Hello dear show notes readers!
This week Dan and I open on the image that everyone seems to have fixated on — Jensen Huang in his black leather jacket on the Anchorage tarmac, allegedly traveling with just a backpack — and from there we slide into the actual substance of what happened at the Trump–Xi summit. The deliverable was, in Dan's word, frameworks rather than specifics: no signed trade deals, no headline numbers, but a tentative agreement to stand up a bicameral US-China trade council to replace what we ended up calling, with a straight face, "trade agreements by tweet."
The thing that kept jumping out at me was the quiet admission underneath the framework talk. China and the US sitting down to formalize a direct two-party institution, with Russia visibly excluded. "You're a menace, but you ultimately don't matter," as Dan said. The choke-point math is what makes it real: 20 percent of global oil through Hormuz, half of the global container traffic through the Strait of Taiwan, and the UAE laying pipe to route around the first one. Oil will have a relief valve. Container ships won't.
From there we end up where the show always seems to end up these days — building material for what I keep calling our Promethean candidate. Dan introduces a frame I think we're going to be reaching for again: the atom economy. The bits era is over, atoms are next, and the next CapEx wave is energy grid, sensor networks, smart-cooling infrastructure — the public-infrastructure backbone that everyone plugs into. Tragedy of the commons, basically: nobody's market alone will fund this, and that's why it has to be policy. I revive my six-year single-term presidency idea, except this time the rationale is industrial-policy continuity — you vote for the direction, then you watch it actually get built across years two through five.
We wind up in the deep, dark forest of US sales tax administration. Dan's lived experience here is its own argument. Forty-eight filings a month across nested Colorado jurisdictions, by his estimate 85 percent of small businesses out of compliance, and an entire shadow industry of compliance labor that has mostly migrated to the Philippines and El Salvador. I caught myself realizing that the compliance burden is effectively a tax on Americans that funds growth in other countries. That can't be how this is supposed to work.
Thanks for sticking with us. Have a good week, and as always — go build something. We'll see you next time.
Cheers,
Sean
We said some things. Here's how we did.
🟢 = Nailed it | 🟡 = Close enough | 🔴 = Whiffed it
🟢 Strait of Hormuz ≈ 20% of global oil Sean (~04:20): "the Strait of Hormuz, which is 20% of the global oil supply." The EIA's most recent chokepoint analysis puts roughly 20% of global petroleum liquids trade through Hormuz. Sean is in the right neighborhood.
🟡 Strait of Taiwan ≈ 50% of global container traffic Sean (~04:20): "50% of the global container traffic passes through the Strait of Taiwan." The Strait of Taiwan does carry a very large share of Asia–US-bound container traffic, and roughly half of the global container fleet passes through it each year. But the more commonly-cited "global chokepoint" headline is the Strait of Malacca (around 25–30% of global trade by value). Sean's figure is defensible for ship-counts but is easy to misread as "50% of all global trade by value." Partial credit, with a footnote.
🟢 Tariff trajectory: 47.5% from a May-2025 peak around 127% Sean (~05:18): "tariffs are down to about 47.5% at the current state. So from 127.2 of May of 2025." This tracks with the Peterson Institute and Tax Foundation effective-rate trackers — peak China-applicable tariffs in May 2025 were in the high-120s, and they've come down through 2025 negotiations into the high-40s. Within rounding.
🟢 2026 is year-1 of the 15th Five-Year Plan Dan, reading Google's AI Overview (~12:21): "2026 is the first year in the running five-year plan. This is the 15th five-year plan." Correct — the 14th plan ran 2021–2025; the 15th plan runs 2026–2030.
🟡 China youth unemployment "like 25%" Dan (~14:08): "youth unemployment there is like 25%, something crazy." The pre-2024 NBS series did reach 21.3% in June 2023 before publication was suspended. Under the revised methodology (excluding students searching for work), the 2025 figures have run roughly 14–17%. The framing is directionally correct — youth unemployment is structurally elevated — but the specific "25%" figure was the pre-revision number; current readings are lower. Partial credit.
🟢 Charlie Munger maxim Dan (~41:09): "Charlie Munger's show me the incentives and I'll show you the outcome." Correctly attributed; the maxim is one of Munger's most widely-quoted lines.
🔴 "Funded through tariffs and property tax" pre-income-tax Sean (~41:25): "Without the income tax, we were funded through tariffs and property tax." Pre-1913, the federal government was funded primarily through tariffs and excise taxes (whiskey, tobacco, etc.) — not property tax. Property tax is and has been primarily a state and local revenue source. The big idea (federal revenue used to come from somewhere other than income tax) is right; the specific second category is wrong.
🟡 "Early 19th century" growth in federal scope Sean (~41:37): "It really grew in size in the early 19th century, particularly through the war." Sean almost certainly meant early 20th century — the 16th Amendment authorizing federal income tax was ratified in 1913, and the major federal-scope expansions were New Deal–era. Verbal slip on the century, but the historical thrust is correct.
🟡 "44% of US GDP is small business" Sean / Dan (~32:05): "44% of USA GDP is small businesses." The most recent SBA Office of Advocacy figure puts small businesses at roughly 43.5% of US GDP. Close enough.
🟢 Federal government as the largest US employer Sean (~29:43): "the federal government, I'm pretty sure" is the largest US employer. Walmart is the largest private employer (~1.6M). The federal government employs roughly 2.1M civilians plus ~1.3M active-duty military — so in aggregate, Sean is right.
Final Score: 5🟢 / 4🟡 / 1🔴 The geopolitical math holds up; the tax-history detour wanted one more pass before it left the room. Strong on what mattered.