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Good morning, John. Here in my notes app
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list of video ideas, nestled between
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ranking Irish road signs and will
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computers ever suffer lies a little
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video called am I cigarettes? Which you
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stole from me. But of course, I forgive
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you for two reasons. One, I've stolen a
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ton of stuff from you. And second, you
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did a better job of that video than I
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would have, not least because I have
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never smoked a cigarette. I was so
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scared of addiction as a kid, which is
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kind of wild considering how I use the
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social internet. But we're going to talk
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about that. So, you finished your video,
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which I liked a lot, without any
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solutions, and then you just like kind
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of dumped that on me. Well, John, you
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know, I've got thoughts. So, a quick
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summary, the idea basically is that the
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social internet might really be quite
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bad for people. And at some point, you
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transition from you using it to it using
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you, the way that cigarettes are
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basically hacking a human to become a
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person who uses them, which is just an
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amazing business model for some rich guy
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and a terrible outcome for everyone
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else. But is this a good metaphor? Is
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the social internet cigarettes? And
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since I live so much of my life here and
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make so much of my content for people
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here, is it worse than that? Am I the
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cigarettes that are being sold by the
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rich guy? So, having this metaphor not
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just be like a thing in my notes app,
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but something that I spent a little bit
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of time with. I do think it's probably a
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dangerous metaphor. I think it's a
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simplifier. I like simplifiers, but you
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always have to ask what the
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simplification obscures. And in this
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case, I think a lot. I think it would be
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very easy and it would get a lot of
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views to have a video that's called like
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we don't use Tik Tok, Tik Tok uses us.
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And that is sometimes true and it might
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even result in positive outcomes to make
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a video like that because I think we
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should be thinking about this stuff
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more. But I think I've landed on a
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better metaphor that I'd like to share
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with you. But in the way of Vlog
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Brothers where nothing is simple and we
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have to imagine everything complexely,
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it takes a little bit of time I think to
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build the case. Well, so I'm sure that
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some people argue that cigarettes
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provide some utility to humans. And I
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assume almost all of those people make
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money selling cigarettes, but this is
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definitely BS. A world where nicotine
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had simply never evolved would be a
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better world with less suffering. But
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the thing that is like the core of the
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social internet isn't nicotine. It's not
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like an addictive chemical that provides
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no benefit except for making you
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addicted to it. The thing that is at the
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core here is information. It's content,
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for lack of a better term. And I love
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content. I love books and music and art
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and cat videos and video essays and
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podcasts about the history of the
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Supreme Court and dumb videos about
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baseball statistics even though I never
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watched baseball. So, cigarettes cannot
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be positive, but I think information
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obviously can be which is why this
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metaphor I think cannot lead us towards
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solutions. It isn't a good enough
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metaphor. And so, here's my different
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metaphor. Let's talk about food. Food
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definitely good. Definit like nobody
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wants a world without food. And for most
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of human history, the problem was not
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enough access to food. And honestly, I
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don't mean most of human history. I mean
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all of human history up until extremely
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recently, malnutrition has likely played
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a role in more human deaths than any
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single pathogen or weapon. Scarcity of
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calories has been the human story for
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basically the whole time. Like the whole
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time. The first American generation that
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for the most part did not have to worry
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about getting enough food is still
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alive. Up until the 1940s, food
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shortages were common. In the 1930s,
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they were extremely common. In the
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1880s, it was unimaginable that they
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wouldn't happen. So, we've moved from
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scarcity to like ultraabundance. At this
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point, we kind of have too much food.
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And now, we're in a society where
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companies compete to create the most
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delightful and engaging and inexpensive
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food possible, which it turns out is way
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better for you than malnutrition, but
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also creates other problems. If the
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calories are cheap and they're designed
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to hack your brain into not realizing
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you've consumed them, you will eat more
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food and it makes sense that companies
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would optimize for that. If you got a
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product on the grocery shelf and there's
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a product right next to it that tastes
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better and that people like more, that's
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a big problem for you. That's the
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competition happening on the grocery
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shelf. So, it makes sense that companies
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are optimizing for that. And it makes
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sense that I would have a hard time not
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eating more food than I need while
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simultaneously not actually getting all
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the fiber and vitamins and proteins I
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need because they're not optimizing for
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delivering everything I need to be a
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healthy person. They're optimizing for
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what I'm going to buy. I want a
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Nashville hot chicken all the time,
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every meal. But important, very
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important, a hot chicken sandwich isn't
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cigarettes because cigarettes are just a
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way to get nicotine into your body while
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a hot chicken sandwich is mostly food.
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Now, Coca-Cola, I probably shouldn't go
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on this digression, but I'm more on the
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fence about sugar waters. If the food is
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just 20 lollipops dissolved in bubbly
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water, that's calories, but it isn't
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really food. And perhaps I would prefer
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a world where we just had never thought
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of the idea of sugary drinks. And yes,
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that includes juices. Juice is soda.
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This is my biggest take. Juice is soda.
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My point is, there was a time, and it
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was a very long time, when we did not
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have enough food. And now we don't just
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have an abundance. We kind of have too
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much. And we have companies competing to
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make food that is both cheap and super
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tasty, hyper palatable they call it. The
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result is a lot of people with fairly
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unhealthy relationships with food and
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health problems that we've never had to
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deal with before. And the question has
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been, how do you solve this? And for a
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long time, we had the exact wrong idea.
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We thought that if you gave people
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information about how many calories were
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in Doritos, it would make them
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healthier. If they knew what they were
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doing, they would do it less. And this
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is wrong. Nutrition is complex and no
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one has any idea how many calories they
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need to eat or how many calories they
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eat. Keeping track of that and I've
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tried is like a full-on hobby. Like it
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has to be like your first or second
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priority after work. We know that we did
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this and we know that it hasn't worked.
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I don't think the solution is to deeply
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understand the chemical and caloric
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content of a Dorito. And I think that
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everyone who studies this would agree
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with me. I'm not saying anything
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revolutionary here. It turns out that
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the solution is mostly avoiding food
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that has been designed to be extremely
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tasty. Because when you don't do that,
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it's very hard to not overeat food. But
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unsurprisingly, this is difficult. And
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not just because Doritos and Pop-Tarts
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taste so good and cost so little. It's
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hard because having too much food is a
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very new problem. Like, we are not set
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up for it. We do not have cultural
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structures to deal with it. Also, and I
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know this is a hard thing to
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internalize, but we don't have as much
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agency as we would like to think. I
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really like the elephant writer metaphor
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where like our bodies are the elephant
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and our consciousness is the person like
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driving the elephant. We all have many
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situations where we've realized that we
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would like to go somewhere but the
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elephant doesn't want to go that way and
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it simply will not. We just can't in
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that moment stop ourselves from saying
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the mean thing, from making the bad
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decision, from finishing the burrito
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even though you are stuffed full of
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burrito. But luckily we're cultural and
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we build cultural tools when we have to.
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It just takes a long time. It takes a
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while for us to get good at worlds that
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are fundamentally differently shaped
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than the ones we used to live in. The
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way that we get better at things when
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things change isn't entirely clear, but
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it does seem to happen with food. Part
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of that is definitely going to be
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cultural change, like just having a vibe
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around ultrarocessed foods that feel
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kind of gross or a little cringe, like
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something that you would not allow in
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your home. I was raised on Pop-Tarts. I
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have not had a Pop-Tart in a long time.
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I've never stopped wanting Pop-Tarts,
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but I have not had one in a while. And
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with food, for people who are already
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deeply affected, we now have amazing
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pharmaceutical tools. From what I can
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see, GLP1 agonists are basically miracle
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drugs. Like, I know people will argue
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with me about that, but it is really
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great that we have these tools. But I
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think that the long-term solution will
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just be a turn away from foods that are
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engineered to hack our brains and like a
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feeling that I don't want to deal with
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them, like I don't want to give them
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that power over me, and a turn toward
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foods that are just better for you, that
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are more foodshaped, you know? Now,
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that's not easy. And again, I do think
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that this isn't just about like hyper
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palletability being engineered by
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chemists. I think there's lots of food
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that's very tasty that isn't
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ultrarocessed that also has this
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problem. It's just like too good. And
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we're humans. We're animals. It is hard
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to deal with this. But I think that the
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positive consequences of solving this
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problem are too large that we won't get
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there. And I hope that you have followed
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the metaphor here because I am now going
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to open it up for you. For the last
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millions of years of human ancestral
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existence, we didn't just live in a
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world of food scarcity. We lived in a
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world of information scarcity. You can
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make the case that the last generation
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that had to worry about too little
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information is still alive today and
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they are my parents. And now we live in
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a world of information abundance. Almost
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as if there's too much information. And
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definitely the people who package up
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information to sell it to you are
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competing with each other to make that
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information more hyper palatable. And in
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many cases the process that makes the
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information hyperpalatable also makes it
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worse for you. It makes it easy to only
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consume information that you like.
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Information that hacks your brain into
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consuming more of it. Information that
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doesn't contain the vitamins and the
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fiber and the protein that your brain
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needs to have a functional, useful model
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of the world that helps you thrive in
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your environment. There's lots of like
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empty calories which I think are mostly
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fine. Like I love myself a video of a
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guy getting hit in the nuts just after
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he got hit in the nuts. But there's also
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stuff that's definitely actively
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harmful. the trans fats and sugary
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beverages of the information world, the
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outrage bait, the conspiracy theories
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that alienate you from your communities.
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And just like with the nutrition labels
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situation, I think it's very easy to
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think the solution to this problem is,
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oh, we just need to educate people on
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what's good and bad and they'll make
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better decisions. And I think that's
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wrong. I think that it's a good part of
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it, but on its own, you will never get
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someone to fact check a fact that they
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agree with. Like the only time the red
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flag gets raised for the vast majority
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of people is when the information seems
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wrong. So when it seems right, why would
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someone check the fact? You can't check
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every fact that you come across on the
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internet, you come across 600 of them an
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hour. There's too much. And unlike food
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where like you make a Dorito and then
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you try and sell Doritos to everybody
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with the internet, we can design an
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individual personalized Dorito for every
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single person. And that Dorito can
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gather information about what they like
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and it can morph and change along with
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that person's interest to make sure that
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it's always hyper palatable specifically
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for that person. And as they fall down a
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misinformation rabbit hole, that Dorito
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can keep changing shape until it's worse
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and worse for you as long as it keeps
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you eating Doritos. This is wild. It's
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hard. This is very scary. But it's not
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cigarettes because the Dorito is still
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food. It's still information at the
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core. It isn't just an addictive
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compound. At the core, it is
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information. It is something that can be
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valuable or can be harmful. So, I would
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not prefer to just live in a world where
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it was never invented. I mean, there are
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days, but I bet during the Reformation
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there were lots of people who felt that
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way about books. This is hard and some
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of the smartest people in the world are
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employed designing Doritos that will be
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more and more appealing to you. But I
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also think that we as biological
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entities and cultural entities are just
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at the part of this where we suck at it.
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And I've actually seen signs that we
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could maybe be getting better, though
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it's hard to tell. But we've gone from
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millions of years of ancestral
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information scarcity, which by the way
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could definitely kill you back then, to
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the first era of information abundance.
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And a nice thing here is that we have a
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great metaphor in food. And what have we
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learned from food? Companies will do
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everything they can to make things that
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are very appealing, even addictive. We
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have less control than we imagine that
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we have. And giving your agency away a
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little bit can be fun and rewarding, but
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giving it away completely isn't just
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damaging to you and your ability to
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flourish is kind of cringe. Like nobody
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brags about the start of their second
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hour on TikTok. What worked with
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cigarettes and I think what is working
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some with food is shining a light on the
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people who want to manipulate us.
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There's this TV advertisement that was
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on in Florida when I was a kid where
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there's this guy dying in the hospital.
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Maybe I'll just play it for you. I'm
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going to describe it, but if I can find
00:11:37
it, I'll just play it for you. There's
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this guy dying in the hospital and
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there's these all these like suits
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around him like like professional
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businessmen around him and they're
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saying, "Oh no, like how are we going to
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replace this guy?" Like he was our
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greatest most loyal customer. And then
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the camera like pans to a young person
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in the hallway of the hospital. That to
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me is the best messaging. That's what we
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need. We need to understand that the
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people and the platforms and the foods
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that are very good at hacking your brain
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and taking away your agency and the
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creators and the leaders who alienate
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you from reality so that they can keep
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control over you that keep you scared of
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everything, angry at everything, feeling
00:12:14
superior to everyone. Those people are
00:12:16
the businessmen in that hospital room.
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And there are a lot of people, a lot of
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people who have ended up damaged by
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those people. and they will always
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always want more customers. And I do
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think that eventually we will see that
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stuff not just like junk food that's
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like Doritos are good sometimes, but as
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so manipulative and cringe and like
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imagining us as tools to be used. I
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think that we'll eventually see that. I
00:12:40
just think it's going to take a long
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time. John, the social internet isn't
00:12:43
cigarettes. It is food. And a lot of
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it's junk food. And a lot of it's worse
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than junk food. It isn't just Doritos.
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It's making us sick. But a lot of it is
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nutritious. We have to get better at
00:12:54
being able to identify which is which,
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but it's going to take a lot of time.
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And I do think there are ways to speed
00:12:58
that time up. Like I remember how
00:13:01
successfully we decreased smoking in
00:13:03
America. There are things we can do,
00:13:04
things we can shine a light on, but I
00:13:06
think that the stories have to be much
00:13:07
simpler than here's how you do fact
00:13:10
checks and have good information
00:13:11
literacy. It has to be a simple story of
00:13:13
people trying to manipulate us into
00:13:16
being their tools despite the fact that
00:13:18
it's going to make our lives worse.
00:13:19
That's what we have to think about.
00:13:21
simple stories. And this was not a good
00:13:23
video for simple stories. I'll say
00:13:25
that's not really my area of expertise
00:13:27
all the time. There's definitely a TLDDR
00:13:29
version of this video that's more
00:13:30
effective. And I leave that up to
00:13:32
everyone else. John, I'll see you on
00:13:34
Tuesday. Also, completely unrelated, the
00:13:36
Awesome Socks Club Warehouse has too
00:13:38
many socks in it right now. We always
00:13:39
buy a few extra and then we have too
00:13:41
many. And we solve this problem in a
00:13:42
bunch of different ways. One, we give
00:13:44
them away to charity. We've given away
00:13:45
over 50,000 socks. I mean, 100,000 if
00:13:47
you count both of them. But we also sell
00:13:48
them as mystery socks. If you could
00:13:50
choose the size, but you don't know the
00:13:52
cut or the design you're going to get,
00:13:54
and we'll send you a bunch of them. Your
00:13:55
feet need socks. You're going to have to
00:13:57
buy them anyway. You might as well buy
00:13:58
them from a place where all the profit
00:14:00
gets donated to charity. We're selling
00:14:01
these at a pretty substantial discount.
00:14:02
I was planning on uploading a different
00:14:04
video today, and the coupon code is look
00:14:06
at this graph, which would make sense if
00:14:08
it were that video, but John, then you
00:14:10
made me make this video basically. So,
00:14:12
instead, the coupon code is the same.
00:14:15
So, look at this graph. coupon code,
00:14:16
you'll save an extra $5 off the already
00:14:18
steeply discounted mystery socks.