1 00:00:01,560 --> 00:00:03,920 Speaker 1: When you're ready to ride Metro, we want you to 2 00:00:03,960 --> 00:00:06,560 Speaker 1: know we're ready for you. Here are just a few 3 00:00:06,600 --> 00:00:08,399 Speaker 1: of the people at Metro to tell you how we're 4 00:00:08,440 --> 00:00:11,320 Speaker 1: doing our part to keep riders safe. We're cleaning like 5 00:00:11,440 --> 00:00:20,320 Speaker 1: nevill before you've found has sanitizing, no mask, no metron one. 6 00:00:20,480 --> 00:00:23,239 Speaker 1: We have a few extras at Metro. We're doing our 7 00:00:23,280 --> 00:00:25,920 Speaker 1: part to keep the DC area moving. Find out more 8 00:00:25,920 --> 00:00:30,319 Speaker 1: at well Matta dot com slash doing our part while 9 00:00:30,320 --> 00:00:32,800 Speaker 1: we're living through and a historical event. So how about 10 00:00:32,800 --> 00:00:35,000 Speaker 1: we talked to one of the world's greatest historians. It's 11 00:00:35,080 --> 00:00:40,040 Speaker 1: Armstrong and Getty extra large because four hours simply usn't enough. 12 00:00:40,880 --> 00:00:46,159 Speaker 1: This is Armstrong and Getty extra Large. Neil Ferguson is 13 00:00:46,200 --> 00:00:49,879 Speaker 1: the Millbank Family Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford 14 00:00:49,960 --> 00:00:53,239 Speaker 1: University for twelve years, the Laurence ay Tisch Professor of 15 00:00:53,360 --> 00:00:57,480 Speaker 1: History at Stanford, among other credentials, and more importantly, is 16 00:00:57,520 --> 00:00:59,840 Speaker 1: a hell of a good conversation. That's been too long, Neil, 17 00:00:59,840 --> 00:01:03,200 Speaker 1: how are you, sir? Very well? Indeed, I'm happy to report. Yeah, well, 18 00:01:03,640 --> 00:01:05,399 Speaker 1: I'm excited to talk to you because Joe and I 19 00:01:05,440 --> 00:01:08,560 Speaker 1: were throwing us around the other day. Um, you know, 20 00:01:08,600 --> 00:01:10,640 Speaker 1: you're a professional historian, so it's good to ask you 21 00:01:10,640 --> 00:01:14,520 Speaker 1: where word amateur history bubbs buffs? Are we living through 22 00:01:14,600 --> 00:01:18,320 Speaker 1: like a top ten world event? I mean, because by 23 00:01:18,360 --> 00:01:20,080 Speaker 1: a number of measures, it seems to me it would 24 00:01:20,160 --> 00:01:24,679 Speaker 1: rank pretty high in world history, maybe below the meteor 25 00:01:24,680 --> 00:01:27,520 Speaker 1: that killed the dinosaurs, but certainly above Prince Harry moving 26 00:01:27,560 --> 00:01:31,120 Speaker 1: to Canada. Somewhere in that range. Yes, I certainly think 27 00:01:31,160 --> 00:01:35,039 Speaker 1: it beats Prince Harry, So I'm not sure we're quite 28 00:01:35,040 --> 00:01:38,600 Speaker 1: at the extinction event level. I think if it were 29 00:01:38,680 --> 00:01:43,440 Speaker 1: just a pandemic, it wouldn't really be top ten because 30 00:01:43,480 --> 00:01:46,800 Speaker 1: it's clearly not up there with the Black Death of 31 00:01:46,959 --> 00:01:51,520 Speaker 1: the fourteenth century. I don't think it's as a dangerous 32 00:01:51,560 --> 00:01:55,360 Speaker 1: disease actually is the influenza of eighteen nineteen. But what's 33 00:01:55,440 --> 00:02:01,640 Speaker 1: making it world historical is the extraordinary economic consequences, and 34 00:02:01,720 --> 00:02:06,560 Speaker 1: particularly the ways in which government mandated lockdown, the causing 35 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:10,560 Speaker 1: that the biggest economic shocks since the Great Depression, much 36 00:02:10,600 --> 00:02:14,359 Speaker 1: bigger than the two two tho nine financial crisis. I 37 00:02:14,400 --> 00:02:18,600 Speaker 1: think that's really the differentiating factor here. We're really in 38 00:02:18,680 --> 00:02:21,359 Speaker 1: the midst of one of the biggest economic shocks in 39 00:02:21,800 --> 00:02:26,000 Speaker 1: history well, and similar to the still shocking lack of 40 00:02:26,080 --> 00:02:28,840 Speaker 1: knowledge about the specifics of the virus, how it infects, 41 00:02:28,840 --> 00:02:32,080 Speaker 1: how it spreads, how it kills. We don't have the 42 00:02:32,160 --> 00:02:35,280 Speaker 1: slightest idea do we what the aftershocks are likely to 43 00:02:35,320 --> 00:02:38,480 Speaker 1: look like or how long the last Well, that's right, 44 00:02:38,840 --> 00:02:42,400 Speaker 1: because we know more now than we did back in 45 00:02:42,560 --> 00:02:46,760 Speaker 1: January when I started writing about this warning that the 46 00:02:46,840 --> 00:02:52,320 Speaker 1: Woolhan coronavirus was likely to become a global pandemic. But 47 00:02:52,320 --> 00:02:55,200 Speaker 1: but we we still don't really know the critical things 48 00:02:55,280 --> 00:02:57,640 Speaker 1: we need to know. We don't really know what the 49 00:02:57,639 --> 00:03:01,320 Speaker 1: infection fatality rate is because the case motality rates are 50 00:03:01,400 --> 00:03:03,840 Speaker 1: very skewed. We don't really know how many people have 51 00:03:03,919 --> 00:03:07,760 Speaker 1: been exposed. For testing is getting up to the level 52 00:03:07,800 --> 00:03:10,200 Speaker 1: where we can start to get a fix on it. 53 00:03:10,360 --> 00:03:12,640 Speaker 1: We have no idea when a vaccine will be ready. 54 00:03:12,680 --> 00:03:15,440 Speaker 1: It certainly won't be this year and can't even be 55 00:03:15,480 --> 00:03:18,639 Speaker 1: relied on to be ready for next year. So for 56 00:03:18,800 --> 00:03:21,720 Speaker 1: a whole bunch of imponderables here. But history can be 57 00:03:21,800 --> 00:03:24,080 Speaker 1: in some ways of helpful, if not more helpful than 58 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:27,160 Speaker 1: epithe theology. One thing is very clear from the great 59 00:03:27,200 --> 00:03:30,960 Speaker 1: pandemics of the past. This will not be one wave 60 00:03:31,040 --> 00:03:33,560 Speaker 1: and done. And I think we've been letters of public 61 00:03:33,600 --> 00:03:36,280 Speaker 1: to believe. But as alably flattened the curve and the 62 00:03:36,320 --> 00:03:39,839 Speaker 1: great phrase of the year, we'll be fine and we'll 63 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:42,880 Speaker 1: be looking back on this by July fourth saying gee, 64 00:03:42,880 --> 00:03:46,880 Speaker 1: that was rough but over. That's not the case. Almost 65 00:03:46,920 --> 00:03:51,760 Speaker 1: all the great pandemics are multiple waves. The second wave 66 00:03:51,960 --> 00:03:54,640 Speaker 1: was bigger than the first one, and I think it's 67 00:03:54,720 --> 00:03:58,000 Speaker 1: it's only a matter of time. It could be soon 68 00:03:58,360 --> 00:04:01,240 Speaker 1: trying to get the economy back to work. It could 69 00:04:01,320 --> 00:04:04,160 Speaker 1: be after the summer, but there will be a second wave, 70 00:04:04,200 --> 00:04:07,320 Speaker 1: and I think it's time that people face that realistically, 71 00:04:07,480 --> 00:04:10,080 Speaker 1: rather than kidding themselves that it will all be over 72 00:04:10,120 --> 00:04:13,160 Speaker 1: by July four. Your opinion piece in the Boston Globe, 73 00:04:13,160 --> 00:04:17,960 Speaker 1: the economic legacy of a coronavirus lockdown, the old battle 74 00:04:18,080 --> 00:04:23,600 Speaker 1: between security, um uh, you know, security and safety and 75 00:04:23,680 --> 00:04:26,000 Speaker 1: your economic security and your health and all that sort 76 00:04:26,040 --> 00:04:28,479 Speaker 1: of stuff. The way it's playing out here, it seems 77 00:04:28,520 --> 00:04:31,080 Speaker 1: like it transferment to flatten the curve. As you said, 78 00:04:31,080 --> 00:04:33,040 Speaker 1: it's the phrase of the year, flatten the curve. But 79 00:04:33,080 --> 00:04:34,840 Speaker 1: originally we're going to flatten the curve to try to 80 00:04:34,920 --> 00:04:37,039 Speaker 1: keep the hospitals from being overwhelmed. Now all of a sudden, 81 00:04:37,080 --> 00:04:39,320 Speaker 1: we've gone to it seems, flatten the curve to make 82 00:04:39,360 --> 00:04:41,720 Speaker 1: sure nobody dies from it. And I don't know if 83 00:04:41,760 --> 00:04:44,680 Speaker 1: I'm willing to trade how many tens of thousands deads 84 00:04:44,720 --> 00:04:47,400 Speaker 1: for something worse than the Great Depression. I think that 85 00:04:47,520 --> 00:04:52,320 Speaker 1: this trade off has has sometimes been over sympathized in 86 00:04:52,880 --> 00:04:56,920 Speaker 1: the way that some politicians are said, we should be 87 00:04:57,040 --> 00:04:59,600 Speaker 1: ready to satisfice the elderly to get the economy back. 88 00:04:59,600 --> 00:05:01,200 Speaker 1: I don't think we should think about it like that. 89 00:05:01,400 --> 00:05:03,880 Speaker 1: I think that the truth is that we just have 90 00:05:04,000 --> 00:05:07,600 Speaker 1: a lot of uncertainty about the disease, and therefore we 91 00:05:08,000 --> 00:05:10,640 Speaker 1: need to err on the side of caution. We certainly 92 00:05:10,680 --> 00:05:12,760 Speaker 1: needed to err on the side of caution right at 93 00:05:12,760 --> 00:05:15,359 Speaker 1: the beginning when we knew nothing about it. Unfortunately we 94 00:05:15,480 --> 00:05:18,800 Speaker 1: did it. But I think the projections that were so 95 00:05:18,880 --> 00:05:23,280 Speaker 1: crucial in March in leading to lockdowns implied that up 96 00:05:23,279 --> 00:05:26,400 Speaker 1: to two million or more Americans would die if we 97 00:05:26,480 --> 00:05:29,359 Speaker 1: did nothing, and I think that was all was certainly 98 00:05:29,400 --> 00:05:32,760 Speaker 1: wrong because it implied or it was based on an 99 00:05:32,760 --> 00:05:36,920 Speaker 1: assumption that the infection fatality rate was about point nine percent, 100 00:05:37,400 --> 00:05:42,520 Speaker 1: in effect, to the epidemeologists, who confusedly included somebody with 101 00:05:42,640 --> 00:05:45,839 Speaker 1: the same name as me, Neil Ferguson of Imperial College, London, 102 00:05:46,200 --> 00:05:49,920 Speaker 1: were saying, this is as bad as nine and I'm 103 00:05:49,920 --> 00:05:52,240 Speaker 1: pretty sure it's not. I think we now know enough 104 00:05:52,320 --> 00:05:55,400 Speaker 1: to see that it is not as deadly. It's more 105 00:05:55,480 --> 00:05:58,640 Speaker 1: like actually the ninety seven fifty eight pandemic, which not 106 00:05:58,680 --> 00:06:01,480 Speaker 1: many people remember. And the reason they don't remember it 107 00:06:01,520 --> 00:06:03,880 Speaker 1: is that killed quite a lot of people around the world, 108 00:06:03,880 --> 00:06:08,200 Speaker 1: including many Americans. It didn't lead to they can lockdown. 109 00:06:08,240 --> 00:06:11,440 Speaker 1: It didn't need to this kind of man made depression. 110 00:06:11,640 --> 00:06:14,599 Speaker 1: So I think, although I'm going to be careful here, 111 00:06:14,839 --> 00:06:19,000 Speaker 1: I think we're starting to see that we actually went 112 00:06:19,080 --> 00:06:22,280 Speaker 1: in for overkill in the face of a disease that 113 00:06:22,440 --> 00:06:25,960 Speaker 1: was highly contagious, certainly, but not as injurious as we 114 00:06:26,000 --> 00:06:29,320 Speaker 1: at first thought. And that's why I think it would 115 00:06:29,320 --> 00:06:34,080 Speaker 1: be very, very urgently desirable for the US to switch 116 00:06:34,160 --> 00:06:38,000 Speaker 1: to a more subtle form of containment of the disease, 117 00:06:38,360 --> 00:06:40,800 Speaker 1: of the sort that we've already seen in countries like 118 00:06:40,960 --> 00:06:44,480 Speaker 1: Taiwan and South Korea, which haven't had to lockdown their economies. 119 00:06:44,760 --> 00:06:47,520 Speaker 1: We used a very blunt instrument based I think on 120 00:06:47,560 --> 00:06:51,440 Speaker 1: an exaggerated fear of the excess mortipality that was going 121 00:06:51,480 --> 00:06:54,359 Speaker 1: to be It can like lockdown. I don't think have 122 00:06:54,480 --> 00:06:59,040 Speaker 1: been especially affected compared with social distancing, which is something different. 123 00:06:59,560 --> 00:07:02,080 Speaker 1: And I think the lesson that we can learn from 124 00:07:02,240 --> 00:07:05,680 Speaker 1: successful countries like Taiwan and South Korea is that with 125 00:07:05,880 --> 00:07:10,040 Speaker 1: testing and contact tracing, you don't need to create your 126 00:07:10,080 --> 00:07:15,040 Speaker 1: economy to manage this disease. Well, and we're discussing the 127 00:07:15,080 --> 00:07:17,440 Speaker 1: trade off between the lives of the old in your 128 00:07:17,480 --> 00:07:20,920 Speaker 1: example and versus the economy. I think it's brutally under 129 00:07:20,920 --> 00:07:24,600 Speaker 1: discussed the fact that if the economy tanks or is 130 00:07:24,840 --> 00:07:30,200 Speaker 1: left in rubble, there will be many, many deaths of poverty, despair, 131 00:07:30,320 --> 00:07:34,520 Speaker 1: lack of medical care, suicide, depression, addiction, etcetera, etcetera. And 132 00:07:34,560 --> 00:07:37,640 Speaker 1: I could easily see a two hundred thousand deaths of 133 00:07:37,680 --> 00:07:42,640 Speaker 1: despair being sacrificed to save thirty thousand lives of Wuhan flu, 134 00:07:43,200 --> 00:07:45,920 Speaker 1: which is obviously not to sort of bargain anyone would strike. 135 00:07:46,400 --> 00:07:50,720 Speaker 1: I think the risk in terms of potential mortality due 136 00:07:50,760 --> 00:07:54,320 Speaker 1: to code of mountin was was higher than a thousand 137 00:07:54,480 --> 00:07:57,360 Speaker 1: if we if we'd really done nothing, I think, yeah, 138 00:07:57,360 --> 00:08:01,240 Speaker 1: I meant going forward really bit higher. But you know, 139 00:08:01,320 --> 00:08:04,880 Speaker 1: we're in a situation now when it's quite hard to 140 00:08:05,120 --> 00:08:07,560 Speaker 1: say what the result would have been if we if 141 00:08:07,560 --> 00:08:10,160 Speaker 1: we've done nothing. But the distinction I want to draw 142 00:08:10,280 --> 00:08:15,080 Speaker 1: is between a rational policy of social distancing that tries 143 00:08:15,160 --> 00:08:20,640 Speaker 1: to minimize the exposure, especially vulnerable groups to this virus 144 00:08:21,080 --> 00:08:24,120 Speaker 1: under very blunt instrument of economic lockdowns, which I think 145 00:08:24,120 --> 00:08:28,120 Speaker 1: have almost certainly done more harm than the net public 146 00:08:28,160 --> 00:08:30,760 Speaker 1: health benefit. I mean, in the end, we're using a 147 00:08:30,760 --> 00:08:33,800 Speaker 1: lot of quite confusing metrics, and the result I think 148 00:08:33,800 --> 00:08:37,040 Speaker 1: has been to lead ordinary Americans to to feel very 149 00:08:37,120 --> 00:08:40,600 Speaker 1: uncertain about what they should do. I think the best 150 00:08:40,600 --> 00:08:43,800 Speaker 1: way of thinking about this is just excess debts. Are 151 00:08:43,880 --> 00:08:48,520 Speaker 1: we seeing right now much higher mortality than we would 152 00:08:48,640 --> 00:08:53,120 Speaker 1: expect at this time of year? And that's I think 153 00:08:53,160 --> 00:08:55,600 Speaker 1: a good way of thinking about it. And the answer 154 00:08:55,679 --> 00:08:58,959 Speaker 1: is that we're starting to although at the moment it's 155 00:08:58,960 --> 00:09:02,439 Speaker 1: still very confined into states such as New York. In Europe, 156 00:09:02,440 --> 00:09:06,680 Speaker 1: there's excess mortality certainly in countries like Italy and Spain, 157 00:09:07,120 --> 00:09:09,439 Speaker 1: and it's clear that it would have been much higher 158 00:09:09,679 --> 00:09:12,360 Speaker 1: if if they done nothing, and if we've done nothing, 159 00:09:12,400 --> 00:09:15,040 Speaker 1: So I don't think we should underplay this. It was 160 00:09:15,120 --> 00:09:17,880 Speaker 1: always a mistake to say, oh, this is just the 161 00:09:18,520 --> 00:09:22,640 Speaker 1: seasonal influenza. That was a terrible uh, that bad bit 162 00:09:22,760 --> 00:09:25,960 Speaker 1: of analysis that that attracted a lot of comment pators 163 00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:29,080 Speaker 1: on both the left and the right back in January, February, 164 00:09:29,120 --> 00:09:31,560 Speaker 1: in the first half of March. So I don't think 165 00:09:31,600 --> 00:09:35,000 Speaker 1: we should underestimate this, but nor should we While be exaggerated, 166 00:09:35,080 --> 00:09:40,199 Speaker 1: this is really not as dangerous of virus as the influenza. 167 00:09:40,679 --> 00:09:45,559 Speaker 1: If if you actually imagine that virus coming back today, 168 00:09:46,080 --> 00:09:49,880 Speaker 1: then we'd be looking at death death count potentially up 169 00:09:49,880 --> 00:09:52,400 Speaker 1: to two million. But I really don't think that was 170 00:09:52,440 --> 00:09:54,760 Speaker 1: the mere scenario we faced. I think it was much 171 00:09:54,800 --> 00:09:58,480 Speaker 1: closer to being something like ninety seven fifty eight, with 172 00:09:58,600 --> 00:10:03,640 Speaker 1: maybe maybe five a thousand people potentially at risk. So 173 00:10:03,800 --> 00:10:06,800 Speaker 1: it's a very fine balance that governments have to strike. 174 00:10:07,320 --> 00:10:10,040 Speaker 1: I think the mistake that we may have made was 175 00:10:10,080 --> 00:10:14,400 Speaker 1: to say, our first we'll try in cicions, why why 176 00:10:14,400 --> 00:10:17,000 Speaker 1: shouldn't we worry, And then let's try what the Chinese 177 00:10:17,080 --> 00:10:20,000 Speaker 1: did in Coupe problems, which was economic lockdown, and we 178 00:10:20,080 --> 00:10:22,960 Speaker 1: failed to see that actually there was a much smarter 179 00:10:23,080 --> 00:10:27,280 Speaker 1: policy being done in the other China, iwan we're testing 180 00:10:27,320 --> 00:10:31,959 Speaker 1: and policing enabled them to avoid the contagions spreading far 181 00:10:32,360 --> 00:10:34,720 Speaker 1: the god very few deaths, and they haven't had to 182 00:10:34,720 --> 00:10:38,520 Speaker 1: lock down their economy. I think, guys has to be 183 00:10:39,000 --> 00:10:41,880 Speaker 1: why did all those people in the federal government whose 184 00:10:41,960 --> 00:10:45,920 Speaker 1: job this was failed so badly. It's not like we 185 00:10:45,960 --> 00:10:49,400 Speaker 1: didn't have a plan for a pandemic. We had I 186 00:10:49,440 --> 00:10:53,400 Speaker 1: think at the last count, six different plans. We had legislation, 187 00:10:53,640 --> 00:10:56,760 Speaker 1: we had task forces, we had people inside the Department 188 00:10:56,760 --> 00:11:00,200 Speaker 1: of Helping Human Services whose one job it was to 189 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:04,440 Speaker 1: deal with the pandemic, and for some unexplicable reason almost 190 00:11:04,440 --> 00:11:08,560 Speaker 1: brought completely failed. That's the conversation I think we need 191 00:11:08,600 --> 00:11:11,240 Speaker 1: to have when this finally is over, which I don't 192 00:11:11,240 --> 00:11:13,559 Speaker 1: think we'll be until next year. We need to ask 193 00:11:13,840 --> 00:11:18,640 Speaker 1: why big government failed so ethically in the United States 194 00:11:18,640 --> 00:11:21,520 Speaker 1: this year. Yeah, I hope that's looked at um UH 195 00:11:21,640 --> 00:11:24,080 Speaker 1: and by people being nonpartisan, just trying to get to 196 00:11:24,080 --> 00:11:26,400 Speaker 1: the bottom of it. I've read about the first half 197 00:11:26,480 --> 00:11:29,920 Speaker 1: of your Henry Kissinger book just absolutely fantastic. And the 198 00:11:29,920 --> 00:11:31,600 Speaker 1: reason I bring that up as I was reading an 199 00:11:31,640 --> 00:11:34,560 Speaker 1: opinion piece from Henry Kissinger just the other day, in 200 00:11:34,559 --> 00:11:37,240 Speaker 1: which he thinks this is really going to have an 201 00:11:37,240 --> 00:11:42,160 Speaker 1: effect on the world order, particularly um the power struggle 202 00:11:42,200 --> 00:11:44,080 Speaker 1: between US and China. How do you feel about that? 203 00:11:45,720 --> 00:11:47,800 Speaker 1: How gool with that? I mean, Richard half of the 204 00:11:47,840 --> 00:11:51,960 Speaker 1: Council on Foreign Relations wrote a kind of alternative piece saying, Oh, 205 00:11:52,160 --> 00:11:54,959 Speaker 1: it's not going to change that much except to accelerate 206 00:11:55,040 --> 00:11:58,160 Speaker 1: existing trend. I think I think that that's definitely wrong. 207 00:11:58,240 --> 00:12:02,160 Speaker 1: This is a huge shift that is going to happen. 208 00:12:02,720 --> 00:12:06,160 Speaker 1: I think in some ways it is laying bare what 209 00:12:06,320 --> 00:12:10,680 Speaker 1: I've already called Cold War two, revealing that there are fundamental, 210 00:12:11,480 --> 00:12:15,600 Speaker 1: irreconcilable differences between the United States and China. Perhaps I 211 00:12:15,600 --> 00:12:18,480 Speaker 1: should say the Western China, because Europe's in this too. 212 00:12:18,800 --> 00:12:20,880 Speaker 1: I think prior to the pandemic, a lot of people 213 00:12:20,920 --> 00:12:24,280 Speaker 1: wanted to pretend this wasn't happening and that somehow we 214 00:12:24,320 --> 00:12:28,079 Speaker 1: could resurrect the old relationship between the US and China 215 00:12:28,120 --> 00:12:30,560 Speaker 1: that I used to call chi America. But ch America 216 00:12:30,640 --> 00:12:32,960 Speaker 1: is dead and Cold War two is very much with us, 217 00:12:33,360 --> 00:12:37,079 Speaker 1: and I think the pandemic has has revealed that very clearly. Chinese, 218 00:12:37,080 --> 00:12:40,680 Speaker 1: of course, they're trying to bend the narrative and say oh, well, 219 00:12:40,679 --> 00:12:44,040 Speaker 1: this may possibly have started in China, but actually it 220 00:12:44,120 --> 00:12:46,520 Speaker 1: might have started somewhere else. But hey, anyway, we're here 221 00:12:46,520 --> 00:12:48,920 Speaker 1: to save the world, and that that I think is 222 00:12:49,120 --> 00:12:53,320 Speaker 1: a pretty ill conceived propagandam move from China's part that's 223 00:12:53,320 --> 00:12:56,360 Speaker 1: probably going to backfire on them. It's certainly not playing 224 00:12:56,400 --> 00:12:58,840 Speaker 1: well in Europe as I understand it. So no, I 225 00:12:58,880 --> 00:13:02,120 Speaker 1: think this is a big moments of truth for the U. S. 226 00:13:02,200 --> 00:13:05,640 Speaker 1: China relationship. But it's a moment that has revealed all 227 00:13:05,679 --> 00:13:08,360 Speaker 1: that is rotten at the core of the People's Republic 228 00:13:08,360 --> 00:13:12,400 Speaker 1: of China's governance. But there's other stuff to be looked 229 00:13:12,400 --> 00:13:16,040 Speaker 1: at too. I don't think it could be without consequences 230 00:13:16,080 --> 00:13:19,040 Speaker 1: that the price of oil has essentially collapsed to zero 231 00:13:19,200 --> 00:13:23,280 Speaker 1: or even in some cases into negative territory. For countries 232 00:13:23,320 --> 00:13:26,520 Speaker 1: like Russia or for that matter, Saudi Arabia that rely 233 00:13:26,840 --> 00:13:30,800 Speaker 1: primarily on these revenues from oil, it's it's got to 234 00:13:30,920 --> 00:13:35,199 Speaker 1: be an existential threat that they face. So I think 235 00:13:35,200 --> 00:13:38,559 Speaker 1: the political consequences, or maybe I should say the geopolitical 236 00:13:38,600 --> 00:13:42,120 Speaker 1: consequences of the pandemic, will be enormous, much closer to 237 00:13:42,200 --> 00:13:45,880 Speaker 1: kissing to the Richard hearts, and that changing direction just 238 00:13:45,920 --> 00:13:48,559 Speaker 1: a bit. Those of us of a libertarian banter are 239 00:13:48,600 --> 00:13:51,880 Speaker 1: concerned about a couple of aspects of this power. Once 240 00:13:51,960 --> 00:13:59,080 Speaker 1: grasp is not easily taken back, and right surrendered are 241 00:13:59,120 --> 00:14:03,439 Speaker 1: not easily regained, And there seems to be an awful 242 00:14:03,520 --> 00:14:08,079 Speaker 1: lot of uh, you know, too too easy acquiescence to 243 00:14:08,480 --> 00:14:11,120 Speaker 1: We're putting you essentially under house arrest, and we're not 244 00:14:11,200 --> 00:14:14,360 Speaker 1: even going to indicate that we understand how serious that is. 245 00:14:14,640 --> 00:14:17,640 Speaker 1: You have no right to peaceably assemble, but it's because 246 00:14:17,679 --> 00:14:21,760 Speaker 1: there's an emergency, and again it could be necessary. But 247 00:14:21,880 --> 00:14:25,280 Speaker 1: the fact that the powers that be don't even say, look, 248 00:14:25,400 --> 00:14:29,360 Speaker 1: we understand, we're asking you to surrender your most precious rights. 249 00:14:29,600 --> 00:14:33,080 Speaker 1: Were very sorry, We'll get back to normal as soon 250 00:14:33,120 --> 00:14:36,600 Speaker 1: as we can. The casualness of it is bothersome to us. 251 00:14:36,960 --> 00:14:39,760 Speaker 1: Any thoughts on that, Yeah, I think the United States 252 00:14:39,960 --> 00:14:42,600 Speaker 1: has a bit of a public actually with the way 253 00:14:42,680 --> 00:14:47,760 Speaker 1: in which emergencies operates. They have a tendency to get 254 00:14:47,800 --> 00:14:54,480 Speaker 1: declared and never undeclared because the National Emergencies Act, which 255 00:14:54,560 --> 00:14:59,640 Speaker 1: dates back to the nineteen seventies, has essentially being abused 256 00:14:59,640 --> 00:15:03,000 Speaker 1: by sess of administrations. Again, this is not a partisan point. 257 00:15:04,080 --> 00:15:07,000 Speaker 1: Emergencies get declared and then they kind of stay in force, 258 00:15:07,840 --> 00:15:10,480 Speaker 1: and I think it would be very very dangerous indeed, 259 00:15:10,880 --> 00:15:14,120 Speaker 1: if certainly the emergency measures that have been introduced since 260 00:15:14,120 --> 00:15:17,520 Speaker 1: the pandemic came along became a permanent feature. I think 261 00:15:17,600 --> 00:15:23,120 Speaker 1: it's urgently needed that the National Emergencies Act be reformed 262 00:15:23,360 --> 00:15:27,200 Speaker 1: so that there is an expiry mandatory expiry of sticks 263 00:15:27,200 --> 00:15:31,040 Speaker 1: of emergency, because otherwise we end up in a situation 264 00:15:31,080 --> 00:15:34,680 Speaker 1: which I think is very troubling that a whole range 265 00:15:34,680 --> 00:15:39,040 Speaker 1: of different statutory provisions supposed to be for emergencies only 266 00:15:39,520 --> 00:15:44,840 Speaker 1: become permanent features of of American life. And I don't 267 00:15:44,880 --> 00:15:47,440 Speaker 1: think any president should be in a position to play 268 00:15:47,520 --> 00:15:50,640 Speaker 1: a permanent state of emergency. Frankly, that's how the publics die. 269 00:15:50,920 --> 00:15:53,760 Speaker 1: Don't really matter who the president is. My final question 270 00:15:53,800 --> 00:15:56,200 Speaker 1: is how long do you think there will be reverberations 271 00:15:56,600 --> 00:16:00,960 Speaker 1: economically worldwide out of this? But I don't think the 272 00:16:01,000 --> 00:16:03,640 Speaker 1: public health crisis is going to be over for quite 273 00:16:03,680 --> 00:16:06,920 Speaker 1: a while because the virus is not going away. We 274 00:16:07,000 --> 00:16:11,280 Speaker 1: don't have therapy is we don't have a vaccine, were 275 00:16:11,320 --> 00:16:14,760 Speaker 1: nowhere near to her immunity. A great proportion the population 276 00:16:14,800 --> 00:16:17,440 Speaker 1: hasn't even been exposed to it yet, We're still going 277 00:16:17,480 --> 00:16:19,800 Speaker 1: to be playing some game of whack a mole with 278 00:16:20,240 --> 00:16:25,560 Speaker 1: covered nineteen inter next year and beyond become a regular 279 00:16:25,600 --> 00:16:27,920 Speaker 1: teacher of life. In fact, if it turns out that 280 00:16:28,000 --> 00:16:31,240 Speaker 1: you don't get more lasting immunity once you've had it, 281 00:16:31,240 --> 00:16:33,800 Speaker 1: which I think is quite possible. So that's the that's 282 00:16:33,800 --> 00:16:36,280 Speaker 1: the public health problem. It's certainly not going away in 283 00:16:36,320 --> 00:16:40,600 Speaker 1: a hurry. But the consequences of what we've done really 284 00:16:40,640 --> 00:16:45,080 Speaker 1: traveled me more because we have inflicted an enormous shock 285 00:16:45,160 --> 00:16:48,520 Speaker 1: to our economy. That's there in the data that you 286 00:16:48,600 --> 00:16:53,240 Speaker 1: and I can see every day. Soaring unemployment, business is 287 00:16:53,320 --> 00:16:56,120 Speaker 1: teetering on the brink of insolvency, relying on checks from 288 00:16:56,120 --> 00:17:00,000 Speaker 1: the federal government to steer This can't continue for much longer. 289 00:17:00,200 --> 00:17:03,520 Speaker 1: With really sustained UH, you can come a damage that 290 00:17:03,560 --> 00:17:06,120 Speaker 1: will not be easy to recover from. I certainly don't 291 00:17:06,119 --> 00:17:10,280 Speaker 1: see a v shaped recovery under these circumstances. Imagining that 292 00:17:10,320 --> 00:17:12,639 Speaker 1: this is financial prices two points oh, and that you 293 00:17:12,720 --> 00:17:15,680 Speaker 1: just need to throw money at it in the form 294 00:17:15,720 --> 00:17:18,520 Speaker 1: of a large federal deficit and lots of wanted di 295 00:17:18,600 --> 00:17:22,200 Speaker 1: easing is delusional. All those measures are doing is propping 296 00:17:22,280 --> 00:17:25,800 Speaker 1: up the economy that would otherwise be flat on its face. 297 00:17:26,520 --> 00:17:28,560 Speaker 1: But I think it's going to be a long road back, 298 00:17:29,280 --> 00:17:35,000 Speaker 1: even if we successfully begin to unwinder lockdowns in the 299 00:17:35,040 --> 00:17:39,280 Speaker 1: next couple of months. So I'm afraid we aren't going 300 00:17:39,320 --> 00:17:42,240 Speaker 1: to be out of this for a long time. Remember 301 00:17:42,240 --> 00:17:44,600 Speaker 1: how long it took actually for the U. S economy 302 00:17:44,640 --> 00:17:46,359 Speaker 1: to get back to where it was in arnds of 303 00:17:46,400 --> 00:17:51,200 Speaker 1: just an employment after two thousands, more like six years 304 00:17:51,200 --> 00:17:53,600 Speaker 1: before we were really back to where we had been. 305 00:17:54,000 --> 00:17:56,600 Speaker 1: This is worse, and so I think we need to 306 00:17:56,640 --> 00:18:01,000 Speaker 1: prepare our for a slow crawl back to something that 307 00:18:01,080 --> 00:18:03,520 Speaker 1: I don't think we can call the new normal, because 308 00:18:03,520 --> 00:18:05,720 Speaker 1: I don't think it's going to be that normal. It's 309 00:18:05,760 --> 00:18:07,560 Speaker 1: not going to be that normal if we can't go 310 00:18:07,600 --> 00:18:10,280 Speaker 1: to the all game, if we can't go to crowded restaurants, 311 00:18:10,280 --> 00:18:12,520 Speaker 1: if we can't go to the movies, if all of 312 00:18:12,560 --> 00:18:17,560 Speaker 1: those things that involve social proximity are essentially off for 313 00:18:17,640 --> 00:18:21,399 Speaker 1: the indefinite future until there's a generally available vaccine, and 314 00:18:21,520 --> 00:18:26,040 Speaker 1: talking about normal is probably just another form of self delusion. Well, 315 00:18:26,400 --> 00:18:29,040 Speaker 1: and the universe has a funny way of throwing things 316 00:18:29,040 --> 00:18:31,560 Speaker 1: at you as you're recovering from the last shock. To 317 00:18:32,040 --> 00:18:35,840 Speaker 1: Neil Ferguson of the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, we don't 318 00:18:35,880 --> 00:18:37,760 Speaker 1: want to be too greedy with your time, but we 319 00:18:37,800 --> 00:18:40,560 Speaker 1: thank you very much for the conversation. Always enjoy it 320 00:18:40,760 --> 00:18:46,560 Speaker 1: in a pleasure sor I'm not more cheerful. Thanks nonetheless. Yeah, well, 321 00:18:46,600 --> 00:18:48,239 Speaker 1: I understand why he said there at the end. I 322 00:18:48,280 --> 00:18:50,000 Speaker 1: was thinking while he while he was laying that out, 323 00:18:50,040 --> 00:18:52,600 Speaker 1: I thought, I hope he's wrong. I hope he's wrong 324 00:18:52,640 --> 00:18:56,800 Speaker 1: about that. It is not ten years before we get 325 00:18:56,800 --> 00:18:59,679 Speaker 1: back to even where we were before. Well, you know, 326 00:18:59,760 --> 00:19:02,320 Speaker 1: my might comment about the universe throwing things. Actually it 327 00:19:02,359 --> 00:19:06,160 Speaker 1: works both ways too. Sometimes the universe throws enormous opportunities 328 00:19:06,240 --> 00:19:09,320 Speaker 1: your way and and things turn out much better than anticipating. 329 00:19:09,320 --> 00:19:12,840 Speaker 1: You know, tearing down and chaos is the natural state 330 00:19:12,880 --> 00:19:16,439 Speaker 1: of things. That's what you're always fighting against just in life, entropy, 331 00:19:16,600 --> 00:19:21,720 Speaker 1: right and uh and so well, you know, like you said, 332 00:19:21,720 --> 00:19:23,800 Speaker 1: there will be other things come along over the next 333 00:19:23,920 --> 00:19:26,320 Speaker 1: six eight ten years as the world tries to get 334 00:19:26,320 --> 00:19:29,400 Speaker 1: back to where it was three months ago. Um, there 335 00:19:29,400 --> 00:19:34,560 Speaker 1: will be wars and earthquakes and hurricanes and political unrest 336 00:19:34,600 --> 00:19:37,359 Speaker 1: and who knows what. So, you know, the optimist in 337 00:19:37,440 --> 00:19:42,000 Speaker 1: me thinks that a lot of crap that is addling 338 00:19:42,160 --> 00:19:45,080 Speaker 1: our society, that's hurting us is going to be shaken 339 00:19:45,119 --> 00:19:47,199 Speaker 1: out because we don't have time for it anymore. We're 340 00:19:47,200 --> 00:19:51,040 Speaker 1: gonna be a leaner, meaner, more practical people. Then there's 341 00:19:51,040 --> 00:19:53,520 Speaker 1: the other part of me that thinks, no, it appears 342 00:19:53,560 --> 00:19:57,720 Speaker 1: to me bureaucracies are growing. Uh, the the power of 343 00:19:57,720 --> 00:20:00,440 Speaker 1: the government and the bureaucracies is growing in things might 344 00:20:00,680 --> 00:20:02,840 Speaker 1: just end up worse. I don't know. We've got We've 345 00:20:02,840 --> 00:20:05,639 Speaker 1: got a whole generation that's has spent a good chunk 346 00:20:05,640 --> 00:20:07,880 Speaker 1: of their life being taken care of by the government 347 00:20:07,920 --> 00:20:09,919 Speaker 1: because there was no other way to do it. And 348 00:20:09,960 --> 00:20:13,879 Speaker 1: now they that's on the entries. Yeah, oh well, what 349 00:20:13,920 --> 00:20:21,879 Speaker 1: are you gonna do? Extra large? When you're ready to 350 00:20:21,960 --> 00:20:24,720 Speaker 1: ride Metro, we want you to know we're ready for you. 351 00:20:25,040 --> 00:20:27,000 Speaker 1: Here are just a few of the people at Metro 352 00:20:27,119 --> 00:20:29,080 Speaker 1: to tell you how we're doing our part to keep 353 00:20:29,160 --> 00:20:33,160 Speaker 1: riders safe. We're cleaning like never before. Half build it greatly. 354 00:20:33,720 --> 00:20:39,800 Speaker 1: You've found half sanitizing, no mask, no Metro need one. 355 00:20:39,960 --> 00:20:42,720 Speaker 1: We have a few extras at Metro We're doing our 356 00:20:42,760 --> 00:20:45,400 Speaker 1: part to keep the DC area moving. Find out more 357 00:20:45,400 --> 00:20:47,680 Speaker 1: at well mata dot com slash doing our part