Inside the Mysterious Drone Encounter at Barksdale Air Force Base
Shawn Ryan Show
0:00 I almost texted my friends in the Pentagon to ask them about this.
0:03 I actually just posted something right before I
0:04 went on the show a couple hours ago.
0:06 Epris has a new autonomous thing where the the truck drives autonomously,
0:09 opens up and fires autonomously at the drones.
0:11 You put a couple of these, you put a couple of these to the base,
0:13 they take the drones down right away.
0:14 Cuz see, anti-jamming is one thing.
0:16 Epis is not just jamming.
0:18 Epis is frying the circuits.
0:19 If China takes Taiwan tomorrow and controls TSMC and those chip factories,
0:25 can we even continue to build drones and AI weapon systems?
0:30 I'm always jealous of Japan because like they'll have
0:32 their roads just like the guys will come at night because
0:34 they respect their other people so much in their society
0:36 and they don't have the weird unions that the break thing.
0:38 So they just like work really hard at night
0:40 well paid and get it done fast, right?
0:42 So you can be on the road again.
0:43 Now you could do it again without having
0:44 to keep the union guy up at night, you know?
0:46 Damn, man.
0:48 No, but and by the way, here's the thing.
0:50 This is like a classic Jevans paradox
0:52 thing which is really important for economics because
0:53 a lot of people might see this and their first instinct might be, well, f you.
0:57 you're just getting rid of people's jobs, right?
0:59 That that that might be the thing they think.
1:01 And and and and here here's here's what it is.
1:04 It's that when you when something goes down in cost,
1:06 you you can get do a have demand for a lot more of it, right?
1:09 So the original Jevans paradox, it's important for people to understand.
1:11 This is a key economics concept is is they figured out uh
1:15 how to make coal plants twice as efficient in the 19th century.
1:18 This is a big deal cuz coal was like the big energy.
1:21 And so if you own a bunch of coal mines,
1:23 a lot of people did, that was a big thing back then.
1:25 and coal plants are twice as efficient.
1:26 All of a sudden, everyone's like, "Oh my god,
1:28 they're not going to need our coal anymore." And you know what happened instead?
1:31 This demand for coal went way up because because
1:34 all of a sudden because energy was so much cheaper,
1:37 it was now in much more in demand and there's much more uses of it.
1:40 And it's the same thing here.
1:41 If you can build buildings in America for much cheaper,
1:44 suddenly a manufacturing project that you were forced
1:46 to do in Mexico or forced to do
1:48 in the Philippines or Vietnam or wherever else
1:50 the hell the numbers said to do it, suddenly it makes a lot more sense to do
1:54 it here because you're building it for much cheaper.
1:56 And so suddenly suddenly you're cut so all so the amount of economic
1:59 activity you're going to create if we can make these things cheaper,
2:02 it's going to go so up.
2:03 There's going to be so much more stuff that just
2:05 right now there's all this stuff Sean that I
2:07 really want to do here as a patriot and I do I produce a lot of things here.
2:09 I build things with the ships and everything else,
2:11 but a lot of stuff just doesn't pencil.
2:12 Like Joe, I'm sorry.
2:13 It doesn't pencil.
2:14 And you you can't just be a crazy person.
2:16 It has to pencil, right?
2:17 But this makes a lot of stuff going to pencil
2:19 a hell of a lot better in the next few years.
2:20 So, it's going to lead to a massive boom in economic activity here.
2:23 It's it's a very good thing for America.
2:25 Yeah, man.
2:26 I mean, what do what do these machines look like?
2:28 Are they just repurposing?
2:29 They're repurposing Caterpillar machines for now.
2:31 Caterpillar, by the way, is crushing it the last few years, you can imagine,
2:33 because of all the construction and data centers
2:35 and demand for their machines around the world.
2:37 So they're a very profitable massive company and they they love this.
2:40 They know they can't build it themselves and and so they're they're
2:43 working really well and partnering and figuring
2:45 out and we're equipping their machines
2:47 and you know you know who else is going to be going
2:49 into this sector as well is our friend Travis just announced it.
2:52 Have you followed that at all?
2:53 Travis Kalanick.
2:55 No.
2:54 So he's the one who built Uber, right?
2:56 Very famously amazing entrepreneur, super hardcore uh guy in terms of a builder.
3:01 And his latest company he's renaming Adams
3:03 and he's going into the world of Adams.
3:05 as you can go.
3:05 He did a whole manifesto online.
3:07 So, Bedrock's my favorite big company exists in this space,
3:10 but in other parts of the space like mining, etc.
3:12 Travis wants to figure out how to how to make the world of atoms work with AI.
3:16 So, this is going to be a hopefully a huge
3:17 growth area for everyone in the next several years.
3:19 Man, that is wild.
3:22 Yeah.
3:21 What are you excited about?
3:23 You know, I'm America is back, man.
3:24 Like I said, I think I think I think
3:26 our country went through something very weird for 50 years.
3:28 All of a sudden, we had way too many lawyers from the early '7s.
3:31 We had this fiat currency.
3:32 We got rid of the gold standard.
3:34 We had all this bureaucracy sprout up.
3:37 I mean, it was almost like it was like it
3:39 was almost like the Soviet Union somehow it infiltrated us.
3:41 I don't know.
3:42 Something really bad happened where our culture went off the rails.
3:45 Workers weren't paid as much.
3:47 Finance got to be too big relative to workers.
3:49 I think it's a major problem.
3:50 I still think we got to fix that with, you know,
3:52 there's all these things were broken for 50 years.
3:54 And suddenly, and the airplanes didn't get better,
3:57 healthcare got more expensive.
3:58 Everything got broken.
3:59 Suddenly, it's all reversed.
4:00 Suddenly, healthcare is going to get cheaper.
4:01 Airplanes are going to get better and faster.
4:03 like government's gonna get less stupid with it with with this AI stuff.
4:06 All this manufacturing is coming back.
4:08 All of a sudden, we're building ships again with Dino.
4:10 Like America, China builds 230 times ships as we we can.
4:14 We're going to 100x it in America the next next several years.
4:16 Like all this stuff like he just, you know,
4:18 he's just he's he announced it himself and he just raised billions more, right?
4:20 There's all this stuff that's getting funded,
4:22 all the stuff that's working, all stuff that's growing.
4:24 Like America is going to be by far number one again.
4:28 And we just got to make sure we don't rip ourselves apart
4:30 and we don't let the left get in charge because they'll break it.
4:32 I love to hear that.
4:33 I love to hear that.
4:34 I got a hot question for you.
4:36 All right,
4:36 you ready, Joe?
4:40 Drone swarms just flew over Barksdale Air Force Base for a week straight.
4:45 This is where we keep nuclear B-52s.
4:47 Oh, yeah.
4:48 They resisted jamming.
4:49 They were customuilt and the military couldn't stop them.
4:53 Your company, Eperis,
4:54 literally builds the weapons designed to solve this problem.
4:58 So, what's actually going on here?
5:00 Is this a real foreign adversary probing our nuclear infrastructure?
5:04 Or is there any chance this is a scop,
5:07 a distraction from what's happening with Iran and everything else right now?
5:11 You know, it's a great question and I I almost texted my friends
5:14 in the Pentagon to ask them about this because I was wondering it too.
5:16 I probably should.
5:17 Huh.
5:18 Although although the reason they might not tell me is
5:20 that they know I'd probably tell everyone I talked to you.
5:22 So So I I don't have inside information.
5:24 I wish I did.
5:25 Um there that your your listeners 100% right.
5:29 Epris could shoot shoot shoot these things down.
5:30 I actually just posted something right before I
5:32 went on the show a couple hours ago.
5:34 Epris has a new autonomous uh thing where the truck drives autonomously,
5:37 opens up and fires autonomously at the drones.
5:40 You put a couple of these you put a couple of these to the base.
5:42 They take the drones down right away cuz see anti-jamming is one thing.
5:45 Epris is not just jamming.
5:46 Epis is frying the circuits.
5:48 Epis is literally applying like an insane amount
5:51 of energy all smooshed into a 10,000 of a second
5:54 and like and like using AI and everything to get
5:56 the power to hit the guy nitrite all at once.
5:58 and the burst just like is a cone of energy.
6:00 It just it fries these things.
6:01 So yes, uppers 100% could fry these and turn them off and you know,
6:06 so if we really need to, maybe they're going to adopt it.
6:08 So let's let's see.
6:09 That's I think that's the obvious solution.
6:12 Andy Lowry is coming here on Monday.
6:13 I think he is.
6:14 All right.
6:15 He's bringing one.
6:16 Oh, good.
6:16 Really?
6:17 He's bringing one.
6:17 We're going to get a walk around.
6:19 Let's get him.
6:20 We'll fry the neighbors.
6:21 Andy Andy's the CEO of Empress, man.
6:23 Don't fry the neighbors.
6:24 You'll get us in trouble.
6:25 The neighbors cars.
6:27 Uh, the problem is is once you fry some of these things,
6:30 you can't turn them back on.
6:30 They might wouldn't be very happy with you.
6:34 There's a followup.
6:35 If China takes Taiwan tomorrow and controls TSMC and those chip factories,
6:41 can we even continue to build drones and AI weapon systems?
6:46 So, first of all,
6:47 that's kind of what I was alluding to earlier about,
6:49 you know, if they do take Taiwan, what does that mean?
6:51 And you were talking about repurposing chips.
6:53 Yeah.
6:53 F first of all TSMC is part of like a massive ecosystem.
6:58 So a lot of the design, a lot of the work,
7:00 a lot of other things happen in America,
7:02 happen around the world, happen in ASML in Europe.
7:05 Like you couldn't just like take TSMC and just like own it for yourself.
7:08 Like it would it would stop working because you'd stop sending the designs,
7:10 you'd stop doing the work, you stop it, right?
7:13 I thought it was all centralized.
7:14 No, it's actually really interesting.
7:15 I think America actually does capture more
7:17 of the profits from the chip ecosystem than Taiwan does.
7:19 This is what people miss.
7:20 like they they definitely they definitely capture more
7:22 of the revenue because of like the cost, but if you look at the actual profits,
7:26 we're still capturing more than they are because we do so much of the work.
7:29 It it's a very distributed industry where a lot of that's
7:32 happening at Lamb Research and Applied Materials and all these companies
7:35 that maybe you haven't heard of that are in the Silicon
7:37 Valley that are that are part of the US still.
7:40 Uh and so so they couldn't just take it all away.
7:42 Now, that said, they could massively
7:44 slow down everything in global chip production.
7:46 They could definitely cut off uh all the newest stuff.
7:49 It would take a long time to redo it,
7:51 which is why we're trying to obviously build what we can here.
7:54 But listen, it it would set back AI by five or 10 years.
7:57 Would it stop us from building drones?
7:58 No.
7:59 Like we have another separate problem right now,
8:01 which is that we don't do enough rare earth refining,
8:03 which is something the Department of War has
8:05 done a really good job trying to change.
8:06 There's been at least a couple companies are putting
8:07 a lot of money into uh to, you know, they're going to mine rare earth,
8:10 they're going to refine rare earths,
8:12 and you need those things to be able to build the magnets and the drones motors.
8:15 Like most of the Ukrainian drones on both
8:17 sides involve China in their supply chain, which is not good for us.
8:20 That's like it's a shame right now.
8:21 That's what how it works.
8:22 So, we got to fix that.
8:23 But that's not necessarily just a TSMC problem.
8:26 That's a separate problem we got to fix that we're working on.
8:32 How I mean, you were talking about Elon, you know, getting diving into this
8:36 terafab.
8:36 Yeah.
8:37 How how I mean, you got to bring someone on who knows
8:39 more about it because it's it's a new thing.
8:40 Yeah.
8:41 Yeah.
8:41 Yeah.
8:41 I'm just curious.
8:42 What is the timeline?
8:45 Is there one?
8:47 I have nothing but respect for Elon as a number one builder in the world.
8:51 I think when you're a great entrepreneur,
8:53 at least if I speak for others as well and and for my own
8:57 things where I've built five or six pretty big companies,
9:00 like I think you almost have to trick yourself, at least for me,
9:02 into thinking it's going to be faster than it
9:04 is because otherwise you can't get yourself to do it.
9:05 You know what I'm saying?
9:06 Like cuz when you start one of these companies,
9:08 at least in my experience, maybe I'm just slower, but they always take longer.
9:11 They're always harder.
9:12 I think I think Elon is is has done the most amazing things,
9:15 but he's also made predictions where things take longer.
9:17 And that's I think that's just normal for a great entrepreneur.
9:19 So, I think it's just really hard to know how long things are going to take.
9:22 And I think whatever someone guesses is a great entrepreneur,
9:25 you could sometimes maybe add a few more years.
9:27 And so, I think this thing takes a while.
9:30 Uh that said, they're going really fast.
9:32 They have the best people in the world.
9:33 And it's really good for America that they're doing it.
9:35 So, I'm I'm rooting for him.
9:36 Is that an Austin Duke?
9:38 Yeah, it actually is.
9:39 Man, that is wild, man.
9:40 That place is so cool.
9:41 We're just finishing our STEM building from a new university right next
9:43 to SpaceX uh and Boring Company right there uh next to all this stuff.
9:48 We're going have a 30 acres and have this awesome building.
9:50 We're going to be doing they're actually helping us.
9:52 They're going to be doing like robotics and electrical
9:54 engineering and and all sorts of stuff there.
9:56 So, it's a it's a really fun area right now.
9:58 Bam.
9:58 That's cool.
9:59 University of Austin.
10:00 We're crushing it.
10:01 That's cool.
10:01 What are you guys doing over there at University of Austin?
10:04 We talked about it last time we were here.
10:06 Yeah, it's great.
10:06 The third class is joining right now.
10:08 These are the Oh Peter Thiel has already hired away a few of our a few
10:12 of our people from the first two classes and a bunch of them online.
10:15 You can go look.
10:16 They're doing all sorts of cool companies,
10:17 all sorts of cool internships with Boring Company and Palunteer
10:21 and all sorts of different groups we partner with.
10:23 Uh listen, these are amazing young people.
10:25 To to have a really top score, Sean, and then to turn down an Ivy League
10:29 or another top school and go to a new university,
10:31 you have to be an entrepreneur.
10:33 You have to have an opinion.
10:33 you know, you have to want to be part of like the, you know,
10:37 frankly, it's the country elite.
10:38 It's the new elite.
10:39 It's the people who don't want to be part of the old kind
10:41 of broken Harvard deal kind of kind of loser mess like CFR, you know,
10:45 guys who predict everything wrong about what's going to happen in the Middle
10:48 East and are just like part of the old kind of corrupt old guard.
10:51 Like they want to be part of the builders.
10:53 They want to be part of the the actual competent people who
10:55 think for themselves and don't just echo what you're supposed to say.
10:57 I think I think it's going really well.
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