Chapter
Overton Window and Trade Blind Spots
The Overton Window and the trade blind spots that the U.S. has developed, as so many elements are necessary for national survival are off-shored, but with respect to many other things, it is fine for the U.S. to get them through trade, without making everything expensive, such as televisions and iPhones.
Clips
Discussions on the potential for a Cold War between the United States and China, and the impact it could have on technology, including the cost of electronics and the investment in Chinese factories that have contributed to the growth of the manufacturing industry.
45:36 - 47:24 (01:47)
Summary
Discussions on the potential for a Cold War between the United States and China, and the impact it could have on technology, including the cost of electronics and the investment in Chinese factories that have contributed to the growth of the manufacturing industry.
ChapterOverton Window and Trade Blind Spots
EpisodeE5: WHO's incompetence, kicking off Cold War II, China's grand plan, 100X'ing America's efficiency
PodcastAll-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
Instead of investing in a wall to prevent immigration from Central and South America, we should invest in building production capacity and manufacturing in those countries to create jobs and compete with China as a block.
47:24 - 49:54 (02:29)
Summary
Instead of investing in a wall to prevent immigration from Central and South America, we should invest in building production capacity and manufacturing in those countries to create jobs and compete with China as a block.
ChapterOverton Window and Trade Blind Spots
EpisodeE5: WHO's incompetence, kicking off Cold War II, China's grand plan, 100X'ing America's efficiency
PodcastAll-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
The Overton window is the minimally viable acceptable surface area for dialogue which, if exceeded, starts to get extreme.
49:53 - 55:18 (05:24)
Summary
The Overton window is the minimally viable acceptable surface area for dialogue which, if exceeded, starts to get extreme. On the US's current reliance on international trade, Off the Chain host analyzes our blind spots that have caused us to offsource so many essential elements of national survival, which could be easily acquired through trade in other sectors such as apparel or toys.