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Amir Salihefendic
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Tom Bilyeu
Welcome back to part two of this incredible conversation. Without further ado, here we go. What do you think the Unabomber got right in his manifesto that teaches us something about how we should engage with
Amir Salihefendic
AI So maybe some background. Unabomber manifesto was. Was written by. By this guy who's actually a mathematic mathematician. His name is Ted Kaczynski. And for all intents and purposes, like, he's obviously did really bad stuff, we should say that did terrorism. But he wrote this manifesto that I think is worth reading, and it is a reflection and introspection on technology and its role in human society. It's called the Industrial Revolution and its consequences. And it starts with the Industrial Revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. One of the strongest opening sentences you can find in any book or piece of writing. He talks about how technology can rob us from this natural thing to us that he calls the power process. So he says humans are. Are, are made, are built, evolved, whatever you. You think of to. To have certain life phases and certain challenges to be able to overcome them. So you start as a child, you learn how to walk. You know, you crawl around, you learn how to walk, and you learn how to eat and do all the basic stuff. And then, you know, as a hunter gatherer, say, ancestral humans, they would learn how to hunt, and they'll do well in hunting. They'll have enough resources to be able to go get married and get a hut or whatever they used to live in. Get a hut. The cost of hurts. These Days down payment on a hut. Got my slab of meat for down payments. And then you have children, and then they have children, you age out and you become the wise grandfather and then you pass away. And he says that that's so essential to us, is his view. And technology increasingly is making our lives so easy to that society becomes pathological in many ways. And he calls that depression. He calls actually social activism, you might call it woke today as he actually has an entire section on social activism being a symptom of people just not having to struggle and having to.
Tom Bilyeu
They are looking for a surrogate for meaning and purpose.
Amir Salihefendic
They're looking for a surrogate meaning and purpose or they're taking out some kind of rage against society that because of that lack of meaning, of purpose. And his view is that these technologies have become a replacement for the power process and that's causing humanity overall to be just net unhappy, worse off because of technology. Now, I obviously don't agree with the conclusion of that, but it's important to.
Tom Bilyeu
When you say you don't agree with the conclusion, you don't agree that it's actually depressing us.
Amir Salihefendic
I don't agree that it's inevitably true that technology makes us worse, unhappy. I think there are forms of technology that makes us worse, unhappy and all of that. But it's like any, any tool, any powerful tool, it can have negative consequences and positive consequences. And society needs to adapt to that and come up with either like regulations, religions to regulate these things or, or just like social antibodies. You know, for example, I'm a big fan of quest the snacks you made. There was a time when it was, you know, kind of acceptable to be eating junk all the time, to be eating Twinkies and all of that. But at some point, especially in the U.S. i think start in the U.S. where there's. There was a feeling that no, we're getting unhealthy, we're getting unhappy, we're not looking attractive, and there's a movement around let's find replacements, let's eat whole foods, let's eat. And society developed ways in which to get the best of both worlds, to have really tasty good food, but at the same time not feeling like crap and unhappy all the time. And so I think without that regulatory force, and I don't mean that strictly in a government sense because I can government regulation can come with all sorts of negative consequences, but it could come from kind of society overall, then you can overcome these things. But I think free markets and capitalism sort of running amok without Any social reaction and regulation of that, we could end up in a place where technology is actually really harmful.
Tom Bilyeu
Okay, so we know that some technology creates a problem. Do you put AI in the camp of technology that creates that problem?
Amir Salihefendic
I think AI could create tremendous problem, could create tremendous solutions. I think the more powerful something is, the more has potential to do both.
Tom Bilyeu
Okay, so I'll put my thesis forward, which is that is maybe one word different than what you said, which is AI is going to create tremendous solutions and tremendous problems. And so for me, I look at this and it's been such a huge boon in my own life. There are things that I'm able to do with our video game development that just wouldn't be possible if we didn't have AI just becomes too expensive too fast. So huge win. I use it in my own life constantly. Its ability to help me educate myself is unparalleled ever. It's just absolutely incredible. When I look at the societal impacts though, I immediately am like, oh like this is really going to be a problem. And I'll sort of rank order. I think the you've got at the very top, you've got the ultimate panopticon where AI is just going to watch, see and do everything. And it becomes a tool for elites to gain control over the masses. I know you know about James Burnham, so definitely want to get into that, but just as a marker for now. So worry about that then certainly worry about an interim period where humans will like if I look at Gen Z for sure, probably even younger millennials, they just don't try because the K shaped economy has brutalized them their whole life. And then we've told them, hey, don't worry, in five to ten years AI is going to be better than you at everything. And there's just a why bother mentality. And then obviously you can go into all the different layers, sex bots, all that kind of crazy stuff. But it's like, okay, well I know humans are bad at the self regulating that you're talking about and I know governments are bad at the top down regulation. So now I'm like, oh, we have this thing that will be the ultimate tool of the elites to control people and then the other stuff that it can do requires a lot of self regulation. And so how do you think through or if you don't agree with that problem? Yeah, definitely, let me know. But if you do agree, like how do you deal with it?
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah, I agree and I will say yes, government is not always successful at regulation. But there are some Things that I think were positive kind of partnership between society, culture, you know, and, and government, in some cases religion. Like smoking. I think it's been really successful in the US like when I came first here, like, not only was. Not only was hard to smoke because it's like everywhere, it's kind of banned indoors. It was socially, at least in my social circles, socially looked down upon to be a smoker. And I was smoking at the time when I first came from Jordan, and I felt kind of like a social outcast a little bit. I felt kind of weird, like, why am I smoking? Like, are they better than me? And that's the kind of feeling you want to. Want to create for something that's like truly, truly harmful, but do.
Tom Bilyeu
So this is where it gets complicated with AI. So in the video game industry where I'm at, video gamers absolutely despise AI and they have that energy of like, what are you doing? Why are you using that? I'm not even going to play your game. If you used AI even for like the tiniest background object, like, nope, you're dead to me.
Amir Salihefendic
But what are they reacting to? Like, are they reacting to actual social harm or are they reacting to sense of anxiety or job reflection?
Tom Bilyeu
I'm trying to get to this as a category question. So what I hear you saying is we need to make things that are dangerous feel like we did cigarettes.
Amir Salihefendic
The other way I'm saying it is, I generally am optimistic about humans to. Although some things could be very harmful in the short term. Just generally people and I think healthy societies and, and you could argue whether we have healthy societies or not, given all the social unrest in the world. But healthy societies tend to develop antibodies over time. Now that doesn't mean you shouldn't worry about that, but there's just a general kind of flag that I'm planning to say. I'm generally optimistic about humans.
Tom Bilyeu
Figure it out.
Amir Salihefendic
Humans figuring it out. That being said, we can discuss all the, all the, all the details and that. So yeah, definitely there are reactions to AI that are totally irrational. And that happens too. Like the idea that you can't use AI to make video games is just when you talk to anyone. And I've tried to have conversations there. It's just there's no real argument there. At best you can get to the argument of artists. This is actually plagiarizing artists work and whatever, you can have a discussion around that, but for the most part it's just a total emotional reaction. Um, but, but I think some of the things that we need to truly worry about right now is like just the general information landscape is absolutely horrific right now. Like you can't tell what's real and what's not real. Like any major news event, there's all these AI videos that are happening around it and it, and it, it just leads people to this nihilistic view of like I just can't. Everything is propaganda. And, and our, our kind of media establishment in the US hasn't really helped a whole lot, especially during the COVID years and after that and just the trust in media has went down a lot. So even that as an institution that you could probably maybe rely on at some point is no longer the case. Social media replace it and now social media is just like full and sort of full of these fake videos and you can't make heads foam tales taking
Tom Bilyeu
a short break but there's more impact theory after Stay tuned if you work
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Tom Bilyeu
Thanks for staying tuned. Now let's get back to it. Okay, so this is a good point to go back to James Burnham. So Covid happens completely reorganizes my sense of what the world is and how it works. Like my life really can be just a line drawn as like my frame of reference before COVID my frame of reference after. Yes, reading James Burnham gave me the language with which to explain what I had been through and I suddenly realized, oh my God, my whole life the narrative has been controlled. I just didn't realize it. So I mistook consensus around projected narrative for actual represented truth and Covid made me realize, oh no, no, no. It was never simply representing the truth, it was always just narrative Control. Now, social media made it impossible for them to have uniformity of narrative. And I was like, whoa, that was such a terrifying paradigm shift. And Burnham has this idea that you'll well know called the iron Law of oligarchy. So there will always be a small group of people that run the world, like, quite literally. And it doesn't matter how you fragment it. Whether it's in a company, there's going to be a small group of executives that run the company, whether it's a state government, small group that run that, whether it's a household, there's going to be. You know, even when you got the parents and the kids, it's like, well, the parents are going to run things. Or I suppose you could have something really wacky and the kids are running the show, but there's always going to be a small group that actually leads. Now, one of Ted Kaczynski's ideas that I thought was really, really interesting is that what he said was the system itself, as technology advances, will have to crack down on the people's behavior more and more to stay in control. And so with AI, you're creating the ultimate tool because it can see everything, synthesize, everything can be everywhere all at once. I mean, you know, you look at what is. What's the Peter Thiel Company. Oh, God. Palantir. Thank you. So you look at some of the stuff they're able to do from a surveillance perspective, and now you've got. AI itself creates the very tool when it gets in the hands of the elites who know they must control the narrative, control behavior in order to control, in order to keep the system alive. And so now it's like, oh, the thing that Kaczynski. He wouldn't have predicted AI in the form that it's in now.
Amir Salihefendic
Right.
Tom Bilyeu
But he understood the coming problem.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah, yeah. I mean, I think a lot of these early literature were kind of circling around the same thing. There's this another thinker called Nickland, which is also Nickland. Niklan Pretty. Never heard of this wild, very impenetrable type of thinking, but in writing. But one idea that he. He talks about is capitalism is the boot desk for AI. So it was always going to head to AI Interesting. Like. And he goes a little wackier than that and says, it's almost like you could think of AI as reaching back into the past and building itself through. Through free markets and capitalism. It's almost like this thing has always somehow existing in some form, and it's getting built. And the ultimate conclusion Is as AI, But I digress. But the point is it was always headed in this direction, this systems that we're building. That being said, in the same way that technology has good uses and bad uses, technology can be centralizing and decentralizing. There's an author, his name is Tim Wu, and he wrote the book the Master Switch. And he talks about this oscillation between centralization and decentralization of technology. He brings up, for example, radio, one of the early technologies he talks about, ham radio. It was such a decentralizing technology because people used to like, you know, have these radios at home. They would talk to each other, they would like, they can broadcast anything. Obviously at some point the government stepped in, kind of regulated the radio, radio bands. And he says, like early Internet was also a very decentralized, decentralizing technology. There wasn't really this, you know, Facebooks of the world. It was like social networks that was peer to peer and everyone's computer was treated the same. There wasn't like client server. Everything is a client and a server. But at some point we had it in a way that is like centralizing. But his argument is like, it'll keep oscillating. We'll invent something that's like more decentralizing. And then later on it centralizes. We'll invent another thing that's decentralizing. You can think of crypto as like a decentralizing of the, potentially of the Internet. Now AI, I will make the point that it's both centralizing and decentralizing at the same time. So of course AI can be used to do mass surveillance, to do, to have these like big, you know, machines that kind of can ingest all the data about us and use facial recognition. And you can think of it as the ultimate like, you know, dream of the Chinese Communist Party, right? Is to see everything and know everything about everyone and control everything. But there's something also decentralizing about AI. Now think about entrepreneurship. Like I think we're going through a, a boom in entrepreneurship. Like there's like none in history. Like what you said about, you know, your game studio, there's a lot of people that are able to build games right now that couldn't before. In, in our business, we see we built a platform that allows people to build software. And so we see individuals that are making millions of dollars that otherwise would have required to have raised a lot of capital and be in Silicon Valley and employ a lot of people. So we see a lot of these micro entrepreneurship now coming on the scene A lot of people are leaving their jobs, jobs they hate, jobs they're miserable in and starting businesses that they're really passionate about and areas they really care about. So I think there's a sense in which there's going to be a lot more, a lot more companies. And I think that's a really good thing. That's a decentralizing thing that decentralizes power. I also think that, you know, we talked about the information landscape. Now I think, I think GROK on AX has been for the most part positive tool for, for people to like judge whether something is real or not. Like you see as like at grok, is this real or not? And most of the time the answers are really good and it's giving them different perspectives and it's helping people judge the different things. I actually don't think that the ultimate personal information assistant has been built yet. Like what I'd want to see someone build is me going into some kind of AI system and putting some kind of statement like Covid was lap leaked. And then I want to see agents from every model, every company, from every country in the world argue about it and I want to see it spread and argued in every different perspective with different prompting and things like that. And then like find a summary of like all the different views and maybe even at some point putting in probability probabilities about like here's what we think the probability of that happened or this happened or this. So I think AI can actually create a potential information landscape that gives power to people to judge things and not have to rely on cnn. I do agree with you. New York Times, cnn, whatever. There always been tools of the oligarchy to control opinion. I think it's, it's more brazen right now. I think there's like, there was a sense of journalistic integrity at some point, but, but, but, but, but I think ultimately AI can be an empowering tool for the, for the masses to deal with this. Even on the issue of centralized sort of government, 1984esque AI, you can imagine a world in which people are helped by their personal AIs to overcome the AI surveillance.
Tom Bilyeu
I don't know that I can.
Amir Salihefendic
Why not?
Tom Bilyeu
Okay, so the thing that I think we have to contend directly with is if it is true that for the system to survive, the system must control your behavior. That AI gives them myriad ways now to nudge your behavior in certain directions, that even if you have your own individual AI, the system is going to find ways to continue to close lanes down, close Lanes down. Close lanes down. So even think about right now, this is my prognostication. I think in the next two years, you're going to find out that the fraud that we're seeing in Minnesota is pervasive. It's everywhere. And show me the incentives, I'll show you the outcome. And so we have a welfare state, and therefore welfare is going to be taken advantage of. You have an open border. People are like, oh, wow, okay, cool to get that especially. And I know this is now going deep into conspiracy land, but if also there are ways for them to vote. It's like you get the incentive structure where it's like, hey, the tit for tat is you come in, you get some free stuff, and then I can basically count on your vote because I'm the person that makes the free stuff available. So now we're going to see, like, fraud just ever present. So what does the government do to crack down? The government's like, oh, I have a deficit, so now I'm going to go tax the wealthy people. The problem is the wealthy people can leave, but that doesn't stop them from ever tightening the grip. And now you can imagine if you take tax as but one example of how the system responds by increasingly getting more aggressive, what happens when you can't leave? And so if, for instance, one thing California's tried to do is even if you leave, we can still tax you years after you've left, which is pure insanity from where I'm sitting. But it's like, if the system is able to get that kind of legislation passed, and we know it's possible because countries all throughout history have done that where the walls are to keep people in. So the system has historically done it very successfully. The system has every incentive to survive, and now we're giving it, like, the people at the top are going to have the access to most power, most money, because they can tax technology. They can legislate their own control, all of that. And then they can, if they see that the individual is doing something they don't want them to do, as we saw with censorship, they'll just shut it down. So they'll come up with a reason. It will be cloaked as safety, as to why you can't have the AI yourself or you can't have one that's that powerful or whatever. And again, they'll pitch it as safety, but they'll still follow the same playbook of more control. More control.
Amir Salihefendic
More control. Yeah, like a comment in agreement with that. There's like another book that's Burnham esque. It's called the Sovereign Individual. I don't know if you've read that. It's a fantastic book. It predicted bitcoin. It depicted, I read like the first chapter or something so I know it's really great. It talks about that we have that modern welfare states are, you can think of them as companies for the employee. They're not in service of the customer, they're in service of the employee. The employee being the politicians, the deep state employees. And ultimately everything that they do is to empower themselves. And they actually prefer an underclass. They prefer an underclass and they prefer the rich elite and they prefer to create the chasm between them because the underclass they can rely on their vote because they're voting money for themselves. And then there's like a source of capital and wealth from these productive individuals that they can always funnel through.
Tom Bilyeu
That is terrifying.
Amir Salihefendic
It is terrifying. Now, now sort of the flip side to that, you know, I think, I do think I do believe just like a fundamental belief in the self correcting nature of humanity. And also America like I think America has a few innovations on how we organize society that are quite novel and quite powerful. Free speech is, is one of them. Could argue the second amendment is also another one of them. But you know the country was founded on the basis of revolt against taxation. So I, it's hard for me to imagine that we're going to live in the world of this, you know, top down, you know, taxation, suffocation, sort of control without, without there there be a sort of a reaction to that. And by the way the elite is also made of the wealthy. Like if you go to D.C. right now, I mean D.C. is you know, run by billionaires. I don't mean this as a bad thing. Like I think it was really great that a bunch of like tech, tech guys like went to DC and like are able to contribute and hold position, positions of power. So it's not entirely clear to me that, that you know that it's headed that way in a locked in fashion. There's still, there's still some democracy. I mean the thing that is strange about California and the thing that I think the early founders of America didn't want is this idea of like majority majoritarian rule. The idea like you get 51 vote, you can vote your the money out of the 49. They intuited and that's why America is a republic and not a direct democracy. They intuited that that's a, that's a, that's a way to, to take any minority and be able to, to, to target them. And so maybe there's something about how California is structured that is kind of hopeless. But, but, but, but, but America has different states. Like you know, Texas and Florida, they're trying to bring the tech, tech guys there. They're, they're actively promoting and, and soliciting and saying, you know, come here. Well, I'm not gonna. So there's also competition, there's also competition internationally with China. Like once people see that China is, is rising. By the way, China's free market system is more robust than America's at this point. Talking about welfare, there's no welfare there. There's not a welfare state. The way they do communism is by controlling the capitalist economy. The way they distribute wealth is by making sure that company, there's so many companies, there's so much competitions, margins are near zero. So you have the like, if they think that electric vehicles are important, they're going to say, okay, we're going to just seed every company that's going to make electric vehicles. And there's like a lot of zombie EV companies in, in China. There's probably a lot of fraud and all of that. But also there's, there's tons of like really competitive Chinese electric vehicles. I don't know if you've ever seen one, but they caught up to Tesla in some cases. Better.
Tom Bilyeu
Yeah. From a sales perspective, they're crushing Tesla internationally.
Amir Salihefendic
Internationally they are. And so when the American public is educated on the fact that if we're going to treat our most productive element of society that way and they're going to flee and we're not going to be productive because we don't have a true free market, we're going to be losing China, we're going to get poorer. And so I think the public will understand that, will understand that there's going to be a reaction.
Tom Bilyeu
Interesting. We're hitting pause for a moment, but there's plenty more ahead so don't go anywhere. Thanks for sticking around. Let's get right back into the action. Okay, so I'm starting to map where we align and where we disagree. So you have a fundamental belief that there's a self correcting mechanism to humans in general, that we see a bad thing and over time we fix it and that America is even better than that, better at that than sort of the average. Okay, fair enough. I have a different base assumption that my beliefs are built on top of and they are that because intelligence is unevenly distributed and interest is wildly unevenly distributed. That you have a double force that pushes people into either being aware of how they're being manipulated and controlled and can do something about it, or they don't have the time or the intellectual capacity to do it. And that bifurcation will always give the elites the ability to have a massive amount of control because you just go after the people that don't have the time or the cognitive bandwidth to deal with it.
Amir Salihefendic
I think intelligence is overrated.
Tom Bilyeu
Okay, now, now we're in violent disagreement. Okay, make me a believer.
Amir Salihefendic
I think that, and, and you know, as someone who, who grew up and everyone around me it was like, oh, this is smartest kid. You know, they, you know, I could skip classes, I could hack into school, I could do everything. Like being smart is a core to my identity. That's why I'm here. And so it's not like I don't believe in intelligence or, or I'm anti intelligence intellectual. But over time I've come to realize that being smart there's a, like, there's wild diminishing return to it. Do you know the midwit meme, right? I mean society. So the elites that Burnham talks about, what Mark Andre calls the laptop class, right, they're kind of the midwits. They're not the 150 IQ, they're the 110 IQ. Those are the people running society. And so you know, if the idea that intelligence is the most important thing would be run be by the Einsteins of the world, but we were never run by the Einstein of the world. The period in America that we had a little more technocratic government around World War II and there were like really intelligent people that rose to the top. And Richard Feynman von Neumann. This era is really exciting, but that's like a fluke in, in human history. I think most of the time it is not pure intelligence that is that, that, that rise to the top and ends up sort of controlling things. Think of, think of Dilbert's cartoons. You know, Scott Adams just, just, just passed away. I, you know, I grew up reading these cartoons and, and I'm like man, I just don't want a pointy hair boss. And I think it really had an impact on me as like an entrepreneur, as like part of the entrepreneurial drive is like. And I did go to the job market and I, my first, first few jobs I had pointy haired bosses and they were not very smart. I was way smarter than them. But they were very good at the social game. They were, they had different skills. I think humans are a lot more diverse than we, we think about. It is not just like IQ is like a single value. It is more like a, you know, if, if you really want to measure human performance, you need to measure a lot of other things. Charisma, social skills, spiritual understanding, being, being having senses about the world to understand where the world is headed. Like that's something I pride myself on. And I don't think, you know, I'm like, you know, like I, I grew up with a lot of kids that were a lot more book smart than me. Like they would, and I'm sure you did too. Like they, they would get better grades and, and all of that. But one thing I always had like a, a good talent for is knowing where the world is headed technology wise. So I could like sit down, like I kind of think and try to predict where things are headed. And I don't think that's like a pure intelligence thing. Maybe it's, I don't know what it is. I would not go too woo woo. But over time I've, I've kind of my, my view of human talent have sort of evolved beyond, beyond just, just intelligence. And so I think there's a lot of regular everyday people that have a sense for how they're getting oppressed, how they're getting screwed and mean, the whole MAGA thing, the whole Trump revolution is because everyday people that you might not think of as the, the ultimate intelligence just realize they're getting screwed. They should like figured out that there's a sense in which there's like a deep injustice in, in, in America and how, how certain people are, are, are getting treated. How we're like outsourcing all the manufacturing. Some people are getting rich and others, and they may not have, not all of them. Obviously a lot of, lot of people in that camp are very smart, but a lot of people might not have that like, you know, vocabulary or like exact way to kind of articulate in an intellectual way. But people are smart and I think they tend to sense where things are at and, and when they're getting screwed by certain people.
Tom Bilyeu
Okay, whatever word you would call that agency, I shorthand it to intelligence. But whatever that is that makes people able to navigate the world. Well, do we agree that it's unevenly distributed.
Amir Salihefendic
Broadly? Yes.
Tom Bilyeu
It's interesting. There's something here that I think people spike.
Amir Salihefendic
I think people spike on different things. I think people who spike really high on intelligence, they tend to lack certain awareness of the world in different ways.
Tom Bilyeu
I'll Completely let go of the word intelligence. Intelligence is me groping for something.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah.
Tom Bilyeu
I'll give you an example. So I used to hire people regardless of felony convictions. And it was an incredible journey. This was back at Quest. So this is a lot of, like, laborers, manufacturers. And so we had people lit, literally line up around the building just to be interviewed.
Amir Salihefendic
Fantastic.
Tom Bilyeu
Because it was. I'm getting a shot here. No one's ever given me. And I'll get all this praise, like, oh, my God, I can't believe you did that. Like, just incredible, incredible people came out of that period. But also out of that period came my belief that only 2% of adults will ever change. And so wherever the vast majority of humans are, when you meet them, they will be a year later, two years later, five years later, 10 years later. And that means 98%. This is obviously rough, but 98% of people, they're baked once the. Once they're, I don't know, 17, 18, somewhere in there, they are forever, that person. And if something broke or wasn't there to begin with, it will be that way forever for the rest of their lives. And I put an ungodly amount of time and attention into trying to help those people, like, free themselves. Long before there were cameras or anything. I was just doing it because my natural bent is that I change so much. Let me help other people change. Because it had such a radical impact on my life and I just found. No, it just isn't. So whatever that thing is, don't you
Amir Salihefendic
think that change needs to be personal, needs to be self driven? Like, maybe your, your experience trying to change people is the problem.
Tom Bilyeu
Do you think we're automata or is free will real?
Amir Salihefendic
I think free will is real.
Tom Bilyeu
Okay, so now we have found where we disagree.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah.
Tom Bilyeu
Do you believe that there is a spirit that is not attached to the body?
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah, I go back and forth on this a lot. I just don't think that. I just don't think that you can explain consciousness in entirely physical ways.
Tom Bilyeu
Like, you don't think intelligence really matters? I don't think that question really matters. I can't understand people's obsession with that. And I perfectly accept. Maybe I'm just too dumb.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah.
Tom Bilyeu
But like, when I hear the hard problem with consciousness, I'm just like, what?
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah, it is hard. Like, you need to figure out what's special about humans. Consciousness is clearly a special thing. And I mean, there's a.
Tom Bilyeu
Sorry, I. I'm going to challenge your, your total foundational premise. Yeah. Why do you need to understand consciousness to. To what? Navigate the world? Well, help you?
Amir Salihefendic
I just mean as. As. As. So you asked a question about free will, and if we're getting to bedrock philosophy, I just don't think you can brush away the question of unconsciousness. And the question of consciousness brings in spirit and other things.
Tom Bilyeu
Can I try to brush it away? And then you tell me if I. And trust me, I want to improve. So if you see something that I'm missing, I'm desperate to see it as well. Let's say, just for sake of argument, that humans are an antenna for consciousness, that it does not reside in the body and that people that believe that are 100% right. That does not change the way that I have to interface with being a receiver of consciousness. So, for instance, if you hit me in the head, it will disrupt my ability to receive that signal. If you give me traumatic brain injury, it will disrupt my ability to receive that signal. If my genetics are trash, it will disrupt my ability. If I intake toxins, it will disrupt my ability to. On and on and on. So knowing that I am a receiver of an exterior thing to the interior is fascinating. And I would be like, whoa, that's crazy. But it wouldn't change anything about the physics of how I live my life. It would just be a. Oh, that's interesting. It's different than I thought it was. But it does not suddenly unlock an ability simply because I know that it's coming from the outside.
Amir Salihefendic
Right.
Tom Bilyeu
So my thing is, like, it doesn't matter, I think, experientially to whether God exists or not. It doesn't matter if rocks are conscious. Consciousness is fundamental. None of that matters. Whatever it is that drives it, it feels like this.
Amir Salihefendic
So there are a lot of downstream implications of thinking that humans are full automaton. Input, output, their function of their environment, for example. You would have a totally different justice system. Right? Like, I wouldn't. Why not? Because like you, you would. You would assume that no one is doing anything out of. Like, no one has true agency in a world of automatons. And so.
Tom Bilyeu
So I look at it from the perspective of I'm programming a video game and I have an outcome that I'm trying to get to. And let's say that's a society that can cohere but never becomes calcified or static. So I need momentum, I need change. I need it to move forward. Whether it's AI reaching into the past and configuring us to be that way, or God did it, or evolution did it. But that is what we have. So the reason that humans are the most dominant species the world has ever seen is because we can cooperate for flexibly in these really large groups, people tend to calcify over time. And so evolution figured out, well, we can't let these guys be like jellyfish. So we're going to kill them off because their particular abilities are going to ride on the back of culture. But once they learn what works, they're going to harden it and they're going to become deeply efficient. And the way that I stop the world from becoming so efficient that it stops is I'll kill them off. I'll give them like, you know, whatever, 35 to 85 years, depending on when you were born. And then we get the renewal of. I think it was Max Planck that said science does not advance one insight at a time. It advances one funeral at a time because the context changes. And so the people that believe the old thing, they just die off and then the new idea just becomes self evident because the context has changed. And great. So now I'm like, okay, if, if I'm programming this and I just need to set up the variable such that it is that way. For instance, I want to see people be given a chance to change. But I also believe that people are automata. But because of the way that I'm wired, for whatever weird reason and the things that I've encountered in my life, it makes me feel a way I don't want to feel if we just write somebody off and say they're resigned to the dustbin of history.
Amir Salihefendic
So why not though? Because.
Tom Bilyeu
Because we live in a biological reality. I cannot escape my biology. I am wired.
Amir Salihefendic
You think maybe there's something true in your wiring.
Tom Bilyeu
What do you mean by true?
Amir Salihefendic
There's something true that you don't. Maybe you don't actually believe that people are automatons.
Tom Bilyeu
I believe it to the core of my existence. So I believe that Phineas Gage is the most. Have you read the book Determined by the Stanford professor's name? I'm currently blanking on he. Literally all the way down to quantum collapse and tubules and all that. He just debunks one after another. Any room for free will.
Amir Salihefendic
Have you read the Blank Slate by.
Tom Bilyeu
I'm so familiar with the concept, I can't tell you if I read the book. I don't remember.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah, Steven Pinker. Pinker, yes, but I know it intimately. He talks about the. And I'm not saying that's the argument you're making. He makes. He Talks about a lot of what happened like last century in terms of human destruction and tragedy is intellectually at heart is about this idea of humans as robots, as blank slates. Like we can program them. They grew up in a certain way. If you feed them the right inputs, they're going to be a certain way and then there's going to be like
Tom Bilyeu
do you think that's true or false?
Amir Salihefendic
That's false.
Tom Bilyeu
Yeah, agreed.
Amir Salihefendic
That's false. Yeah. So, but, but, but you. Why do you think it's false? Like if you think it's automaton, like presumably there's certain inputs that we can, we can give people to like act in a certain way. You think they're non changeable at 17, 18.
Tom Bilyeu
Think about it like to use computer language. If you don't have the ability to access that API. The API can be telling you to do something all day. If you're not designed to do it, you're not going to do it. That's why I say be attracted to a porcupine. You can't, you cannot force yourself to be attracted to a porcupine.
Amir Salihefendic
I'm sure someone on 4chan is.
Tom Bilyeu
Well, so here's the, here's the weird thing about human psychology is all for boys anyway. All sexual fetishes are developed around the age of 14. Super weird. And so guys have developed fetishes for like they have to have bugs crawling on their legs because the first time they masturbated that a bug in like whatever like. And so okay, that, that was a weird way for whatever programmed us to be like okay, well whatever that thing you're into, I guess that's the thing the culture's into. So cool you're now into that thing. You're into women with big boobs. Nope, this time now it's girls with big asses. Whatever. But like, so there is an amount of like adaptability that we have.
Amir Salihefendic
But there's a fixed range.
Tom Bilyeu
Correct. And so it's like you're not going to be able to find yourself like step stepping outside of that because we only have so much latitude now I'm going to guess some people have more latitude than others. And it comes down to genetics and all that. So people need to understand. What I'm trying to say anyway is that we're incredibly complicated automata. But I would put forth, without spending the entire episode on this, I would put forth that we are programmed by God, evolution, nature, whatever. But we're programmed so we're within these finite bounds. And because we're within These finite bounds and everybody is different. That that is why there is the iron law of oligarchy is that I think about this a lot when I think about money. So I originally got into politics, world affairs and all that during COVID because of my employees back at Quest. And I was like, a lot of these guys don't know how to manage their finances. I didn't understand money printing, so I didn't realize they were about to get bailed out. So I was like, oh, we're all about to get hit by a meteorite. They're all going to lose their jobs, they're toast. Let me do content about saving money and you know, budgeting well so they can get through what I thought was going to be maybe six months and then I would help them get on the other side. You get into it, you start asking what is money? And it unravels everything. You end up at James Burnham, the elites and all that. And I was like, whoa. So I realized, okay, the world's not what I thought, but economics, a very complicated system. Very complicated, but you can sort of get it.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah.
Tom Bilyeu
And so when I try to explain to people inflation, for instance.
Amir Salihefendic
Right.
Tom Bilyeu
Only to then watch them vote for things that are inflationary, which hurt them. I'm just like, what's happening right now?
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah.
Tom Bilyeu
So what do I do with that? And the reality is we've had this.
Amir Salihefendic
Can you vote against inflation? I feel like, I feel like every. I mean Trump and Biden are as inflationary as. As the other like.
Tom Bilyeu
Correct.
Amir Salihefendic
Do we have a non. Inflammation inflation? It is inflammation.
Tom Bilyeu
I was going to say it is inflammation. Very good for it.
Amir Salihefendic
Anyways, that digression.
Tom Bilyeu
We don't have choices for president. But yes, in 1913 we passed a law that made it possible to have a central bank. When we founded the country, they fought tooth and nail not to have a central bank. They said we need the debt to get the country kicked off, but we're going to give it like a 19 year time horizon. And at the end of the 19 years, they closed it.
Amir Salihefendic
Right.
Tom Bilyeu
So we made a decision in 1913 to allow ourselves to be pillaged.
Amir Salihefendic
Yes. I don't know if people made a decision. The oligarchs definitely did.
Tom Bilyeu
Yes.
Amir Salihefendic
Yes.
Tom Bilyeu
Therein lies my problem.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah.
Tom Bilyeu
So if people understood it.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah.
Tom Bilyeu
They either would have voted differently or they would own assets because they would actually understand what's happening. You can escape inflation by owning assets, but you can't vote for inflationary things and not own assets. You are voting for your own poverty and so it's wild. So now I'm like, how do I. How do I deal with that if people aren't. Either they don't have time or they don't have the. I round it to intelligence. But I get that it is a very complex thing. What is it? How is it that people allow themselves to be abused?
Amir Salihefendic
I'm not in disagreement that there are certain things that people are unaware of because of the. Because maybe they're too complicated or they're made complicated. Like economics was made. Was intentionally made complicated. Complicated, like Keynesian economics is the ultimate lie. Like the. You know, they just complicated economics a lot. Like, if you read Austrian economics and if you understand, like, things like the gold standard or things like potential Bitcoin standard, it's a very simple system. But to understand Keynesian, you know, inflationary economics is. Is impenetrable. And it's, I think, by design made to be impenetrable so that we can't. So I wouldn't fault people for not understanding it, because, I mean, it took you. You're. You're like, what, in your 30s when you understood it? I wish. Yeah, my 40s. 40s.
Tom Bilyeu
And I'm still. I feel like I'm just beginning to understand it. But that, that's my point, is that you can make it so complicated that a certain number of people will understand and then other people won't. And again, I always throw in that maybe they just don't have time, they don't have the interest.
Amir Salihefendic
At some point, they'll intuit it. And this is. This is, I think back to this idea of where I think it's not just intelligence. They'll intuit that they're getting screwed. They'll know it, they'll feel it, that they're getting screwed. And that causes revolution.
Tom Bilyeu
Yes, but they fight for the wrong thing. The revolutionaries often make things infinitely worse.
Amir Salihefendic
Not always.
Tom Bilyeu
Not always.
Amir Salihefendic
Yeah, but some revolutions are good.
Tom Bilyeu
Lenin. Those are all continued.
Amir Salihefendic
All of these are.
Tom Bilyeu
Yeah, but they were revolutions. They were people who were like these kids, we're going to do this the right way. And then Mao went and starved 45 million of his own people to death, Right. And then put them through the Cultural Revolution where he killed millions more. Lenin and Stalin collectively. Jesus. If you include what they did in Stalingrad In World War II, it is terrifying. But even just the people they starved to death or threw in the Gulag, I mean, it's just tens of millions of people.
Amir Salihefendic
So that, yeah, that was started by a small group of intellectuals, the Bolsheviks yes, that's the entire thing.
Tom Bilyeu
Their whole message was, you're being abused by the rich and the powerful. Take your power back. But that's not what happens.
Amir Salihefendic
You could certainly play on people's passions and you can create popular movements that end up even enriching and empowering a small, a smaller group of people. So overall, just to synthesize all of this, I don't think we're in that big of a disagreement. I agree that people don't always have the time, talent, you know, just capacity to understand the more complex things because the system has been built up to be somewhat impenetrable and to be this, like, mountain of lies. I would argue it's not all intelligence, because the most intelligent people that graduate Harvard and go to work in consulting firms and newspapers and all of that, they're very intelligent, but they're lied to as much as, as the average individual. Like, I do believe in the. I do believe in the Bell curve. Like, I think it's, it's a meme. Yes. But I actually kind of believe it. Like there are, there are real intuitions that, that, that everyday people have that, that are true. They arrive at them not in a purely intellectual manner. And you can call that intuition, you can call that spirit, you could call that whatever it is. There's something about the world where people kind of figure out that there's something wrong now that could be going in the right direction. Like, you can definitely, a demagogue can rise up and can give a speech and can play on that intuition and then can take them into a direction that is.
Tom Bilyeu
And do you think AI makes that easier or harder?
Amir Salihefendic
Both. I mean, it's, it's hard to tell which way tilts because if we have these personal assistants that are able to synthesize a lot of information for us and try to talk to us at our level. Like, when you give chatgpt to your kid, it talks to them differently than it talks to you. I think there is a world in which, which there's an ability to understand things a little more and be a little more skeptical about things. On the other hand, the demagogue can be supercharged by AI by like, writing great speeches and manipulating the information landscape on social media. On the other hand, social media companies can use AI to combat some of that. It's a, it's, it's a very powerful tool. It's unclear to me whether it tilts positive or negative. And ultimately it's on society broadly, it's on the entrepreneurs. Like, like, I think There should be a social cost for people in Silicon Valley that are building sex bots. Like if you're building a, if you're, if your friend is building a sex bot, you shouldn't be afraid.
Tom Bilyeu
Right?
Amir Salihefendic
Like you should, you should. We should have standards for, for entrepreneurs. Like, not everything should be about maximizing profits and, and money. Like, it would be great to live in a world in which there's, there's, there's a social cost to. And I think there already is. Like OnlyFans was not started in Silicon Valley. Right. It's one of the most profitable companies in the world. I don't know where it is. It's like neither do I. UK or something like that. And for all its flaws, Silicon Valley, there's always, things are always. Sometimes it's manipulative, but people really try to pitch their company in a human interest way. And I think that's generally led to, to better outcomes than negative. And so it's important, it's incumbent on people that are building this technology to try to nudge the world in a better direction. And it's important for engineers, designers to want to work on positive things. There are, yes, AI as a general purpose platform tool can be used in a lot of different ways, but there are things you can work on that are really positive. Like, I think our business, if I may so say myself, I'm probably a little biased, is unquestionably good for the world. We make it so that anyone can make software to improve their business, to improve their lives for artistic expression. Now obviously you can make malicious software. We take those down. But there are a lot of other use cases of AI that are creating more lonely people that are creating. And I think the American public overall has been somewhat of a good check on companies. Like when I worked at Facebook, we would feel intense pressure from the public when they started hating Facebook for good reasons. Right. Like people would change their behavior a little bit. So it's a complicated, dynamic system. Ultimately, I do have a fundamental belief in goodness of people and in society's ability, given things like free speech and the freedoms that we have in America, to nudge the system in a better direction.
Tom Bilyeu
I love it, man. I hope they take your advice. Having another generation of builders would be absolutely incredible. I love the vision of this being an era of entrepreneurship at a scale that we've never seen before. Really incredible. Where can people follow you? Where can they engage with repl.it I'm
Amir Salihefendic
on X at a Massad a M a S A D that's where, you know, people, like engage with people, reply and. And just try. Try to help replit our website, reply.com. we have like a basic free plan. So you can go. Go there and put a prompt. Don't overthink it. Just try something. Try to make a website. Try to make something for your girlfriend or boyfriend. Just start somewhere. I have a little blog that I, you know, every now and then write something on. I wrote a blog post recently that people found useful called how. How to keep winning Good title. Amsa me. And in it, I just like talk about the. The history of replit is. Is, I think, interesting to some entrepreneurs where we've basically didn't achieve economic financial success until 2024. I started the business in 2016.
Tom Bilyeu
Whoa.
Amir Salihefendic
I started the project, the initial idea, in 2009.
Tom Bilyeu
Wow.
Amir Salihefendic
So I've been at it for a long time. And our revenue just, you know, shot up when the world headed in our direction. So we're right about the prediction. And now it's like a multi billion dollar company. And so I try to write relations man. Thank you.
Tom Bilyeu
Incredible.
Amir Salihefendic
Thank you. So I try to write, like, the advice and like the main thing, the main advice, I just tell people, like, not to quit. I mean, there are caveats to that, but ultimately, you know, the person who's showing up every day and trying things and struggling with things and trying all the different tools, goals, and figuring out where the future might be headed and situating themselves in a way to like, actually benefit from them from that, that's a superpower because most people just quit.
Tom Bilyeu
Ain't that the truth. I love it. Awesome, dude. Thank you for coming on. This was really cool. I've enjoyed researching you and getting to sit across from you.
Amir Salihefendic
It's my pleasure. Thank you for having me.
Tom Bilyeu
Of course. All right, boys and girls, if you haven't already, be sure to subscribe. And until next time, my friends, be legendary. Take care. Peace.
Podcast: Impact Theory
Host: Tom Bilyeu
Guest: Amjad Masad, CEO of Replit
Date: February 6, 2026
This episode of Impact Theory features an in-depth conversation between Tom Bilyeu and Amjad Masad about the complex landscape of artificial intelligence (AI). The discussion dives into themes of technological progress, individual agency, centralized power, and the wide-ranging consequences of AI's advancement. Using the Unabomber manifesto, James Burnham's "iron law of oligarchy," and modern tech as scaffolding, the guests wrestle with whether AI will ultimately empower or enslave society.
“He says humans are made… to have certain life phases and certain challenges to be able to overcome them... Technology increasingly is making our lives so easy that society becomes pathological in many ways.” (Amjad Masad, 02:08–03:13)
“Free markets and capitalism sort of running amok without any social reaction and regulation of that, we could end up in a place where technology is actually really harmful.” (Amjad Masad, 05:53–06:09)
“I just don't think that you can explain consciousness in entirely physical ways.” (Amjad Masad, 37:59–38:12)
“If people understood it... they either would have voted differently or they would own assets because they would actually understand what's happening.” (Tom Bilyeu, 48:17–48:19)
On the Unabomber’s insight:
“One of the strongest opening sentences you can find in any book or piece of writing. He talks about how technology can rob us from this natural thing to us that he calls the power process.” —Amjad Masad, 02:08–03:13
On society’s reaction to tech harm:
“Healthy societies tend to develop antibodies over time.” —Amjad Masad, 10:04–10:28
On elite power and AI:
“AI gives them myriad ways now to nudge your behavior in certain directions, that even if you have your own individual AI, the system is going to find ways to continue to close lanes down…” —Tom Bilyeu, 22:11–22:53
On entrepreneurship and decentralization:
“We see individuals that are making millions of dollars that otherwise would have required...to be in Silicon Valley...So we see a lot of these micro entrepreneurship now coming on the scene.” —Amjad Masad, 20:00–20:25
On revolution and manipulation:
“Their whole message was, you're being abused by the rich and the powerful. Take your power back. But that's not what happens.” —Tom Bilyeu, 51:02–51:08
On free will vs. determinism:
“I think free will is real.” —Amjad Masad, 37:43
“I believe it to the core of my existence...that we are programmed by God, evolution, nature, whatever.” —Tom Bilyeu, 43:17–45:33
The conversation is candid, inquisitive, and often philosophical, balancing optimism (Masad) with caution (Bilyeu). Both speakers blend references to academia, history, and technology with personal anecdotes, keeping the tone lively yet serious.
Final note:
“Ultimately, I do have a fundamental belief in goodness of people and in society’s ability, given things like free speech and the freedoms that we have in America, to nudge the system in a better direction.” —Amjad Masad, 56:39–56:53
[End of Summary]