Artwork for podcast Reqless: Software in the Age of AI
2026-07-18. Everyone's An Expert
Episode 5818th July 2023 • Reqless: Software in the Age of AI • Aboard
00:00:00 00:22:44

Share Episode

Shownotes

Vaccines, submarines ... everyone seems to be an expert. In this episode Rich and Paul discuss how everyone seems to become an expert on various subjects in today's world. They discuss how the truth ultimately surfaces, but humanity often lags behind. Reflecting on the impact of social media and the democratization of knowledge, they examine the challenges we face in staying informed and the consequences of misinformation. This podcast is sponsored by Aboard.

Transcripts

Rich Ziade:

You ever been at like a dinner party or a cocktail party

Paul Ford:

Not really.

Paul Ford:

I don't have any friends.

Rich Ziade:

Neither do I.

Paul Ford:

Yeah's why we're here in this room every day.

Rich Ziade:

and the topic of the week.

Rich Ziade:

Seeps into the

Rich Ziade:

And then they chime in very intense, formal like from their perspective,

Rich Ziade:

everyone has left the room and they're just on air and they're talking and now

Rich Ziade:

they're taking it to a level of detail.

Rich Ziade:

And they're sort of the words I like to use.

Rich Ziade:

They're sort of holding forth.

Rich Ziade:

They're

Paul Ford:

Yeah, sure.

Rich Ziade:

And it's a bizarre thing.

Rich Ziade:

Unless I have Fareed Zakaria at the dinner party and he's chiming in

Rich Ziade:

on like, you know, world politics.

Rich Ziade:

Then he can hold for, he's fareed's.

Rich Ziade:

That's all he

Rich Ziade:

does.

Paul Ford:

He's

Rich Ziade:

he thinks about.

Paul Ford:

fourth holder.

Rich Ziade:

Correct.

Rich Ziade:

But this is like the CrossFit trainer,

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

Oh yeah.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

and they've decided that.

Rich Ziade:

And it's usually, it's an, it's not ego.

Rich Ziade:

I'm, I'm painting an ugly picture here.

Rich Ziade:

It's usually just someone that's just so excited and passionate about this

Rich Ziade:

issue that they've done some reading, but they're not talking to us anymore.

Rich Ziade:

They are effectively clearing the room and saying, I am the expert

Paul Ford:

Sure.

Rich Ziade:

you should all listen.

Rich Ziade:

And it's not, it, it, you know, what happens is there's moment where it's

Rich Ziade:

clearly not a conversation anymore.

Paul Ford:

That's,

Rich Ziade:

You're more an audience.

Paul Ford:

I mean, I gotta tell you, you're describing this situation.

Paul Ford:

I, I, I know exactly what you're talking about.

Paul Ford:

I've probably been the person who is the fourth holder way too often.

Paul Ford:

I now, if

Rich Ziade:

Really, I've never done that before.

Paul Ford:

No, never.

Paul Ford:

Not a word.

Paul Ford:

Uh, no.

Paul Ford:

I mean, look in increasingly, I'm the weird, quiet dad in the corner.

Paul Ford:

That's how I go.

Paul Ford:

Like, uh, because it's.

Paul Ford:

I, I mean, to my stuff anyway, regardless, I, I feel that the dynamic you described

Paul Ford:

is a normal dynamic, but also It's everything now everything is sort of

Paul Ford:

info dumping and sort of, here's the 25 points that I go every, everybody gets

Paul Ford:

talking points, memo, uh, talking points, memos as they go throughout their day.

Paul Ford:

And then they make sure that they're kind of in the right place.

Paul Ford:

And then they're like, okay, well here's the three things we

Paul Ford:

should know about the submarine.

Paul Ford:

And then I'll tell you what, like good example.

Paul Ford:

That submarine went down and exploded with rich people in it.

Paul Ford:

And everybody's like, it was kind of a hilarious situation, but I'm

Paul Ford:

not gonna talk about it cuz I'm a, I'm a civilized human being.

Paul Ford:

And then people started to make jokes about it on Twitter, which they did.

Paul Ford:

And then everybody's like, I can't believe you're making

Paul Ford:

jokes, and so on and so forth.

Paul Ford:

And then the counter narrative, and I, I, I'm extremely good at

Paul Ford:

predicting the leftist counter narrative because I'm It's what I do.

Paul Ford:

And I was immediately like, well, you know, migrants, um, died in

Paul Ford:

similar ways, but nobody makes a a point about that, right?

Rich Ziade:

the New York Times wrote a whole article

Paul Ford:

I'm like, okay, but also like, and, and the thing is, is like, I get

Paul Ford:

it, it that has a narrative consistency.

Paul Ford:

Also, five kids got hit by cars, right?

Paul Ford:

Like I, that's also really bad.

Paul Ford:

Like there's a

Rich Ziade:

there's a lot of bad,

Paul Ford:

there's a litany of really awful things that shouldn't happen because

Paul Ford:

of structural failings in our society that are killing millions of people right now.

Paul Ford:

Everybody's like, yeah, but you, you think that submarine story is interesting?

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna tell you about a story that's kinda like the submarine story so

Paul Ford:

that you feel like a piece of shit.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

And it's absolutely exhausting to me in every way because nobody actually wants

Paul Ford:

to talk about the structural stuff.

Paul Ford:

Cuz those are literally like, we should have a a, a more

Paul Ford:

involved community task force.

Rich Ziade:

Right, Boring.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

Maybe our taxes should be higher.

Paul Ford:

Right.

Paul Ford:

It's just so I, I'm like, okay, I'm gonna get info dumped in, in by,

Paul Ford:

and it doesn't matter which room I'm in, the progressive info dump, the

Paul Ford:

centrist info, dump the technologist.

Paul Ford:

Everybody has to get their points out.

Paul Ford:

And so I don't go to as many parties as I used to.

Paul Ford:

I, I worry that maybe I'm the problem

Rich Ziade:

No, I, I mean, look, everyone's seen this at the party, but

Rich Ziade:

the impact radius is 20 people, 30 people.

Rich Ziade:

I think what's weird on the internet right now is that, um, casual knowledge and

Rich Ziade:

expertise have kind of become conflated.

Rich Ziade:

Such that it feels really good to share knowledge.

Rich Ziade:

By the way, when you know something and others, actually, you don't

Rich Ziade:

even check if others know it.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

You just want to get it

Rich Ziade:

everyone knows.

Rich Ziade:

It feels good.

Rich Ziade:

I think I have some knowledge.

Rich Ziade:

I'm gonna share some knowledge

Rich Ziade:

here.

Rich Ziade:

We go

Paul Ford:

million submarine experts showed up on Twitter.

Paul Ford:

I didn't know there were, there.

Paul Ford:

Like over 40% of our country is able to give serious commentary on what

Paul Ford:

happens with submarines in extreme

Rich Ziade:

It's wild.

Rich Ziade:

Right?

Rich Ziade:

And, and so what you're talking about is the, is the sort of

Rich Ziade:

gotcha counter, which is just

Paul Ford:

Well, it's just, it's all, all these narratives are highly predictable.

Paul Ford:

Like you see billionaires are in a submarine.

Paul Ford:

You're like, all right, I know.

Paul Ford:

How is it gonna go?

Paul Ford:

And you know what?

Paul Ford:

It goes exactly like

Rich Ziade:

I think where it gets a little scary, and I actually genuinely

Rich Ziade:

think it's scary, is when um, someone with a pretty like decent sized

Rich Ziade:

megaphone, starts to dish out just a lot of nonsense, but says it in a way

Rich Ziade:

of authority and asks for an open mind.

Paul Ford:

oh, this is the Elon Musk paradigm right

Rich Ziade:

It's kind of the Elon Musk paradigm.

Paul Ford:

runs his full mouth because he thinks he knows everything.

Rich Ziade:

I, I think that's what it

Paul Ford:

He's the biggest blowhard who's ever existed.

Paul Ford:

He literally is somebody who read Twitter and was like, that is the truth.

Paul Ford:

I need to get in

Rich Ziade:

Yeah, but isn't it scary?

Paul Ford:

Everything's terrifying when you look at it.

Paul Ford:

I mean, I don't know.

Paul Ford:

Y you know, yes, it is weird.

Paul Ford:

I think it's also very American Americans are people who are like neurosurgery.

Paul Ford:

I could do that.

Paul Ford:

You know, nuclear

Rich Ziade:

The world's full of possibilities.

Paul Ford:

I'll just read the Wikipedia page and then I, then I will do the

Paul Ford:

emergency appendectomy myself, cuz I wanna save that money like we are.

Paul Ford:

We're we're very weird that way, you know, we're, we prescribe fish antibiotics to

Paul Ford:

ourselves and things like Um, partially cuz our healthcare system is a mess.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

So in Yougo, you're, you're Eli Musk.

Paul Ford:

I don't know man.

Paul Ford:

Like, everybody runs their mouth and everybody gets upset about everybody

Paul Ford:

running their mouth and gets really worried about running the mouth.

Paul Ford:

But I'm just like,

Rich Ziade:

what about the argument?

Rich Ziade:

That people make, which is what are you afraid of?

Rich Ziade:

Get it all out there and the truth will surface.

Paul Ford:

Yeah, I know, and that's okay.

Paul Ford:

But it sucks.

Paul Ford:

Like it just shouldn't suck this bad.

Paul Ford:

Everything sucks.

Paul Ford:

Like you're just,

Rich Ziade:

well answer me this.

Rich Ziade:

Does, does the truth surface?

Rich Ziade:

For a lot of people it doesn't.

Paul Ford:

mean, it's also, what the hell is the truth?

Paul Ford:

I don't, um, you're a somewhat religious person.

Paul Ford:

I am not.

Paul Ford:

We have a different fundamental understanding of

Paul Ford:

how the universe is ordered.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah, I know, but I'm talking about,

Paul Ford:

who was in the room at that time,

Rich Ziade:

who's behind?

Rich Ziade:

GDPR is made by a bunch of lizard people.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

Oh, okay.

Paul Ford:

So if I come out and say that shouldn't, shouldn't there be a,

Rich Ziade:

the truth, wouldn't the truth just start a materialize there?

Paul Ford:

Nah.

Paul Ford:

People believe in Wizards Man, and they, it's just now they

Paul Ford:

believe in Wizards In Public.

Paul Ford:

It used to be that you didn't talk about the Wizards all day long.

Paul Ford:

But now we just have a wizard believing world and everybody's

Paul Ford:

just like, man, you know, he really cast a wacky spell that day.

Paul Ford:

And everybody's like, yeah, well, you know, that was a, that was a MAGA spell,

Paul Ford:

but it could have been a, Zoom zip spell.

Paul Ford:

And everybody's like, yeah, spells.

Rich Ziade:

Is it bad that lizard.

Rich Ziade:

People are, lizard believers are recruiting other lizard believers.

Paul Ford:

Well, some of them are lizard people, so it's really

Paul Ford:

bad they shouldn't be in there.

Paul Ford:

No, man, look, look, I gotta just, like, let's, let's get down to bras, tacks on

Paul Ford:

this, which is, you can't change this.

Paul Ford:

You can't.

Paul Ford:

You're gonna let people have a voice and these are the voices you're

Paul Ford:

gonna And I don't want to, I used to almost celebrate and enjoy it.

Paul Ford:

Then it was a little weird when the absolute whackadoodles

Paul Ford:

got control of society.

Paul Ford:

That was unusual.

Paul Ford:

I didn't expect that.

Paul Ford:

But

Rich Ziade:

thought they'd be on the fringes?

Paul Ford:

But then it actually turns out, if you look historically

Paul Ford:

like Whackadoodles used the new media, whatever it happens to be,

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

But even before that, like I guy can get up and be like, God told

Paul Ford:

me that we gotta go up to this mountain cuz the world's ending.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

And he uses like he, you

Rich Ziade:

and there's a pamphlet in there.

Paul Ford:

There's a pamphlet and everybody's, and people

Paul Ford:

were like, oh my God, oh my God.

Paul Ford:

I, I, I saw the pamphlet.

Paul Ford:

He says, the world's ending.

Paul Ford:

We gotta get up the mountain.

Paul Ford:

Right?

Paul Ford:

And, and everybody else is like, what the hell are you talking about?

Paul Ford:

And they're like, no, no, you put it in a pamphlet.

Paul Ford:

It has to be real.

Rich Ziade:

I mean, what about the blueberry festival?

Rich Ziade:

Where's everyone going?

Paul Ford:

Exactly.

Paul Ford:

Well, we were, we just picked all these blueberries, not a

Paul Ford:

world's ending, world's ending.

Paul Ford:

So I, I think like, Yeah, we have a, there was, I think we lived in a kind

Paul Ford:

of golden moment that was in the wake of World War II, where, you know, Edward

Paul Ford:

Arm Murrow would get on television.

Paul Ford:

Walter Cronkite would

Rich Ziade:

tell it like it

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna tell you the truth, that we have to, we have to

Paul Ford:

really ask serious questions about the Vietnam War and so on and so forth.

Paul Ford:

And so we had this moment where this.

Paul Ford:

Concept of the truth was shared.

Paul Ford:

We had a little bit of a more monolithic society.

Paul Ford:

There was actually much less polarization and everyone could be like, well, we

Paul Ford:

disagree on the fundamentals, but I love Norman Rockwell paintings and so I'm gonna

Paul Ford:

stand up at the town hall meeting and here we go, and school boards Christianity.

Paul Ford:

And then, uh, that doesn't hold, that's actually not a sustainable

Paul Ford:

thing that actually turns out not to be

Rich Ziade:

You

Rich Ziade:

don't think it's a product of the internet?

Paul Ford:

I do.

Paul Ford:

I think that, but I think that every new medium brings with it its own kind

Paul Ford:

of chaos as people use it and abuse it.

Paul Ford:

The internet is incredibly unusual in that, uh, regulation lagged so far.

Paul Ford:

So TV was actually kind of born regulated.

Paul Ford:

Radio was not.

Paul Ford:

Radio was born and it was people

Rich Ziade:

Preachers

Paul Ford:

and Yeah.

Paul Ford:

No, no.

Paul Ford:

The one of the.

Paul Ford:

Literally, um, uh, sort of a goat extract that would keep you erect, right?

Paul Ford:

Like in the twenties, this is going out on the radio.

Paul Ford:

You're like, you're just like, Hey, I, you know, I wonder what I'm gonna hear

Paul Ford:

on this radio and be like, you know,

Rich Ziade:

are pushing stuff out on the airwaves.

Paul Ford:

Mexican

Paul Ford:

stations, broadcasting when they were worried about us rules.

Paul Ford:

So just absolute nonsense preachers.

Paul Ford:

There was father, father Coghlan, the Irish, uh, anti-Semite in the.

Paul Ford:

Thirties, anti Roosevelt, like, I mean, just sort of like there's,

Paul Ford:

there's always been this, this subtext throughout all of these platforms,

Paul Ford:

but essentially like radio and TV kind of fell after, uh, after radio.

Paul Ford:

And so the regulatory frameworks were kind of in place.

Rich Ziade:

well, the FCC jurisdiction includes tv

Paul Ford:

Exactly right.

Paul Ford:

So like, so you, you don't end up, you don't end up with that initial

Paul Ford:

phase of chaos, but this, we just went through the first 25 years of chaos.

Paul Ford:

Now, I believe personally that we live in a relatively like law

Paul Ford:

driven civil society in America.

Paul Ford:

And that basically the unregulated situation where anyone can get out

Paul Ford:

and say like, children should be shot, or things like these extremes.

Paul Ford:

Yeah, are, are sort of well outside of First Amendment and that regulatory, they

Rich Ziade:

prosecuted.

Rich Ziade:

Right?

Rich Ziade:

Like you, they can arrest you for going too far.

Paul Ford:

Regulatory frameworks will continue to assert themselves unless

Paul Ford:

they don't, because there's been a total capture of our sort of shared

Paul Ford:

cognitive understanding of reality by complete moon bats, and then

Paul Ford:

we're in really, really bad pickle.

Paul Ford:

The thing that worries me more, it's like not.

Paul Ford:

Even, even if we have like another wacky conservative wave in America, I Trump

Paul Ford:

I think is a little bit of an outlier.

Paul Ford:

I don't think we're gonna head for full fascism.

Paul Ford:

What bothers me more is like we truly are headed towards a genuine

Paul Ford:

global migrant crisis and, um, and, uh, a global, uh, climate emergency.

Paul Ford:

And then when you combine that, With, uh, with the sort of ability of this

Paul Ford:

information to spread mis the, of these platforms to spread misinformation, you

Paul Ford:

have a real pickle on your hands, and we don't seem to have the leadership.

Paul Ford:

Our current president is over 500 years old.

Paul Ford:

And so it's just sort of like, I, when I look at

Rich Ziade:

how are you gonna get ahead of that?

Paul Ford:

Yes.

Paul Ford:

And are you gonna really police it?

Paul Ford:

And probably what that means.

Paul Ford:

I, as I'm saying this out loud, and I hate to say it, it feels like overzealous.

Paul Ford:

Moderation and policing is the only way forward for the internet or otherwise.

Paul Ford:

It will be part of a really great cultural failure, and it already has been.

Paul Ford:

So, you know, it's a real uplifting podcast.

Paul Ford:

We try to keep it positive, but I, I'm not super positive on

Rich Ziade:

I mean, I hear you.

Rich Ziade:

I, I, I think, that, um, People are going to say what they're going to say.

Paul Ford:

Well, and they believe it.

Paul Ford:

There are people who really do believe that lizards run the world

Rich Ziade:

well, I'm, I don't even wanna go to that

Rich Ziade:

I'm talking just decided to read an article about submersibles and then

Rich Ziade:

goes back into social and writes 2000

Rich Ziade:

And, and that person is actually, he owns a chain of, presses.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

But is in our immune system at this point.

Paul Ford:

I, doesn't matter?

Rich Ziade:

I guess it doesn't, I don't know if,

Paul Ford:

I think it matters when people run their mouths about like race,

Paul Ford:

science and affirmative action, but like, let 'em talk about the submarine.

Paul Ford:

Everybody's full of it

Rich Ziade:

yeah.

Rich Ziade:

I, I think it matters when, like, tens of thousands of people die vaccine.

Rich Ziade:

So I do think

Paul Ford:

matters.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

All right.

Paul Ford:

No, no, no.

Paul Ford:

Okay, so that is a well taken way.

Paul Ford:

First of all, let's, let's separate those two things.

Paul Ford:

I think this is a valuable thing to do.

Paul Ford:

There is I'm gonna run my mouth about the news of the day, even

Paul Ford:

though I don't know a damn thing.

Paul Ford:

So I can look clever.

Paul Ford:

I'm suddenly, I read, I read the Wikipedia article.

Paul Ford:

Now I'm gonna tell you all about summaries.

Paul Ford:

Right?

Paul Ford:

Okay, fine.

Paul Ford:

That's human.

Paul Ford:

That's just like the internet taking what used to happen at a barbershop Then there

Paul Ford:

is the, I'm not gonna get that devil juice infected into my arm balls because I

Paul Ford:

don't want to get no 5G vaccine monsters.

Paul Ford:

That's bad when people die.

Paul Ford:

You're right.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

So I, I think like,

Rich Ziade:

how do you get ahead of

Rich Ziade:

Because you're, you just, you just pointed out, you know, there's gonna

Rich Ziade:

be mass migration because of climate and you're gonna have some, you,

Rich Ziade:

you think these theories are kooky?

Paul Ford:

Well, I think that today what you do is you go like, well, you know,

Paul Ford:

we're gonna put a little thing underneath here that says that's misinformation.

Paul Ford:

And we're gonna like,

Rich Ziade:

a lot of stickers,

Paul Ford:

Here's, here's where we're at right now.

Paul Ford:

Despite the fact that everybody acts like we're at the end of the days

Paul Ford:

and everyone's miserable all the time online, which should put your phone down.

Paul Ford:

Um, despite all that, it's relatively stable.

Paul Ford:

Global economy and most people are able to participate if they really have

Paul Ford:

some good physical ability and want to.

Paul Ford:

So like, I, I, I sort of feel like, so it's like, all right, we put the

Paul Ford:

warning on, you know, we put the sticker on like with cigarettes and

Paul Ford:

uh, you know, but then ultimately what happens is you get in real big trouble.

Paul Ford:

Like the way you stop smoking, you, you charge, you know, the way to solve

Paul Ford:

this is charge everybody $5 to tweet.

Rich Ziade:

cigarettes for 12 bucks.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

Seven of it goes to

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

You didn't have to arrest smokers, you just had to charge 'em.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

Okay.

Rich Ziade:

So, and I agree with you on this, which is the point I was going to

Paul Ford:

tax social media

Rich Ziade:

No, no, you, no.

Rich Ziade:

I think, I think assert, disincentives.

Rich Ziade:

On a lot of the ugly stuff that can cause real damage.

Rich Ziade:

Right.

Rich Ziade:

And the truth is, for cigarettes, it took like 50 years before those kicked

Rich Ziade:

in, like a lot of people died needless

Paul Ford:

tens, hundreds of

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

And look, I do believe that, you know, if you see the label and you're like,

Rich Ziade:

oh, the hell with it, I'm gonna smoke.

Rich Ziade:

You know what, that's, I'm okay with that.

Rich Ziade:

Like you've, you know the risks around it,

Paul Ford:

We all do dangerous and or hypocritical things.

Paul Ford:

We drive, sometimes we speed, we drink alcohol sometimes too much.

Paul Ford:

You know, so, and it's,

Rich Ziade:

It's, we all take those risks.

Rich Ziade:

I think what's challenging here, what's tricky here, and this is, this is

Rich Ziade:

what makes this so hard, is that most people don't know damage is being done.

Rich Ziade:

Like it is paternalistic to suggest that we have to get ahead of this for people.

Rich Ziade:

But the truth is, it was paternalistic to finally regulate cigarettes and

Rich Ziade:

charge a lot more money for them.

Paul Ford:

the great, you know, the nanny state,

Rich Ziade:

It.

Rich Ziade:

Look man, who was gonna do it?

Rich Ziade:

It wasn't gonna happen unilaterally by the tobacco companies.

Rich Ziade:

They decided to do it.

Rich Ziade:

They had to do it because they got, there was a massive, I forget the settlement.

Rich Ziade:

It was billions and billions of dollars.

Rich Ziade:

And now Altria exists, which is a different name for a cigarette

Paul Ford:

It's a great logo, you know?

Paul Ford:

You know.

Rich Ziade:

It's got the rainbows colors in

Paul Ford:

I'll tell you, you know what killed cigarettes is secondhand smoke.

Paul Ford:

Once you have a concept like that, once the children are dying, yeah, yeah.

Paul Ford:

Then you can get in there and you can say, no, no, you have to save the children.

Paul Ford:

And I, I feel that like, okay.

Paul Ford:

If you really want a regulatory framework here, you can have Mark Zuckerberg

Paul Ford:

wear, you know, put on his pants all day long, take off his hoodie.

Paul Ford:

But, um, you have to actually like create a narrative in

Paul Ford:

which the children are dying.

Paul Ford:

And, you know, PE suffering is this.

Paul Ford:

You have to show people this unmitigated

Rich Ziade:

Old people are dying.

Rich Ziade:

Didn't work.

Paul Ford:

No, we didn't care too much about that one.

Paul Ford:

Everybody was distracted.

Paul Ford:

It was a tough couple

Rich Ziade:

it's a bad, bad outcome, right?

Rich Ziade:

Look, is

Rich Ziade:

it

Paul Ford:

the last 10 years have taught me things about

Paul Ford:

human nature, including my own.

Paul Ford:

I don't love every day.

Paul Ford:

It is what it

Rich Ziade:

I mean, maybe this is our first No advice.

Rich Ziade:

The yacht and Ford advisors, let me ask you this question.

Rich Ziade:

Answer it directly.

Rich Ziade:

Don't pull any

Rich Ziade:

punches.

Rich Ziade:

isn't

Rich Ziade:

like all the all of human history.

Rich Ziade:

Just the bandaid getting applied after the fact.

Rich Ziade:

Like the blood is already dried on the arm and it's, and it's, we're always too late.

Rich Ziade:

Aren't we always too late?

Paul Ford:

We're always too late.

Paul Ford:

We're always too late.

Paul Ford:

No, and in fact, actually, you know what's fascinating is if you

Paul Ford:

really look at the way that the American legal system is structured,

Paul Ford:

it's designed with that in mind.

Paul Ford:

Like, it's like it's gonna be too late.

Paul Ford:

Like the Supreme Court is not a fast twitch response organization.

Paul Ford:

I mean, right now it's mostly a chartered phishing, uh, company.

Paul Ford:

But other than that,

Rich Ziade:

No, you're right.

Rich Ziade:

I mean, the civil rights movement, I mean, you could see the dissents in the early

Rich Ziade:

cases move up into the majority opinions like within 10 years, but that's a long

Paul Ford:

Well, and it's, it's, you're a lawyer.

Paul Ford:

We are, we are privileged people.

Paul Ford:

And when we look at those timeframes, we're like, that's just the process.

Paul Ford:

And when you're in the middle of the process, you're like, you know,

Paul Ford:

the, the great Martin Luther King essay title is why we Can't Wait.

Paul Ford:

Right.

Paul Ford:

Like, because everybody comes to you and goes like, Hey man,

Rich Ziade:

it a minute, it's gonna take some time.

Paul Ford:

all around, right?

Paul Ford:

And then it, it comes and it goes and people pass laws and

Paul Ford:

then they unpass the laws.

Paul Ford:

And here we are.

Paul Ford:

Here we are at this weird moment.

Paul Ford:

Um, there is no fast twitch response.

Paul Ford:

It can only be slow.

Paul Ford:

It will only be late.

Paul Ford:

And there is a

Rich Ziade:

it's always late.

Paul Ford:

There's a price to pay in human suffering along the way.

Paul Ford:

All right?

Rich Ziade:

Uh, if you are not an expert as in like accredited or got

Rich Ziade:

some sort of advanced degree, You don't need to chime in at the dinner table.

Rich Ziade:

Don't chime in where you can hit 300,000 people at

Paul Ford:

once.

Paul Ford:

You know what's bananas though, my friend?

Paul Ford:

It's that there became, and this is like the truest, most capitalist

Paul Ford:

logic I've ever seen for on behalf of social media, there became this

Paul Ford:

cultural logic that if you don't chime in, you're part of the problem.

Paul Ford:

You have to have an opinion on I believe so.

Paul Ford:

I feel that way.

Rich Ziade:

you're Right.

Rich Ziade:

Where's your voice?

Paul Ford:

and if you say the wrong thing while everyone is

Paul Ford:

upset about the other thing.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

You're also, you're being, you're disregarding things.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

You know what the rational adult response to that is?

Rich Ziade:

Stay out.

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna just, gonna go watch

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

I'm in duck out

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

That's, and it's, most people, honestly, frankly, most people

Paul Ford:

are, most people have ducked out

Rich Ziade:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, Uh, I mean, the sliver of advice in this

Rich Ziade:

one, There was a little something in

Paul Ford:

oh, it's okay.

Paul Ford:

You know,

Rich Ziade:

humanity on a

Paul Ford:

We actually

Paul Ford:

are very positive, happy people on a day-to-day basis.

Paul Ford:

And I have a lot, I have still have a lot of faith in the system.

Paul Ford:

I have a lot of

Rich Ziade:

yeah.

Paul Ford:

in, I, I like humans, I love 'em.

Rich Ziade:

Me too.

Paul Ford:

But boy, you just, you get a lot of 'em together and you, you

Paul Ford:

get some really bad stuff sometimes.

Paul Ford:

Sometimes really good stuff

Rich Ziade:

Sometimes.

Rich Ziade:

Really good

Paul Ford:

anyway.

Paul Ford:

All right.

Paul Ford:

Zdi

Rich Ziade:

Speaking of getting people

Paul Ford:

oh yeah.

Paul Ford:

You know, we actually are building a product we should

Paul Ford:

talk about, it's called a board.

Paul Ford:

You can check it out@aboard.com.

Paul Ford:

It lets you, um, collect stuff from all over the place, all the information,

Paul Ford:

all the links you could ever want.

Paul Ford:

It lets you organize those into piles of stuff that you can see

Paul Ford:

right there in your web browser.

Paul Ford:

And then it lets you collaborate with people like me and

Paul Ford:

Rich and other people too.

Rich Ziade:

I think one of the things that makes me excited about aboard

Rich Ziade:

is that it's, it's smaller circles of people which tend to be less toxic

Paul Ford:

Oh, I would, I If you were gonna plan a dinner party or create

Paul Ford:

cells in your revolutionary vanguard, I would use our product over just about any

Paul Ford:

other, I think it's really quite good.

Paul Ford:

Uh, check us out on, at Zdi Ford on Twitter and hello zdi ford.com.

Paul Ford:

We love you.

Paul Ford:

And uh, we're gonna, next, next podcast, we're gonna talk

Paul Ford:

about something incredibly

Rich Ziade:

talk about.

Rich Ziade:

Oh, absolutely.

Rich Ziade:

Like Sprinkles, ice cream and sprinkles.

Paul Ford:

Oh, it's better than, are you rainbow or chocolate?

Rich Ziade:

Rainbow's.

Rich Ziade:

Not real.

Rich Ziade:

It's actually just

Paul Ford:

chocolate.

Paul Ford:

You Absolute monster.

Paul Ford:

Yeah, rainbow's.

Paul Ford:

Wonderful.

Paul Ford:

All right, we'll talk about it

Links

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube