with you except we won't. Well,
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00:46:57.360
there's always a chance we won't, but I have a sense that human, first of all, I believe that
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00:47:03.960
most people have much more capacity for good than evil. All of us are capable of evil, I believe,
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00:47:08.960
but most people are much more capable of doing good and want to do good. And I also believe in
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00:47:17.200
the resiliency of the human species that we're an innovative bunch and we can respond to tragedy,
link |
00:47:22.960
especially we respond more to tragedy as the scale of tragedy grows and our response is much
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00:47:28.720
better. So that's why I'm not worried about it, bro. What makes a great man? Let's start at the
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00:47:39.960
individual. What makes a great man? What makes a great woman? What makes a great human being?
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00:47:44.560
Somebody that puts others above themselves. What makes a great leader of humans?
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00:47:52.360
Same thing.
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00:47:53.800
But that sentence does a lot of work. When you're a leader, there's a lot of egos. There's a lot
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00:48:01.560
of tension. There's the human factor. There's people who are timid. There's people who are
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00:48:07.560
assholes. There's people who are incredibly competent, but self obsessed. I don't know.
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00:48:14.720
There's complexities of human nature. How do you get all those people to be the best version of
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00:48:22.200
themselves and to lift up everyone else around them?
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00:48:25.080
Okay. So now that, that question is a little bit different now. So now it's getting into a more
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00:48:31.240
specific question, but at the same time, a more broad question of what elements does it take to
link |
00:48:36.120
make a good leader? So you're right that different people have different personalities, different
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00:48:41.720
tendencies, different levels of ego. And the, the way that I try and explain this is like a
link |
00:48:51.360
video game. And I'm not even a video game player, but I've seen this before where video game
link |
00:48:55.720
characters have various skills, various strengths and weaknesses. So maybe they're strong, but
link |
00:49:02.920
they're dumb, or maybe they're strong and smart, but they're slow. They just give them these,
link |
00:49:07.240
these ratings. And so that's where human beings are. And that's the way leaders are. And you can
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00:49:11.800
have different leaders with different characteristics. And depending on how all those
link |
00:49:17.480
characteristics match up, you can have somebody that is very introverted, but they're a, but,
link |
00:49:25.640
but they're still a very good leader because when they do communicate, they do it in a clear,
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00:49:31.640
simple manner that everyone understands. So even though they're a little bit introverted,
link |
00:49:34.840
people still respect them and listen to them because they communicate in a clear way.
link |
00:49:39.640
You could have somebody that's extremely charismatic, extremely charismatic and everyone
link |
00:49:47.480
looks to them, but they're slow in making decisions. And so now we've got someone that
link |
00:49:53.640
can't really make decisions when decisions need to get made. So even though they're
link |
00:49:57.240
charismatic, they're still not a good leader. So depending on the human being that we're talking
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00:50:03.160
about, and you just mentioned earlier that human beings are, you know, more complex than anything
link |
00:50:07.800
and do a better job at just about everything than a robot. So that's the same thing with
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00:50:12.840
leadership. You've got all these different characteristics and you, you match them or mix
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00:50:16.040
them together. And depending on where the ratings come out, depending on how that thing does in the
link |
00:50:23.240
end, can we almost like as a case study, look at a few people in the tech area that I'm familiar
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00:50:29.000
with that I know well, we can, the only caveat being that I may have no familiarization with
link |
00:50:35.400
them whatsoever. You may have to brief me on them. Yeah. So I'll do my best to brief. I'll do my best
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00:50:40.520
to reduce human beings into simple descriptions. And then you can give me insights of why the hell
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00:50:46.360
they're such effective leaders based on my description, not based on your actual deep
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00:50:50.920
knowledge of the human beings. So that caveat of my inability to speak both the English language
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00:50:58.120
and describe humans well. Let's talk about first, Elon Musk. So he's known as being quite
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00:51:07.000
harsh in the sense of, first of all, a very high bar of excellence.
link |
00:51:13.800
And also willing to what he calls that kind of first principles thinking of asking the,
link |
00:51:20.840
the questions that hurt, which is why the hell are we doing it this way?
link |
00:51:26.600
Why can't it be done a lot, but not just better, but a lot better. So, so let's,
link |
00:51:33.160
I don't want to hear his whole character. I'll go one at one section at a time. So we've got a guy
link |
00:51:36.520
that's harsh and, and asking the really hard questions. How can that be good? Or why is that
link |
00:51:44.440
good? Well, first of all, it can be horrible. And there's leaders out there that are harsh and
link |
00:51:49.320
they're hated and no one likes them and no one wants to work for them and they never do anything.
link |
00:51:52.360
So what is it that Elon Musk does that makes, gives him the ability to be harsh? So I was, I was
link |
00:52:01.160
hearing a description of me when I would give feedback to young seals that had made mistakes
link |
00:52:10.360
during training operations. And the description was that I, same thing, like this harsh blunt force
link |
00:52:18.440
trauma and just totally direct sledgehammer of truth that I would hit guys with. But it's
link |
00:52:29.000
interesting because I always talk about, you know, building relationships and making sure you're not
link |
00:52:32.760
offending someone. Yeah. So how do these things match up? Well, I can tell you how they match up
link |
00:52:38.600
when I was being harsh, the guys that I was being harsh with knew without one shred of doubt that
link |
00:52:46.280
I cared about them more than anything else. And that the reason I was giving them this feedback
link |
00:52:50.120
is because I wanted them to be able to lead their troops. I wanted them to be able to go
link |
00:52:53.960
accomplish their mission. And I wanted them to be able to bring their guys home from war.
link |
00:52:59.400
So I wasn't being harsh because it elevated my ego. I wasn't being harsh because I wanted to
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00:53:04.360
denigrate them. I was being, actually being harsh because I wanted them to accomplish the mission.
link |
00:53:08.760
Because I wanted them to accomplish the mission. So if that's where Elon comes from,
link |
00:53:15.240
hey, listen, we got to make this happen. This is for the good of the world to do this.
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00:53:20.760
And people know that then it works. I'll bring this point back up with another guy,
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00:53:26.680
Steve Jobs, but let me stay on Elon for a second. The other thing he does, which is interesting,
link |
00:53:34.600
I see the value of this. It'd be great to hear you speak about it. He's unlike many of the other
link |
00:53:41.080
CEOs, very rich billionaires, involved in leading a lot of people. He puts a lot of time into making
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00:53:52.120
sure he's on the factory floor. He famously sleeps on the, sort of like in the middle of things.
link |
00:53:58.920
And he puts a lot of effort. He's also very good at it is being a low level engineer. So like,
link |
00:54:05.800
whatever the task is, he wants to understand the details and he'll talk to the lowest level person
link |
00:54:11.960
in terms of like, somebody who's like working literally on putting parts together. He wants to
link |
00:54:19.640
understand what the problem is, what the challenge is. If there's an emergency, he wants to understand
link |
00:54:24.680
the actual details of the problem, not like delegating it to a manager, but like,
link |
00:54:29.880
because a lot of CEOs, a lot of managers will talk about sort of the power and the importance
link |
00:54:35.560
of delegation. Here, he wants to know if there's a big problem, he wants to know the exact detail.
link |
00:54:41.080
He wants to know the exact problem. He wants to, at the fundamental level, understand how to solve
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00:54:46.040
that problem. Whether it has to do with materials, whether it has to do with the actual manufacturing,
link |
00:54:51.080
the mechanical engineering aspect, like we're talking about engineering. This is a guy who
link |
00:54:56.840
wears a suit as a CEO, tweets about Dogecoin, but like an actual job, he's low level engineering.
link |
00:55:05.720
And that to me was always inspiring to see somebody who knows what the fuck they're doing.
link |
00:55:12.680
That's what it, like he gains the respect of engineers at the lowest level.
link |
00:55:18.040
I don't know if that's scalable, but that's always been inspiring to me. And I wonder how many people
link |
00:55:22.760
it's inspiring to. Maybe you could speak to the value of doing that, of no matter how high your
link |
00:55:28.280
level of leader is, to be able to do the low level shit. Yeah. And that's a common trait that good
link |
00:55:35.320
leaders have. And maybe he doesn't necessarily know how to do everything, a good leader,
link |
00:55:40.840
but they go down there and talk to the frontline troops and say, Hey, what is the issue that you're
link |
00:55:45.400
dealing with? Or, you know, how can I support you? How can I give you help? And one key point that
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00:55:50.680
you said is, he said, when there's a problem, he gets in there. So there's things happening
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00:55:55.800
at his companies that they're working. And so he doesn't have to die. I'm not saying he never does,
link |
00:56:01.560
but he doesn't have to spend as much time working on or looking at some subsystem that's functioning
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00:56:08.440
well. He's got a good leader in there that's handling it. And he checks in with that leader.
link |
00:56:12.280
And the leader says, yeah, it's working perfectly. He says, great. When there's a problem, that's
link |
00:56:17.560
when he might have to get down there and dig into some details so that he fully understands it. So
link |
00:56:21.640
that he, when he digs down in the details, and this is important, he's coming from an altitude
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00:56:28.120
where he has a better, bigger perspective, not necessarily better, but a bigger perspective.
link |
00:56:33.560
So if you sit there and work on a problem, whatever, for eight hours and you're staring
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00:56:39.240
at, you know, if you were planning a mission and you were planning it for eight hours,
link |
00:56:43.560
you're staring at the maps and the charts and you're figuring out where all the troops are
link |
00:56:47.080
going to be located. And I come in after eight hours and I look at your plan from a distant
link |
00:56:53.320
perspective, there's a good chance I'll be able to see holes in your plan that you couldn't see
link |
00:56:57.960
because your perspective was too close. So that's good for me to be able to come in from a higher
link |
00:57:04.120
perspective and have a look at it. But also there's times where I need to get down there and
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00:57:10.280
actually look, you know, if you're looking at a problem and you say, look, I can't figure out
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00:57:13.960
boss, I can't figure out how to get to this target. And I'm looking at it from a distance and
link |
00:57:17.880
I don't see, I might need to start digging in and looking and saying, Oh, here's a route that we
link |
00:57:22.840
can take that actually makes sense. Let's try that. So I think it's a good example of someone
link |
00:57:29.240
going up and down in altitude to look at problems, understanding what's happening with the frontline
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00:57:33.400
troops. And at the same time, being able to go back to the strategic level. And I can, it's
link |
00:57:39.400
probably this way. The reason that he's successful is because he doesn't get stuck down there.
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00:57:44.840
Yeah. Because if he felt the need to micromanage each and every part on a Tesla,
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00:57:50.680
it wouldn't be, it would be very unlikely that he would have the capacity to do that.
link |
00:57:55.160
It wouldn't be, it would be very unlikely that he would have the capacity to do all that.
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00:58:00.600
Now he can hand over some broad chip design and say, Hey, this is what the function needs to be.
link |
00:58:06.200
And he gives it to Lex and Lex goes there with your team and you figured out and you make it
link |
00:58:09.080
happen. If he had to actually do that all himself, most likely not possible. So that's what leaders
link |
00:58:15.640
should be doing. They should go elevate and, and, and then get down in the weeds when they have to,
link |
00:58:20.920
and then go back up. The sad thing, this is the part that makes me not want to do a startup
link |
00:58:28.760
is basically his whole life is dealing with emergencies. Just like you said, he's not
link |
00:58:35.480
dealing, this is not shooting the shit about details of engineering. It's dealing with like,
link |
00:58:42.440
in this, in the case of the company, life and death, like something that can just completely
link |
00:58:48.280
damage the production line, right? So he's constantly dealing with emergencies, putting out
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00:58:52.440
fires. And I don't know if there's something to be said about that psychology of that, of how,
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00:58:59.160
like he, he's spoken himself that he's worried whether his mind can hold up much longer.
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00:59:04.600
So hopefully in the near future, he will start to form more decentralized command where he has some
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00:59:10.680
subordinate leadership that he fully trusts. And most important that he has properly trained
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00:59:16.360
so that they can handle these day to day fires at least 80% of them. So only 20% of the time,
link |
00:59:23.080
does he actually need to go in and solve a problem. If he's not doing that right now,
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00:59:28.360
then that's going to end up being a problem anytime. So I work with companies all the time.
link |
00:59:32.760
And that's, what's interesting about this is I go and work with a CEO or with a,
link |
00:59:37.000
with a C suite of a company. It takes a little while to figure out what's going on. I'm kind of
link |
00:59:41.400
going off of the things that you're telling me almost anecdotally, right? Yes. But let's
link |
00:59:46.280
say that what you and also, I don't know how familiar you actually are with the inner workings
link |
00:59:52.040
of his companies, but if we were to assume that what you're saying is accurate, then my advice
link |
00:59:59.240
would be, Hey, listen, you need to start putting a little bit more time and effort into training up
link |
01:00:04.040
some subordinate leadership that has the trust, knowledge, and expertise that you will be able
link |
01:00:10.120
to turn over some of these, some of these details to for two reasons. Number one, so you can let
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01:00:16.040
your brain, you know, you can, you can survive a little longer as he put it, but also all the
link |
01:00:21.800
time that you spend as a leader, looking down and into your organization is time that you're
link |
01:00:25.800
not looking up and out. So when you're not looking up and out, you're not seeing what
link |
01:00:29.800
the competitors doing. You're not seeing where the market's going. There's problems that,
link |
01:00:33.560
that, that can come from that. So if right now he's spending too much time looking down and in,
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01:00:38.200
and you mentioned, you know, you said, I don't know if I want to do a startup. When you do a
link |
01:00:40.840
startup, you're going to be looking down and in for a while. It's going to take a while. You're
link |
01:00:44.200
going to have to do all this work yourself. You're not going to have the finances to put
link |
01:00:47.400
people manpower behind these things. So that's probably he, maybe he's in that mindset a little
link |
01:00:53.640
bit because he's done so many startups over the years. And so he's in the he's habitually in the
link |
01:00:58.840
weeds. So my advice would be, all right, let's start looking at formulating some subordinate
link |
01:01:04.760
leadership that has the, like I said, the expertise, the trust that you can, you can start
link |
01:01:09.000
to turn over some of these more minute details to them so that you can start looking up and out.
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01:01:15.560
Yeah. I think he's done that more successful in some places than others. The SpaceX, a lot of
link |
01:01:20.280
people give the credit to Gwen Shotwell for the CEO, the COO of SpaceX as, as a very successful
link |
01:01:31.320
person that runs shit, but in Tesla, not as much. So I wonder if you can comment on something
link |
01:01:38.840
a lot of people worry about, and this applies to a lot of tech companies, which is a lot of people
link |
01:01:46.120
worry about that if Elon disappears, the, the, the innovative spirit, the company is as we know them
link |
01:01:54.040
today will collapse, will stagnate and will basically fail to do what they've been doing for
link |
01:02:00.600
so many years successfully. Is there some aspect to what makes a good leader that if you disappear,
link |
01:02:09.400
it's still the thing still lives on and not just lives on, but thrives.
link |
01:02:14.520
Yeah. So what we have to do in those situations is we have to establish a strong culture inside
link |
01:02:19.240
that organization. And if you're there's, there's, there's reasons why this happens, right? If I have
link |
01:02:26.680
a big ego and I form a company and I love the fact that everyone looks at me and says, Oh,
link |
01:02:32.200
Jocko made this company and he's the creative force behind this company. And that fuels my ego
link |
01:02:36.520
and it makes me feel good. And you know, I'm working with you, Lex. And every time you come
link |
01:02:40.920
up with an idea, I say, Lex, you need to stay in your box. Yeah. Right. So I'm not creating a culture
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01:02:47.000
that rewards that sort of creativity. And eventually when I die, I won't have
link |
01:02:54.040
have educated my team on how to maintain that creative aspect. So again, hopefully inside
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01:03:02.680
that organization, he's, he's encouraging and growing that culture where creativity is rewarded,
link |
01:03:10.760
where, where it flourishes, even when he's gone, that's what we have to hope for.
link |
01:03:16.520
He is, but I also seem to notice that there's not many people like him.
link |
01:03:21.240
Um, people become complacent too easily. I've been disappointed by people a little bit.
link |
01:03:31.880
It's like, success makes people soft. With Elon, it seems like success doesn't have any effect.
link |
01:03:41.000
It's like the reverse effect. It doesn't, it's like, what's the, it's always like,
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01:03:45.480
what's the next biggest thing, right? He's living that exponential growth,
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01:03:50.200
which I think that's the problem that you have to have somebody who's constantly
link |
01:03:56.120
trying to find the 10 X solution, like trying to constantly improve things.
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01:04:01.240
And, uh, restlessly that, I mean, that probably has to do with finding the right people,
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01:04:06.120
not just creating the culture, but creating a culture with the right set of people.
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01:04:11.320
Speaking of which Steve Jobs, there's, uh, two things I want to mention there.
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01:04:19.240
One, once again, the harshness, but a very different kind.
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01:04:22.840
And the second is team building. So on the harshness, he is much harsher than Elon
link |
01:04:32.920
in a way, in the following way. And I'm having a sense that you will not like this,
link |
01:04:38.040
but I'd like to defend it is he loses his shit quite a bit. He was famously, at least,
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01:04:44.920
especially early on being very emotional. He was letting passion dominate the discussion.
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01:04:51.320
There'd be a lot of firings. There would be a lot of mean things said to people.
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01:04:58.280
I don't know what you make of that. How much as a leader,
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01:05:01.160
are you allowed to just lose your shit in your love for the thing you're doing?
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01:05:07.400
And how effective is that?
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01:05:09.560
As a leader, you shouldn't be doing that very often.
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01:05:11.480
So you can look back at me and say, well, Jocko, here's the most profitable company that's ever
link |
01:05:16.200
existed. And so you're wrong. Well, going back to that multiple multitude of characteristics that
link |
01:05:24.200
human beings can have. Well, it's the same thing with businesses. It's the same thing with companies.
link |
01:05:30.920
Steve Jobs was off the charts in some of his traits, his ability to understand design,
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01:05:38.840
his ability to understand human interface with computer systems. So, so far off the charts
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01:05:47.640
that despite his bad temper, emotional behavior, the company still thrived.
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01:05:57.880
That can happen. You can have people that are horrible leaders that develop something
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01:06:04.920
that's so universally outstanding that you end up with a company that's successful.
link |
01:06:14.280
The reason, I mean, I get asked that a bunch, people always ask me, because I say, look,
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01:06:18.360
you shouldn't be losing your temper as a leader. Well, what about Steve Jobs? He used to yell and
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01:06:24.440
scream all the time. Great. When people say that to me, I say, oh, okay. Are you as good at design
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01:06:30.120
as Steve Jobs was? Are you as good at marketing as Steve Jobs was? He had a certain amount of skills
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01:06:38.760
that were off the charts. And so he was able to be successful despite the fact that he would lose
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01:06:45.320
his temper, treat people horribly. That's not good. It's not good. And it would have been even
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01:06:50.760
more successful if he wouldn't had those characteristics. Now you might say, well,
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01:06:55.640
he, his anger is what pushed things. Well, let me ask you this. What leader wins the leader
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01:07:05.720
whose team is afraid, who the team who execute, executes the mission because they're afraid of
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01:07:12.840
their leader or executes the task because they're afraid of their leader or the team that loves
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01:07:18.360
their leaders so much that they don't want to let them down. They don't want to let them down.
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01:07:21.560
Or the team that loves their leaders so much that they don't want to let them down. Which team wins?
link |
01:07:28.120
You're implying a confidence that love is more powerful than fear, but I'm not so sure. This is
link |
01:07:34.120
the Machiavelli question. You're saying ultimately it's always better to lead by inspiration and love
link |
01:07:41.240
than by, by putting the fear into the team. What I'm, what I'm saying is that I've seen
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01:07:48.920
countless times is me leading through my authority, leading through my rank,
link |
01:07:54.920
leading through punitive measures is infinitely worse than me and you working together as a team
link |
01:08:02.680
to win. On the second point of Steve Jobs is he has this idea of philosophy of eight players
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01:08:12.200
where you have a group, like the power and the productivity of a group of what he called eight
link |
01:08:21.160
players is invaluable. So you want to get a team of people who are the best at what they do.
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01:08:29.640
But the most important aspect to him was that a single quote unquote B player on the team destroys
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01:08:37.320
the entire productivity of the team. Is there something that it brings true to that? So he was,
link |
01:08:42.600
I guess this could be a temper thing, but vicious about firing and removing the, uh, what he felt
link |
01:08:50.600
was a toxic B player in a team. So eight players feed off of each other, unless there's one B
link |
01:08:57.800
player present. It depends on the nature of the B player. Is the player, is the player a B player?
link |
01:09:04.920
Is the player a B player because he's a little bit lazy? Is he a B player because he doesn't have a
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01:09:13.640
good vision? Is he a B player because he's got a big ego and always thinks he's right
link |
01:09:21.000
and now creates conflict in the team. So there's a bunch of different B players.
link |
01:09:24.280
Look, if you're working for me and you're kind of a B player, but guess what? You're a grinder and
link |
01:09:29.400
you get stuff done. I want you on the team. You might not be the smartest person I have,
link |
01:09:33.720
but I know that you're committed to the team and I want you on the team. So you're a B player,
link |
01:09:40.920
but that's okay. Now, if you're Lex with the giant ego, I'd rather have, I'd rather have Lex.
link |
01:09:48.520
That's not quite as smart. Cause I got other people that are smart. I got other people that
link |
01:09:52.360
are smart on the team. Look, you're going to need some smart people on the team, but a team
link |
01:09:57.080
is made up. It's a team. And so you take these different components of a team. And if you have
link |
01:10:02.040
complimentary components, you'll end up with a superior team. Then just basing it on the level
link |
01:10:09.880
of, and what's an A player sometimes in the seal teams, they would get something called the stacked
link |
01:10:16.920
platoon. And what that would be is someone, you know, some senior person in that platoon would
link |
01:10:24.600
manipulate and maneuver to get the quote best guys that he could in that platoon. So, you know,
link |
01:10:31.240
the most experienced guys, the person that had great, great reputations. And sometimes those
link |
01:10:36.440
platoons would be great. Sometimes they would implode because what you end up with is a bunch of
link |
01:10:41.880
A players. And now no one wants to follow anyone else. No one wants to agree with anyone else.
link |
01:10:47.480
Everyone wants to do it my way. Not it's my way, not Lex's way. Lex is stupid. No,
link |
01:10:50.760
you're stupid. We end up with problems. So can one person derail a team? Absolutely.
link |
01:10:57.160
Under good leadership, one person should not derail a team.
link |
01:11:04.360
This could be a tech thing too. There's some multiplying effect of just pure excellence,
link |
01:11:10.600
no matter the personalities. I think for Steve Jobs, he doesn't, the ego doesn't matter. None
link |
01:11:19.960
of that matters. What matters is the quality of the output, the genius of the result.
link |
01:11:24.760
And that somehow multiplies itself. And the egos actually, like one of the problems with egos
link |
01:11:31.400
is like, what does ego usually say? It says, I'm much better than you. When you have people that
link |
01:11:36.600
are really good together, it's very hard for the ego to flourish because you're like constantly
link |
01:11:41.640
being shown that you're not as good and there's a competition. So like, I think to his, his idea was
link |
01:11:47.880
that like, if you get people that are really good at what they do, it turns out that you're not as
link |
01:11:53.400
good at what you do. It turns as opposed to you being complacent and not doing much and thinking
link |
01:12:00.520
you're better than everyone else and your opinion is better, is you almost getting in that competitive
link |
01:12:05.000
race. You know that magic that happens when you're at the end of a marathon and you're just like
link |
01:12:10.600
head to head, like you're just going full steam with a person that is as good as you. There's no
link |
01:12:15.800
place for ego there. Which is great. Which is great. Let's use that example. You and I are racing,
link |
01:12:22.520
the end of the marathon. We're both highly competitive, highly competitive. We have massive
link |
01:12:27.960
egos and we both want to win. We both want to win so bad that we, we give everything we've got.
link |
01:12:37.080
That's totally positive, right? Isn't that totally positive? Now imagine this same thing.
link |
01:12:43.720
We're in a race, we're in a marathon, we're in the last hundred meters. It's you against me
link |
01:12:48.600
and, and our egos are huge and we're pushing to win and you start to pull ahead of me
link |
01:12:54.360
and my ego is so big and I hate losing so much that I somehow accidentally
link |
01:13:02.120
push my knee up against your foot on a backstride and throw you onto your face.
link |
01:13:06.840
So that's what ego, ego is an awesome driver unless you let your ego control you and you let
link |
01:13:14.200
ego drive your decision making process, in which case it turns into an incredible problem. So
link |
01:13:20.360
you might have someone that is excellent. You might have someone that's outstanding. You might
link |
01:13:25.960
have some someone that's tens across the board, but their ego is so big that big that they can't
link |
01:13:31.560
work with other people. They can't accept anyone else's ideas. They can't compromise on something
link |
01:13:36.120
because they think their idea is better all the time and that is going to be problematic
link |
01:13:40.120
and I don't want them on the team. Now as a good leader, guess what I'll do? I'll put them into a
link |
01:13:45.480
situation where I can utilize their best aspects, but not have their ego destroy the team. So I
link |
01:13:53.960
might say, Hey Lex, you know what? I actually want you to take lead on this part of the project over
link |
01:13:58.840
here and since you're so smart and you work so hard, I know you're going to pull ahead of everyone
link |
01:14:04.200
else. So you grind on that. Once you get that result, give it to me and I'm going to disseminate
link |
01:14:10.040
it to the team. So I, I, I isolate you from wrecking yourself and the rest of the team with
link |
01:14:17.640
your giant ego. So then, uh, looking at a completely opposite person was this a fascinating
link |
01:14:24.040
person to me is Sandra Pichai, who's the CEO of Alphabet CEO of Google. I admire the
link |
01:14:31.880
the, uh, in a romantic sense, the madness that is, uh, Steve Jobs and Elon Musk.
link |
01:14:40.360
So to me, the opposite of that is Sandra Pichai, who's, uh, like everybody loves him.
link |
01:14:49.080
And, uh, he's also a great listener. So he always brings people together. And so he went,
link |
01:14:54.680
the, the, the energy of that person in the room is like the basic energy. If I were to summarize it,
link |
01:15:00.760
it's like, I want to hear all the voices in the room. That's the energy he brings. And, uh,
link |
01:15:08.440
it's almost like he doesn't want to impose a final decision. He wants to hear all the voices
link |
01:15:14.680
and somehow always the decision just falls out. I don't know what to say about that.
link |
01:15:22.280
What to say about that style of leadership, but it's always surprising to me how
link |
01:15:30.520
that love brought a lot of people together and still, I mean, some of the greatest things Google
link |
01:15:36.040
has done over the past several years, uh, could be attributed to that continued innovation,
link |
01:15:43.640
bringing out the best out of people. There's of course, bureaucracy, which I could criticize
link |
01:15:47.400
at the end of the day, which always happens with big companies. I would argue actually
link |
01:15:51.720
the dictatorial style of Steve jobs and, you know, Musk helped fight the bureaucracy,
link |
01:15:56.040
which is one criticism I would give of being a listener and being kind is sometimes you can't
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01:16:01.480
cut through the as effectively, but he. He's one of the only people I've ever heard of
link |
01:16:07.240
who everybody loves. He's inspirational figure to millions, especially in the, like in India,
link |
01:16:13.720
he's a celebrity in the best kind of way. Is there something you could say about that kind
link |
01:16:18.440
of leadership where you're never the asshole. You're never the dictator. You're always the
link |
01:16:24.120
listener and, um, the compassionate empathetic glue that brings the team together basically
link |
01:16:32.520
would love. Yeah. That's that's great leadership. If you have to choose for Google, uh,
link |
01:16:42.680
for large companies, is there something to be said about what is more effective?
link |
01:16:47.640
The dictator, uh, ruling by love or ruling by fear?
link |
01:16:54.760
First of all, everything's a dichotomy, right? And so to think that all the time, you're always
link |
01:17:00.440
going to be able to just bark orders at people and they're always going to listen to you. And
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01:17:04.920
you're always going to get the best result. That would not be smart to think that every single
link |
01:17:09.160
time you're going to come to a 100% consensus amongst the troops. And that decision is going
link |
01:17:15.080
to reveal itself without you nudging it along. That would also be short sighted and naive. So
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01:17:22.760
what you, what a good leader does is they, they, they stay balanced. And as much as they can,
link |
01:17:27.880
they listen to what the troops have to say. They take that feedback. Maybe they quietly nudge things
link |
01:17:34.360
and, and I'm sure he does that. I'm sure he does some nudging that maybe no one even picks up on.
link |
01:17:40.120
You know, I like to say the best forms of leadership is leadership with minimum force required.
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01:17:45.800
So if I can go into a room as a leader and not say one single thing and the team can come to
link |
01:17:51.560
the right consensus and move in that direction, that's my preferred method. Maybe I have to give
link |
01:17:55.880
them a little bit of a nudge, a 10% nudge in one direction. Okay. That's better than me walking in
link |
01:18:00.760
there and giving them 100% dictatorial direction of exactly what I want to have happen. Now,
link |
01:18:08.040
occasionally, if we have an emergency situation, people are starting to be frazzled and they're
link |
01:18:13.320
not sure which direction to go. Then sometimes as a leader, you have to walk in and say, all right,
link |
01:18:17.320
everyone here's where we're going. And people get on board. Why? Because for many years or months or
link |
01:18:24.600
however long you've trusted them to come up with a plan. And when you trust, when you, as a leader,
link |
01:18:30.840
trust your team to come up with a plan, the team starts to trust you and you get leadership capital.
link |
01:18:37.320
And as you build leadership capital, occasionally you need to cash in some of that leadership
link |
01:18:42.120
capital. You need to spend some of it. And maybe it is, hey, listen, here's the direction we're
link |
01:18:46.280
going right now. We'll debrief it later, but we got to make a move. And the team who trusts you
link |
01:18:52.360
says, Roger that boss, we got it. And all of them actually do this
link |
01:18:57.880
interesting thing. I'd love to hear your opinion on it. Sondra certainly does it to a large degree,
link |
01:19:03.160
which is it's in the process of delegation, trusting a person to do a really difficult thing,
link |
01:19:14.360
like tossing it up and saying like, I trust you can get this job done
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01:19:24.360
for some, even if your resume does not support that. I'm actually kind of amazed that human
link |
01:19:31.000
beings when they're given the trust to get the job done, they step up very often. That's kind
link |
01:19:36.840
of an amazing property of human nature. People often ask me issues about leadership. And I always
link |
01:19:43.000
say that one of the best tools for teaching leadership and for teaching a bunch of other
link |
01:19:47.400
lessons is leadership itself. So when it happens all the time, when you elevate someone into a
link |
01:19:53.160
leadership position, they do step up and they do make things happen. So that's not surprising to me.
link |
01:20:00.040
You do have to mitigate risks. So saying, Hey, you know, Lex, I know you're,
link |
01:20:05.960
haven't been in the military before. I know you have very limited weapons experience,
link |
01:20:11.240
but I want you to run a target assault on a real mission in whatever country that would not be
link |
01:20:18.360
good. That would not be a good move on, on my part. Now, if I said, all right, Lex, you know what,
link |
01:20:22.520
I want you to get some leadership experience. I've got a training mission and it's going to
link |
01:20:26.840
be using paintball and I'm going to put you in charge of it. I got no problem doing that.
link |
01:20:33.480
Some of that is judging human character is like, there's potential, there's something in this
link |
01:20:39.160
person that they are, they have enough demons or whatever the hell it requires to have that fuel.
link |
01:20:45.640
They'll figure it out. They'll hate themselves if they don't. And they'll find the right,
link |
01:20:51.480
they'll find the tools that find the path to achieve the, whatever the level of perfection
link |
01:20:56.280
they can. It's been really surprising to me. It's been making me rethink the whole hiring process
link |
01:21:02.040
because I often now I'm thinking and looking, so I'm looking for people, both for the startup,
link |
01:21:07.480
but just for my own life to help. And I almost want to see evidence of excellence,
link |
01:21:14.840
but maybe you want to just based on just judgment of human character without evidence of excellence,
link |
01:21:21.560
have people step up. Like Joe Rogan with Jamie, that's a funny side of it. I didn't understand
link |
01:21:28.520
how little Joe knew about Jamie when he hired him. And Jamie stepped up and now runs one of
link |
01:21:34.200
the most successful podcasts ever. And that's an incredible kind of, and he's one of the best
link |
01:21:39.960
producers in the world now, not to let it get to his head. And by the way, the funny thing about
link |
01:21:45.560
him. And one of the best Googlers in the world. One of the best Googlers. The funny thing about
link |
01:21:49.880
Jamie, this is okay. You might not like this, but what I, what I like, I'm constantly exceptionally
link |
01:21:57.880
self critical to a point of like self hating. Sometimes I deeply appreciate every single moment
link |
01:22:04.440
I'm alive, but everything I've ever done, I feel like a shit. And when I talked to Jamie about
link |
01:22:10.200
everything he's done, he's just in every way he carries himself. He's so self critical. He's so
link |
01:22:16.520
he's so like worried that it's wrong. It's bad. That anxious energy. I love it. Cause that's how
link |
01:22:24.200
you lead to growth and progress. Like you might, like a therapist might say, that's probably not
link |
01:22:29.640
good for your like wellbeing. Fuck it. It's good for the what's good for your wellbeing is to create
link |
01:22:36.760
awesome things. That's ultimately what leads to happiness is to, to create the best thing you can
link |
01:22:41.800
in your life. And so when I see that in somebody like Jamie or anybody I talked to, when you're
link |
01:22:47.880
really self critical, that's a good sign to me. Is that ridiculous? It's not ridiculous at all.
link |
01:22:53.240
And it goes back, you know, you were, you were the way you were phrasing these questions about what
link |
01:22:57.480
makes a good person and what makes a good leader, the way you phrase them kind of eliminated the
link |
01:23:05.400
normal answer that I give the normal answer that I give. You asked me what makes a good leader,
link |
01:23:10.600
what makes a good person is, is being humble. So when you're going to hire someone for your,
link |
01:23:19.160
for your startup or whatever company you're creating, that is a key characteristic to look for
link |
01:23:24.440
is someone that has the humility like, like young Jamie to say, yeah, you know, I, I could have done
link |
01:23:30.440
this better and here's what I can improve. And here's what I need to work on. When you have
link |
01:23:34.280
somebody that thinks they know everything out of the gate, you're, you're already got someone
link |
01:23:40.280
that's going to be hard to deal with. They're going to be hard to coach. They're going to be
link |
01:23:42.440
hard to mentor. When you have somebody that's truly humble, you barely, again, it's minimum
link |
01:23:47.160
force required because when you say to Jamie after a show, how do you think that went,
link |
01:23:52.040
he says, well, you know, I did this wrong and I didn't have this set up in time. And
link |
01:23:55.640
you don't, you don't barely have to do anything because he's got the humility.
link |
01:23:58.920
If you've got someone that's a big ego and you say, Hey, how did that show go? He goes,
link |
01:24:03.080
I went awesome on my end. Now guess what you have to do. Now you have to start applying
link |
01:24:08.120
force as a leader, which is expending leadership capital, which we don't want to do because we
link |
01:24:11.960
always try and conserve our leadership capital as much as we possibly can. And when we have to
link |
01:24:16.120
expend it just to get Jamie to make some improvements, that's bad. So when you go
link |
01:24:23.240
looking for people, look for people that are humble. Now, does this mean you look for people
link |
01:24:26.120
that don't have any confidence? No, that's not what I'm saying. There's a balance to all these
link |
01:24:29.480
things. That's the dichotomy of leadership you, but people tend towards and look, I work with
link |
01:24:35.480
a lot of military troops in the past. Now I work with companies. The reason I talk about
link |
01:24:39.880
humility all the time is because for someone to be, get into a leadership position in the military,
link |
01:24:47.240
they have to have confidence. So the tendency is that their confidence is going to outweigh their
link |
01:24:53.640
humility at some point. Same thing with, with civilian companies. If you get to a point of
link |
01:24:59.240
leadership inside of a company, you have to have confidence to get there. You don't get to a
link |
01:25:03.880
position of leadership inside of a company lacking confidence. So the tendency is for
link |
01:25:09.880
confidence to, to grow a little bit too much. And we have to put that, put that confidence into check.
link |
01:25:16.680
We have to put that ego into check. Really good leaders. They're confident, but they're humble.
link |
01:25:21.320
That's the balance of the dichotomy. Hear that, Jamie, don't get cocky.
link |
01:25:25.880
On occasion. Rarely you talk about discipline. What does a discipline life look like doing what
link |
01:25:33.080
you're supposed to do? What if I want to lay on the couch and eat Cheetos and watch soap operas?
link |
01:25:41.800
That's that's not, that doesn't feel like discipline. Do you think you're supposed to do that?
link |
01:25:47.720
Well, you know, you could argue from a, a sort of a meaning of life perspective that perhaps
link |
01:25:53.800
happiness is the most important. And if it makes me happy, perhaps that's, if it's fulfilling,
link |
01:26:02.120
of course, eating Cheetos and watching soap operas is fulfilling for nobody whatsoever.
link |
01:26:06.840
Next question. But there's something about discipline that's more than that. We have to
link |
01:26:11.880
like the rigor of habit, right? You, you wake up early in the morning, all the time.
link |
01:26:20.600
What is it Jordan Peterson talks about? Make your bed. One place where you probably agree with
link |
01:26:25.720
Jordan. People ask me if I make my bed. I don't. There's a disagreement with Jordan.
link |
01:26:32.360
There we go.
link |
01:26:32.840
I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't.
link |
01:26:39.720
There's a disagreement with Jordan. There we go. You know, when I was younger, before I was married,
link |
01:26:46.360
I didn't make my bed because I had one sleeping bag on it and I would get out of the sleeping bag.
link |
01:26:53.000
There was nothing to make. Yeah. Now I'm married and I can't make my bed because my wife's in my
link |
01:26:59.160
bed. So I don't make my bed. Okay. So what in your life, maybe we can talk about the one that's most
link |
01:27:07.960
publicly facing, which is you wake up at four o clock or around four o clock in the morning.
link |
01:27:14.280
You post on social media a picture of your watch. It being early, just to remind people that
link |
01:27:25.160
you are a man of your word. What's that about? What's the philosophy of the four o clock?
link |
01:27:32.600
What role does that play in a disciplined life for you?
link |
01:27:35.240
Okay. From that perspective, what role it plays is getting a jump on the day.
link |
01:27:40.920
And when you wake up early and you get a jump on the day and you've got your workout done,
link |
01:27:45.800
and you've got a little bit of little bit of work done by the time normal people are getting up,
link |
01:27:53.640
that's a win. That's a psychological win. And it's not just a psychological win. It's an actual win.
link |
01:27:58.600
It's an actual win. So that feels great. It doesn't feel great. Maybe when your alarm clock goes off,
link |
01:28:04.600
but by eight o clock in the morning and you've already accomplished some of the major tasks
link |
01:28:10.680
that you have, some of the most painful tasks that you have for the day,
link |
01:28:14.760
you're off to a great start and it's going to feel great.
link |
01:28:19.240
Let's break this down then. What does then the rest of the day look like? What is the perfect,
link |
01:28:26.920
productive, disciplined day in the life of Jaco Willink look like?
link |
01:28:31.960
Wake up, workout.
link |
01:28:34.040
Wake up when?
link |
01:28:35.560
4, 4.30.
link |
01:28:36.840
Workout when?
link |
01:28:38.760
5, 5 to 6 or 7.
link |
01:28:42.520
No eating?
link |
01:28:43.560
No.
link |
01:28:44.360
And then what does the workout look like?
link |
01:28:46.600
Depends on the day.
link |
01:28:48.760
What's the perfect? We're talking about body weight, lifting, cardio, heavy bag, jiu jitsu.
link |
01:28:58.120
Okay. Yeah. When I say workout, I mean no jiu jitsu. So jiu jitsu comes later in the day.
link |
01:29:06.200
So this is just you alone?
link |
01:29:07.640
This is me alone working out. Yep. And I'm going to be doing a wide variety of things.
link |
01:29:13.720
This is the thing that has the pictures of the aftermath with some sweat at the end. So the goal
link |
01:29:20.280
is to do whatever the hell results in some sweat. And that takes an hour.
link |
01:29:24.120
Sometimes it takes 12 minutes. Sometimes it takes three hours, depending on what kind of mood I'm in.
link |
01:29:33.240
You got some demons to work through or is this just work? So you got the David Goggins who clearly
link |
01:29:43.000
has demons screaming inside of his head that he's trying to work through. Are you just getting the
link |
01:29:47.880
work done out of the discipline? Or is this, I think Joe is a little bit with David Goggins is like,
link |
01:29:54.840
there's some ego, there's some bullshit that you're trying to get out through some of the exercise.
link |
01:29:58.680
That's a good way to kind of humble you is just doing that exercise.
link |
01:30:01.880
Well, exercise is certainly humbling.
link |
01:30:06.280
I mean, it's, but it's physical conditioning, right? It's preparing your body so that you can
link |
01:30:11.960
handle whatever it is you're going to do. Perfect.
link |
01:30:14.760
What does, what do you do after? Let's talk about food. Hopefully surf. If the waves are good,
link |
01:30:22.200
surf for how good are the waves? Let's say they're good. This is a perfect day. It's a perfect,
link |
01:30:29.000
perfect waves. Why do you surf? It's fun. Okay. This is fun. Okay. Man, man and nature.
link |
01:30:38.600
It was just like, what surfing is the ultimate is the power of the, the infinite power of the ocean
link |
01:30:48.600
versus a little silly looking man on a board.
link |
01:30:53.800
You could say it's the infinite power of the ocean versus a silly looking man on a board,
link |
01:30:57.880
or you could say it's fun because it's Russian and romance. Okay. This is for fun
link |
01:31:03.560
in the morning. Beautiful. And this is, you're still having eaten.
link |
01:31:06.920
No. Okay. So when do you eat? I'll usually start grazing around 11 oclock
link |
01:31:13.960
and grazing. What's the, what's the diet that's the, is there a perfect diet or do you graze?
link |
01:31:19.640
I'll have, I'll eat some nuts, you know, something like that. I usually start grazing. Maybe I'll
link |
01:31:24.600
have a little piece of meat or something like that. Does work enter any of this? I'm sure you
link |
01:31:29.880
have a lot of people that want your attention. Yeah. Yeah. No work is work is about to happen.
link |
01:31:35.480
Cause you know, even if I, if I woke up at four, worked out from five to six surf from six to eight,
link |
01:31:42.760
now I'm starting to work writing, recording, reading, talking to clients.
link |
01:31:51.240
Is there parts of the day where you try to find moments to think deeply, to read deeply,
link |
01:31:59.400
to sort of really focus? Cause this world wants, it's full of distractions, right?
link |
01:32:04.200
Right. Even talking to, uh, like even work stuff, the emails and all those kinds of things that can,
link |
01:32:10.200
they can scatter your mind. Is there times you seek to have that focus?
link |
01:32:14.680
Well, I read a lot of books. And so usually when I read, I'll be reading for a chunk of time,
link |
01:32:20.760
maybe an hour at a time, maybe a little bit longer. And I might do that twice a day. So
link |
01:32:27.880
I don't know if that counts as what you're describing, but then same thing with writing.
link |
01:32:32.520
When I, when I'm writing something, I mean, I just, that's what I do. I write usually usually
link |
01:32:37.720
write for about an hour. I can get about a thousand words an hour out of me. So that's,
link |
01:32:43.560
that's sort of what I do. What does the rest of the day look like?
link |
01:32:48.200
Just a lot of work, but one is the jujitsu. I want to find out about the jujitsu.
link |
01:32:52.200
So round, round four, 30 or five oclock at night and train. Yep. And, uh, how hard you still, how,
link |
01:33:02.920
how are you doing body wise? He still is the old man. Does the old man still got it or,
link |
01:33:09.880
or are you talking to me?
link |
01:33:15.080
It'd be good for viewership and ratings. If I die before the end of the podcast. So
link |
01:33:19.080
so I, I, I still train with the same guys and I'll train, you know, so I've been very lucky
link |
01:33:25.960
when it comes to getting injured and stuff like that. So haven't, I've had some injuries,
link |
01:33:30.120
but they're, they're healed. And so, yeah, I train and, uh, food wise, you mentioned grazing
link |
01:33:36.360
us some, uh, of some nuts, a very light kind of things. Is there a main meal here at night at
link |
01:33:41.720
night? Yep. High, uh, in protein or is it anything? Yeah. I'll have like a steak and salad. I'll
link |
01:33:48.440
usually have for dessert. I have like a protein shake. So is there a thing where at the end of
link |
01:33:57.080
the, uh, at the end of the day, you will like, you have like a summarize sword and you meditate on,
link |
01:34:02.760
uh, uh, death and, um, all those kinds of, is, is there some weird ritual you partake in? No.
link |
01:34:10.120
You just go to bed when I get done with the end of the day, I might read a little bit more.
link |
01:34:13.640
Read more. Yeah. Because reading makes me tired usually. Um, so I'll read a little bit more.
link |
01:34:23.080
Is there a key to you that you can speak to that makes for a productive day?
link |
01:34:28.360
Just the way you approach it mentally. Yeah. Write down what you're supposed to do,
link |
01:34:32.360
wake up early and start doing it and then get it done. Yeah. I know it's a miraculous trick.
link |
01:34:39.080
Can I ask you about Jiu Jitsu? By all means.
link |
01:34:45.320
What have you learned from being a practitioner? You're a black belt.
link |
01:34:49.560
What have you learned from this journey, uh, of, um, being a martial artist?
link |
01:34:57.960
Jiu Jitsu for me was the connective tissue that started to join my mind together with
link |
01:35:05.960
all the F different aspects of my life. And so Jiu Jitsu for me was, was really important.
link |
01:35:12.120
And I don't think I would be doing anything that I'm doing right now if it wasn't for Jiu Jitsu.
link |
01:35:16.440
So there's various aspects of my life that were in existence, but I didn't understand how they
link |
01:35:23.480
were connected until I started training Jiu Jitsu. The primary things are interacting with other
link |
01:35:28.600
human beings and combat tactics and strategy and Jiu Jitsu. And all those things are connected.
link |
01:35:37.480
They all follow the same guiding principles. And I wouldn't have recognized those guiding principles
link |
01:35:42.920
if I didn't do Jiu Jitsu. Can you elaborate? Cause you've trained for many, many years.
link |
01:35:49.880
What, um, is it the hardship? Is it the humbling nature of just being tapped all over,
link |
01:35:55.480
you know, nonstop, or I don't actually don't know how many times more times than you. Okay.
link |
01:36:02.680
So good. Is it just the hardship of physical training, like the honesty of the mat in the
link |
01:36:08.120
sense that like, you know, what works and what doesn't work, which, which aspects were the most,
link |
01:36:13.640
uh, impactful for you? All aspects. So yes, from a humility perspective, when you realize you think
link |
01:36:20.840
when you think, you know what you're doing, when you think you have certain skills
link |
01:36:23.720
and you realize that there's always somebody better than you. And you realize that, Hey,
link |
01:36:26.840
maybe I don't have all the answers all the time. And you bring that to a leadership perspective
link |
01:36:31.800
and you walk into your platoon and you realize that maybe you don't have all the answers all
link |
01:36:35.480
the time. And maybe you should listen to what other people have to say. You bring that to a
link |
01:36:39.400
combat situation and you realize that you think if you sit there and think that you're smarter than
link |
01:36:44.120
the enemy, you're going to be complacent. You're going to make mistakes. So there's one aspect out
link |
01:36:50.120
of the gate, as far as, you know, if I, if I'm going to try and get your arm, do I attack your
link |
01:36:59.160
arm? Maybe not directly, unless I'm a white belt. Exactly. What do I do? I attack your neck. And
link |
01:37:06.600
when you reach up to defend your neck, that's when I get your arm. Well, if I'm out on the
link |
01:37:11.320
battlefield and there's an enemy position, should I attack frontal assault into that position?
link |
01:37:16.520
No, no, I shouldn't. I should put down some covering fire and I should maneuver around to
link |
01:37:19.960
the flank. It's the same thing. If I'm dealing with you and you're my boss and you've got a giant ego
link |
01:37:26.120
and you've come up with a plan and I don't like your plan, should I walk up to you and say, hey,
link |
01:37:29.640
Lex, your plan isn't good? No. Or should I say, Hey, Lex, can I ask you some questions about how
link |
01:37:35.880
you want us to execute this? Cause I want to make sure I understand your vision.
link |
01:37:42.440
So all these things are connected. Yes.
link |
01:37:44.040
And I wouldn't have realized that we could sit here and do this forever. We could, we could,
link |
01:37:48.200
I could tell you these comparisons forever, but this, all this connective tissue, bringing all
link |
01:37:54.920
these things together, I wouldn't have seen it without, I don't think I would have seen it without
link |
01:37:58.840
jujitsu. So jujitsu to me had, it had a incredible life impact on me. Not look the physical part. Yes,
link |
01:38:09.640
absolutely. Does it, does it keep you humble when you know that there's 145 pound individual that
link |
01:38:18.440
can tap you out when you're 220 pound, 25 year old guy. And there's 135 or 140 pound, you know,
link |
01:38:28.040
46 year old guy that can make you tap out. That's humbling. And, and what do you do with that? Do
link |
01:38:35.320
you run away from it or do you continue to pursue it? Same thing with life. Same thing with anything.
link |
01:38:40.680
So jujitsu is an incredibly powerful, not just physical aspect, but it's, it's a way to understand.
link |
01:38:48.440
It's a way of thinking. You've also competed. Is there something you can speak to the value of
link |
01:38:54.440
competition? Obviously you've been through combat, actual military combat is many, many, many, many
link |
01:39:03.160
orders of magnitude, more high stakes than competition in a, in a silly sport like jujitsu.
link |
01:39:10.840
Nevertheless, it still has some of the echoes of the same challenges. Is there something you can
link |
01:39:18.520
speak to the value of competition for you? Yep. Competition will reveal weaknesses in your game
link |
01:39:24.520
that you can then go back and train to rectify. So that, that's a big part of it.
link |
01:39:31.400
So that that's very useful to serve. Yeah. As a testing ground, of course, training can be that
link |
01:39:38.040
testing ground as well or, or that feedback. Yeah. But as you and I both know, if you and
link |
01:39:44.840
I train together all the time, you'll know my game. I'll know your game. And even if we have
link |
01:39:48.760
five other people, we all kind of understand each other's games and you're not doing something to me
link |
01:39:53.080
that I don't expect. So when I go and compete, I'm good. You're good. You know, this random person
link |
01:39:58.440
has a game that I've never seen before. I'm, and I may or may not know how to deal with that game.
link |
01:40:03.480
If I know how to deal with it, great. I get the victory. Maybe I don't learn as much. If I don't
link |
01:40:08.360
know how to deal with their game, I get the loss and I get the win of learning what some
link |
01:40:15.000
weakness in my game is. So you mentioned offline that your friends and you work with Dean Lister
link |
01:40:21.960
and Dean Lister is one of the people that inspired John Donoher, who I've very much been,
link |
01:40:29.960
I've gotten a chance to talk to quite a bit recently.
link |
01:40:34.600
I don't know what you think about this. This is not a therapy session, but
link |
01:40:39.720
or maybe it is turning into one. He's a fascinating person, John Donoher, in terms of
link |
01:40:49.160
creating almost a science of Jiu Jitsu to a level that I haven't seen before, which is
link |
01:40:57.320
systems thinking about, like you can think about military combat as tactics in a particular
link |
01:41:03.400
situation, but then you zoom out and you want to create entire systems of tactics in all situations,
link |
01:41:09.560
right? He's very kind of wants to keep zooming out and creating giant systems.
link |
01:41:14.120
And, which I appreciate that, even though the task is probably impossible to do completely,
link |
01:41:22.040
but there is something that's in terms of competition that
link |
01:41:29.560
he kindled a fire in me that I want to get back out there. He has a particular thing that did it,
link |
01:41:36.920
which is very different from my personal journey in Jiu Jitsu, which was to a degree that people
link |
01:41:45.320
I worked with cared about competition, it was always about winning or doing well,
link |
01:41:53.160
all those kinds of things. For John, it's about winning, like winning is not even a thing that's
link |
01:42:01.400
important. What's most important is winning by submission or dominance, right? And not just the
link |
01:42:12.520
end, it's the entire time competing such that the only thing that matters is that kind of victory.
link |
01:42:19.960
And that's a very different level of competition that's actually liberating in a certain kind of
link |
01:42:23.880
sense. I remember so much of my competition was about fear of not taking risks. You get up on
link |
01:42:34.600
points or you hold a strong position, you kind of advance and you get more points. Maybe you chase
link |
01:42:39.240
the submission, but there's always a fear of risk. And for him, you embrace the risk. You should not
link |
01:42:46.920
be competing out of fear. Live and die by the sword versus stay in safety. I don't know if there's
link |
01:42:54.120
something to be said here. Well, you said it's novel to you, it's not novel to me. My entire
link |
01:43:02.200
journey in Jiu Jitsu was only about submission. And as you mentioned, Dean Lister is my coach and my
link |
01:43:10.920
main training partner for 20 something years. And if you ever watch Dean train or fight, that's what
link |
01:43:18.040
he's trying to do is submit as everyone. That's what he's always done. That's what he always will
link |
01:43:23.880
do. He, you know, he has the highest, I think he has impact. I know he has the highest submission
link |
01:43:30.280
victories in ADCC. He, that's what he does. So this is, in fact, as Jiu Jitsu got bigger and
link |
01:43:38.520
bigger, in fact, as Jiu Jitsu got more popular and we started seeing people competing to win by
link |
01:43:47.640
points, that was what was novel to me in the beginning. Now it's the standard. So it's not
link |
01:43:53.640
novel to me. I love the fact that John Donoher and all of his troops go out and they try and
link |
01:44:00.760
submit people. I think it's awesome. And I think that's what Jiu Jitsu is.
link |
01:44:03.560
All right. Let's ask for some advice for white belts. There's a lot of white belts who listen to this.
link |
01:44:09.000
What advice would you give? You've been in Jiu Jitsu for many years. In terms of
link |
01:44:15.240
a successful journey through Jiu Jitsu, what advice would you give them? People just starting out.
link |
01:44:20.520
Just keep training, keep your ego in check. Don't freak out. Try and use the techniques
link |
01:44:24.280
that you learn and all this stuff. So I'm like saying it, you know, notice how I'm saying it.
link |
01:44:27.960
Yeah.
link |
01:44:28.280
Hey, tap out, keep your ego in check.
link |
01:44:31.240
It's common sense.
link |
01:44:31.720
But the thing is everyone says this all the time and white belts still start off by going
link |
01:44:35.320
completely nuts for at least, you know, three to six months of, I'm not going to let this guy tap
link |
01:44:40.520
me out. And they're going to, and I'm going to tap this guy out, not by using technique,
link |
01:44:44.360
but by just using strength. And it's just, it's just inhibiting your learning. So as much as you
link |
01:44:50.200
can, I know, I know you got to get it out of your system. I know you don't want to tap. And I know
link |
01:44:53.480
you want to tap somebody, but as soon as you get, get that off your chest, then try and, try and
link |
01:45:01.720
relax and try and learn the techniques. It's perhaps counterintuitive. It never was to me,
link |
01:45:07.080
but it's counterintuitive that to, to start on the journey of really sort of mastering Jiu Jitsu or
link |
01:45:13.320
whatever, or improving is you have to relax. And that seems to be a very counterintuitive lesson.
link |
01:45:19.480
I learned that early on with, that was thanks to the Russian system. I played piano and like music,
link |
01:45:26.200
basically, actually this is true for basically any sport that includes the human body is like
link |
01:45:31.560
relaxing is the way you, you start learning stuff. You have to learn, you have to literally,
link |
01:45:36.760
and most people don't seem to understand this is like, you have to learn what it means for the
link |
01:45:41.560
human body to relax. Like, I guess you have to have enough knowledge of all the muscles involved
link |
01:45:48.520
to know what it means to relax those muscles. So for piano, you have to understand what it means
link |
01:45:53.080
to relax your wrists and your fingers in order to learn how to move them. Like if there's tenseness
link |
01:46:00.120
in the fingers, you're not going to like, you have to learn how to try hard while relaxed.
link |
01:46:08.120
The, I guess the beginner, if you don't internalize this lesson, will try hard by
link |
01:46:14.120
tensing up hard and like trying hard, tensing up more as opposed to relaxing more. And that lesson
link |
01:46:21.800
cannot be conveyed through words, I guess. I've had the great fortune of having dictatorial
link |
01:46:28.280
teachers as they do in Russia for piano and so on, where you get like hit if you don't learn
link |
01:46:34.600
to relax, which is a counterintuitive notion, but it works.
link |
01:46:37.880
Yeah. This brings me to one of my favorite pieces of coaching advice that I will tell
link |
01:46:42.520
white belts while they're struggling on the mat. I'll tell them to relax harder.
link |
01:46:47.800
Okay. That's beautiful. For somebody who studied war, who participated in war,
link |
01:46:58.040
what do you think is the best martial arts for, let's call it self defense,
link |
01:47:04.920
let's call it self defense for hand to hand combat outside the constraints of sport.
link |
01:47:13.320
So it's not one answer. The answer to me is jujitsu, boxing, wrestling, Muay Thai,
link |
01:47:24.200
judo, Sambo, and on down the list. I definitely start with jujitsu. The reason I start with
link |
01:47:30.440
jujitsu is because in a self defense situation, if you are a big monster human and you want to
link |
01:47:38.200
fight me and you square off with me, guess what I'm going to do? Run away. Cause I don't want,
link |
01:47:45.960
I don't want to get involved. Even if I see skinny little Lex out on the street and you
link |
01:47:52.200
start yelling at me and saying, you want to fight me? I don't want to fight you. I don't,
link |
01:47:55.320
it doesn't matter. I don't care if I can beat you or not. What if you stab me? What if you
link |
01:47:59.480
sue me after I get done throwing you onto the concrete? There's a million bad things that can
link |
01:48:04.040
happen and almost nothing good. So for self defense, my first self defense is my feet to
link |
01:48:10.920
get away from you. And if you square off to punch me, I can run away from you. If you square off to
link |
01:48:17.560
kick me, I can run away from you. If you push me, I can run away from you. So great. I don't need
link |
01:48:23.400
to know how to box to run away from you where this all changes is when you grab me. And now
link |
01:48:31.320
I don't have the option to run away anymore. Now I actually have to know how to get away from your
link |
01:48:37.000
grip. And that's where jujitsu comes into play. So, especially if you get me on the ground,
link |
01:48:43.160
if you, if you grab me and get me on the ground, now I need to know how to get you off of me and
link |
01:48:49.080
get up and get away from you so I can run away. So that's why I say start with jujitsu. And, and
link |
01:48:55.640
from there, boxing, wrestling, judo, Sambo, Muay Thai. Yeah. There's a, there's certain in the
link |
01:49:04.040
standing position. I mean, I'm a judo person as well. And, uh, the judo is very limited in their
link |
01:49:09.880
understanding of the full grappling spectrum, even though they do all the things on the ground as
link |
01:49:15.800
well. But, uh, it's so focused on the feet, but nevertheless, it's important to understand
link |
01:49:22.600
the thing that judo has as a sport and it's good to practice that, uh, jujitsu doesn't
link |
01:49:30.680
is, um, not just the, the skill of grappling on the feet, but the skill of explosive aggression
link |
01:49:39.640
that, uh, sometimes jujitsu is more about in terms of tactics is more about patience. It
link |
01:49:46.840
depends how you practice it, but because so much is, uh, about control and, uh, technique
link |
01:49:53.160
that, uh, sometimes you don't get to practice like aggression, explosive aggression. And judo
link |
01:49:58.840
is so much about, uh, aggression implemented in such a way that the demonstration of power is
link |
01:50:05.800
effortless, right? That's the beauty of jujitsu. Yeah. And same thing with wrestling. Wrestling
link |
01:50:10.360
also has a high level of intensity and aggression as well. Yes. Yeah. So that's where, that's where
link |
01:50:15.080
I agree. Judo and wrestling. Absolutely. Awesome. Get some and striking boxing Muay Thai. Yeah. You
link |
01:50:24.280
know, like the, you should train all these things. Are there books and movies in your life long ago
link |
01:50:31.560
or recently that had a big impact on you? Uh, yeah, the main one is about face, which is sitting
link |
01:50:38.360
right here. There you go. This is written by Colonel David Hackworth. That's the
link |
01:50:45.640
book that really had a massive impact on me from a leadership perspective. And I ended up,
link |
01:50:51.400
I talked about it enough that it started kind of coming back and started selling well and
link |
01:50:55.720
they contacted me and I wrote a forward for it. So that book had a huge impact on me and I still,
link |
01:51:03.160
when I read it, I still get lessons out of it just about every time. This is the Vietnam war.
link |
01:51:09.000
And Korea. And Korea. And he got in towards the end of, right at the end of world war II. So he
link |
01:51:16.200
was kind of raised by the, the soldiers that fought in world war II and then he went to Korea
link |
01:51:22.200
and then he went to Vietnam. An exceptional warrior, a soldier soldier. If you can give
link |
01:51:27.640
a little inkling what made him a soldier soldier. So I, he died in 2005 so I never got to meet him.
link |
01:51:41.400
And I, I had a guy on my podcast who worked for him in Vietnam, a guy named general James
link |
01:51:50.520
Mukiyama. And luckily his son had reached out to me and said, I think you're talking about my dad
link |
01:51:59.000
cause I read some passage in there that, that Jim Mukiyama was young cap young captain Jim Mukiyama,
link |
01:52:04.840
company commander in Vietnam. He said, I think you're talking about my dad. Would you want to
link |
01:52:10.520
talk to him? And I said, absolutely. Well, here's the thing that I didn't really understand. And
link |
01:52:14.280
you read one quote, but there's all these quotes in that book that talk about how great Hackworth
link |
01:52:19.400
was and what an incredible leader he was and how he was the best combat leader anyone had ever seen.
link |
01:52:24.760
And all these just really complimentary things that are said by a bunch of different people.
link |
01:52:29.400
And when you read the book, you're reading this guy's account of what he went through.
link |
01:52:35.960
But I never really knew if that was all true or did he just cherry pick his friends,
link |
01:52:43.240
quotes about him and cherry pick the stories that he wanted to tell.
link |
01:52:46.920
And so it was very interesting for me when I met Mukiyama, General Mukiyama, who he became a general
link |
01:52:51.640
eventually when I met him and we were talking about his life. And I was very curious and I was
link |
01:52:57.080
a little bit nervous going into this interview because I was thinking maybe my hero, my mentor,
link |
01:53:02.040
this guy that I've never met before, maybe he's just an arrogant jerk that talked, talked himself
link |
01:53:08.040
up in this book. So I'm sitting down with, with General Mukiyama and I finally got to the part
link |
01:53:14.200
where he's meeting Hackworth for the first time. And I said, did, you know, did you know who
link |
01:53:23.720
Hackworth was when he showed up? So he was Mukiyama, Muk, Muk, they call him Muk. Muk was the,
link |
01:53:29.240
was the, like the adjutant to the, to the general that, that was going to, that, that Hackworth
link |
01:53:36.520
was going to be working for. So when Hackworth comes into the office, the first person he meets
link |
01:53:40.040
is this guy, this guy, Captain Mukiyama. And so Hackworth walks in and I said, when Hackworth
link |
01:53:46.040
walked in, did you know who he was? And Mukiyama says, everybody knew who he was, Mr. Infantry.
link |
01:53:54.920
And so he ended up explaining that everything that is written in there about Hackworth,
link |
01:54:01.160
they, they just loved him. They adored him. Up the chain of command,
link |
01:54:07.880
it turned out a little bit different. And, you know, the title of the book is about face. And
link |
01:54:11.320
if you're familiar, familiar with military drill about faces, when you turn around 180 degrees,
link |
01:54:17.000
and at the end of the Vietnam war, towards the end of the Vietnam war, he was so disgusted with
link |
01:54:23.960
the way that the war was being fought. He was so disgusted with the decisions that were being made
link |
01:54:28.520
by the leadership that he did an interview. He was the first Colonel, first senior officer to
link |
01:54:34.280
do an interview that spoke out against the war that was happening. And this is while he's in
link |
01:54:39.800
Vietnam, by the way. So he got drummed out of the army, and he was forced to retire. And that was
link |
01:54:46.440
that. So there's an element of rebelliousness to him. And, you know, when you talk to me about,
link |
01:54:53.800
are there times when the leaders making the leadership, this absolute senior leadership,
link |
01:54:59.640
the civilian leadership is doing the wrong things? Yes. And there's times when people speak out
link |
01:55:04.520
against it. And there's an argument for and against that, too, even even with Hackworth.
link |
01:55:09.000
You know, did he when you get when you quit your job, or you do something that gets you fired,
link |
01:55:13.560
which is what he did, you immediately give up all your influence over what's happening. So they get
link |
01:55:20.280
another, they get another battalion commander to take his place, they get another colonel to step
link |
01:55:23.960
in and take his place. That's what they do. And now he can't help anymore. And he's like,
link |
01:55:27.960
and now he can't help anymore. He can't help his troops. But at that point in the war,
link |
01:55:33.400
he loved his men so much that he was sickened with the situation on the ground. And he,
link |
01:55:44.760
and he spoke out about it. So that book had a huge impact on me. And like I said, I still,
link |
01:55:51.480
I still read it all the time. I reread it all the time. And I always take lessons from it.
link |
01:55:56.440
But let me ask you about love. This is not usually associated with Jaco. But what role does love
link |
01:56:03.160
in terms of friendship, in terms of family play in a successful life? And life in general?
link |
01:56:10.760
Again, this is putting other people above yourself.
link |
01:56:14.280
Do you see that as love? That's ultimately the implementation of love?
link |
01:56:18.120
I would say yes.
link |
01:56:19.160
Jaco, I've been a huge fan of yours. You're somebody who inspires me to get up early,
link |
01:56:25.320
to get shit done, to be disciplined about my life, and to be the best leader I can be.
link |
01:56:31.240
It's really, truly an honor. And thank you for wasting all your too valuable time with me. I
link |
01:56:37.800
don't know what you were thinking, but thank you for doing it.
link |
01:56:40.440
Well, thanks for having me on. I can guarantee I'm not as cool as you just made me sound.
link |
01:56:44.920
I'm just out here, like I said, trying to help people out. And I think you're helping a lot of
link |
01:56:49.560
people out with your podcast. So thanks for having me up here to share some of my experiences.
link |
01:56:54.920
And hopefully I'll see you on the mat one day.
link |
01:56:57.000
For sure. Looking forward to it. Could be sooner than you think.
link |
01:57:00.760
Sounds like a threat. I love it.
link |
01:57:03.720
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jaco Willink. And thank you to Linode, Indeed,
link |
01:57:09.160
SimpliSafe, and Ground News. Check them out in the description to support this podcast. And now,
link |
01:57:15.800
let me leave you with some words from Jaco Willink.
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01:57:19.240
There are no bad teams, only bad leaders.
link |
01:57:22.440
There are no bad teams, only bad leaders. Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.