Kragen Javier Sitaker
Sat, 14 Oct 2006 15:16:55 -0700
I've been downloading this video over the last few days (can't do this from Google Video, because it cuts you off after some number of minutes of downloading --- I downloaded it in a flash to a server in San Jose and have been rsyncing it from there when I have internet access). I haven't seen a transcript of it before, so I thought I would write one. I believe the video is at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6150320548187842685 The part of the video I've downloaded so far is a little over 22 minutes, but the transcript is considerably snappier to read. The video is probably more fun to watch. Mplayer at 75% speed is pretty good for transcription at my typing speed, but I still missed most of the hesitation noises at that speed. I think I have a little under half of the video, and I may get around to posting a full transcript. Google Author Series George Soros & Eric Schmidt August 9, 2006 Anonymous Introducing Woman: Good afternoon. Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to 900 Alta. For those of you who have not been here, we're pleased to host this in this building. So I think people know, we have the Authors at Google series, and we've attracted a lot of fantastic authors over the last 6-8 months that we've been doing this, and I think none as spectacular as this one, Mr. Soros, the author of 8 books, is here to talk about his latest book. Now, because of the prominence and, uh, interest in this author, we're doing a bit of an unusual Authors at Google, where we have our CEO, who needs no introduction, Eric Schmidt, who is here to interview. And so a new format, I'm pleased to introduce Mr. Eric Schmidt and Mr. George Soros. [applause] Eric Schmidt: Well, thank you all, thank you all for being here, and thanks to George for, for coming. Um, you know, this --- my view of Mr. Soros is that he is one of the most important people in the world today in terms of the impact that he's had. Um, he grew up in Eastern Europe where his, in my reading of your background, your understanding of the world was much shaped by what you saw, by the Nazis, and by socialism, and by the Fascism of the time. But because he's a clever guy, he eventually escaped and went to London, where he became quite the financial wizard. And for a few decades, George managed to invent a whole new industry, which we generally know now as financial, financial derivatives, uh, currency trading, and things like that. My first meeting with you was actually at the World Economic Forum about ten years ago, and I happened to go from there to Malaysia, where I happened to meet with the Prime Minister of Malaysia, who spent a great deal of time complaining about you. [laughter] And I thought, "Wow, a dictator really hates George Soros." [laughter] Pretty interesting. [laughter] So a few years later we had dinner, and I asked George, "What kind of an impact can you have on the world?" And I didn't quite understand, because I was just, I guess, stupid or something, how, how much impact he'd already had. In history as it is fully understood, people will understand that the financial support and the structural support that he and his organization, in their first attempts at philanthropy, helped the Polish Solidarity movement, uh, freedom movements in Hungary, and in fact in our conversation a few years ago, third or fourth conversation, he described to me his objective, which was to help use the resources that he'd accumulated in his life to promote open society, open discussion. And I said, "How do you do that?" And he said, "Let's go and fund intellectuals, let's fund universities, let's fund smart people, and they'll take care of everything else." And, indeed, he replicated that model around the world. So, in more recent times, George has started to work on what he sees as the role of the United States, the US Presidency, and the political climate, not just in the United States, but about terrorism, which has resulted in this remarkable new book, The Age of Infallibility. The Age of Fallibility, excuse me --- um, infallibility is the, is the other side, I guess. So, I guess with that, we should say welcome to Google. George Soros: Thank you, thank you. [applause] I have to corr- it's a very nice introduction, and I appreciate it; I think that my role in the financial markets you've exaggerated, because I did not invent hedge funds, and I know really quite not enough about derivatives and so on. [laughter] Eric: Um, since four of the smartest and top people who manage that entire industry were hired, nurtured, and promoted by you, I think your, your credit is due. [laughter] But, in any case, congratulations on your tremendous success. Let me ask you a topic that's bothering me to get us started. Um, and let me observe what I, what I read in the press today. Um, in Iraq, there are a lot of evidence that there's an emerging civil war; um, it's been well, est-, well, relatively well established that the original justification for the invasion of Iraq was, was not supported by the evidence; we now have a very, very difficult ongoing battle between um, Lebanon and a set of people who are generally agreed to as, as terrorists, and Israel and, and there's a great debate as to the tactics there. How did we get here? What did we do wrong? And what caused all of this? George: It's a very good question. Because the situation really is very serious, and deteriorating at, at a rather fast pace. And, and the, what started out as a false metaphor --- the war on terror --- uh, which was a, an expression applied to an abstraction --- uh, has actually had this unintended, I think largely unintended, adverse consequence, of actually becoming now a real war. And the United States, that was at the time the most powerful nation on the Earth --- still is, in a way --- but it's dominated the world's agenda and set the agenda for the world that, that the rest of the world have to respond to --- in response to 9/11, declared war on terror. And that set the agenda for the world, for the world. And now we have a real war. So, if, it's amazing how, I mean, this, in a way, it's a backward way of getting into my book. In the book, I start with a, with a philosophy, a conceptual framework, where I explain the relationship between our thinking and the reality in which we participate. And I argue that because we are both observers and participants at the same time, our understanding is imperfect. But our biased, distorted understanding actually shapes reality. And this is a, really an amazing example of how a false perception, ah, can actually shape reality, and we now have a really serious war on our hand. Eric: Now, in your past work, in the last few years, you've spent a great deal of your time and money, um, essentially trying to, uh, promote politicians other than President Bush, and, um, many of the others are people who are opposed to the current policies. Um, you donated a great deal of money at one point, to, um, a certain set of political action committees and so forth. So, not only have you taken a position, but you've put your money where your mouth was. And you've also drawn quite a bit of very, very vitriolic criticism for all of that in the United States. Why have you decided that President Bush and the current administration, um, in your words, is, is so terrible? George: Well, you know, uh, when I have made more money than I, than was good for me [laughter], I decided what, what it is that I really care about, and I set up a foundation to promote open society throughout the world. And, uh, I got very much involved in various coun- countries, particularly in the former Soviet empire. And there I was standing up for principles of open society. And then, to my greatest amazement, I found that open society as I understand it is endangered in the United States. And so I felt obliged, uh, having sort of backed a lot of people who stuck their neck out and really took very serious risks, uh, to actually also to stand up and to stick my neck out, not taking anything like the risks that, that they had taken in their countries. So, uh, that's really what got me, uh, so involved in domestic politics. And I felt that as a citizen of the United States, somebody who has chosen this country as his home, uh, and seeing that the country is moving in the wrong direction, I felt that I ought to get involved in America. And that's, at the time, I felt that if we could, uh, terminate President Bush's hold on the White House, that we could short-circuit what I think is a kind of a bubble. I called it, in my previous book, I called it a bubble of American supremacy: a false idea which nevertheless becomes part of reality. And I'm afraid that it would have been a wonderful thing to short-circuit it. But now we have the consequences. And it really is, I think, uh, certainly Israel is now endangered in its existence, and I think our dominant position in the world has diminished to a much greater extent than even that I expected at the time when I wrote "The Bubble of American Supremacy." Eric: Now, in this new book, the message is, is about how ideas create a misperception that then creates a bad outcome. But I, I suspect most of the people in the audience and watching, while they're unhappy, really want to know what are some solutions. George: But before, I just want to make, make, make, interject, that it doesn't always work that way; that, actually, ideas can also have, uh, very good outcomes. And there is, actually, I think probably in some ways Google is an, is an example of a co-, of a company that had an idea, and it has really taken off. So not everything turns sour. Uh, some things actually have a positive outcome. Eric: One of the powers of information, which of course is what Google is promoting, is that information, especially if it's done selectively, can be misused. George: Right. Eric: And that's always a great danger with more and more information. George: Well, the problem is, you see, that it's, you can't really base your decisions on information alone. Because you have to, when you're making decisions which have to do with the future, you want to accomplish something, and what the result will be --- that is not information. That's conjecture. And so you have to sort of bring some kind of perspective on the world to make those decisions. And that's where you have to introduce some judgment and bias. And that's not information. And it's not knowledge. So the idea that you can sort of base decisions on knowledge --- that was the, in a way, the idea that was prevalent in the Enlightenment. And that was a fertile fallacy. So the opposite of a false metaphor is a fertile fallacy. And the Enlightenment was a fertile fallacy. But now we've discovered, I think, after having 200 years of Enli- Enlightenment, that it isn't as we imagined it at the time: that, uh, that, you know, there is the intellect, and there is reality. And the two are separate. And you bring the intellect to bear on reality; you acquire knowledge, and you can base your decisions on that knowledge. It doesn't work that way, because we are part of reality. And, and as our understanding is imperfect, we bring our bias, and that becomes part of reality. So the reality is much more complicated than that idea. Eric: Well, and there's also large cultural components for the other side. George: Yes. Eric: Information, symbolism, the role of religion, and so forth, which I've all about. I'd like, given that most of our audience have received a copy of the book, but have not had a chance to, to read it in the last few minutes, um, (as quick as people are here), let's talk a little about what, what the conclusions or what the key points --- why did you write this book? What's so special about "The Age of Fallibility"? George: Well, uh, let's say two, two points. One, that this, I want to bring home the idea that the war on terror is a terrible mistaken false metaphor that brings terrible results. That's a difficult point to get across, because everybody now knows that the invasion of Iraq was a, was a, was a terrible mistake; but people still think, on both sides of the political spectrum, in terms of the war on terror. And I would like to undermine or repudiate that metaphor. So that's one part of the message. And the other one is: What is America's role in the world? What should be America's role? What, what, how has America got to be different, to regain the position that it is currently in the process of, of losing? And I argue that, if you want to be the leader of the world, then you have a special responsibility to be concerned with the welfare of the world --- not only, let's say, your own constituents. The rest of the world doesn't have a vote, uh, in Congress. Nevertheless, American leadership would have to be concerned about issues of common concern to, uh, for humanity. And we've got several of them on which our continued prosperity and existence depend. Like, take, uh, climate change. We've really got to do something about that, and unless America takes leadership, we will not be able to get common action. And here, for instance, the administration is lagging behind the public. The public is now aware of it. The administration is in denial. Uh, nuclear nonproliferation. It's a much bigger threat now than it was in the Cold War, because then there were only basicallly two players, and now you've got many players. So, that's another issue. Then, what do you, what do you do about tyrants like Saddam Hussein? Uh, the way we went about it was the wrong way. But the world has a number of these tyrants around, and we need, do need to do something about it, and it does need some legitimacy, some international cooperation to deal with the likes of Saddam. So just three examples and no more. Eric: Let's go back to your first point, which was the, the false metaphor of the poor impact of the term "war on terror". It is not in question that the United States was attacked by al-Qaeda, that more than 3000 innocent people were killed in a terrible terrorist attack, which affected the country and all of us in a very, very sad way on September 11th, so you're not questioning that? George: No. Eric: It is a war, isn't it? George: No, no it isn't. And it ought not to be. Because war by its very nature creates innocent victims. There's no way to wage war without creating innocent victims. Now, if you wage war against a, an unknown hidden enemy like terrorists, the danger of [cellphone ring] hitting the wrong people is that much greater. And then when you, you wage war on an abstraction, like terror, well, there is no, there is a multitude of sins that you can commit under that rubric, and so war, taken literally, is the wrong way to fight terrorism. Eric: So what is the answer to that part of your point? If it's not a war, but we are threatened, what's the answer? George: You have to, you have to defend yourself against terrorism. You've also got to, to take into account what actually is behind that terrorist. In other words, don't put all, all manifestations of a certain kind under one rubric, one abstraction: "terrorist". You now have, you know, al-Qaeda, you have Hezbollah, you've got Hamas. Uh, and you have got the insurrection in, in, in Iraq. Now, uh, Hamas was brought into existence by the occupation of, uh, Palestine by Israel. Uh, Hezbollah in Lebanon was brought into existence, uh, by the Israeli occupation of, uh, southern Lebanon. The Iraqi insurrection was brought into existence by our occupation of, of, of Iraq. So, you know, if you just sort of, of, of, of declare war on terror, you actually recreate a lot of terrorists in the process of hitting innocent victims, because that is in fact what brings on, uh, terrorism. Now, that's not to excuse al-Qaeda --- I mean, there's no, I can't see any justification, uh, for it. So, but you can't sort of separate yourself from the consequences of your actions and say, "Well, terrorists, you have to wage war on terror, and you can, anybody who can be possibly accused of being in that category, or any, anybody who happens to be standing in the way, uh, you can do whatever you like." So, this is, accepting this false metaphor separates us from them. You see, we are the victims, they are the perpetrators. And so we can hit them. But who are they? And then we hit the wrong people. And they see us in the same light as we see them. So this is where this incredible, uh, um, difference in perceptions has arisen: that where America today is seen as a threat in the rest of the world. Eric: Well, I'm sure that the pictures in the Arab world of innocent people being killed are not helping the sides on either side, and are certainly inflaming local, local population. Another point that you make here and you've made before is that America, because we have been the sole superpower, has a distinctly different responsibility, a higher responsibility. And you've used those, those words in one way or the other. Can you explain that? What is it that we should do differently, or why is the standard different for us, as opposed to another country? George: Well, you see, the current world order is based on sovereign states. And there are many of them. And they all promote their self-interest, they are guided by their interests. And so are we, and so we should be. But, there are common interests that we have, like maintaining peace, etc.... [my current copy of the video ends here: 1351 seconds --- 22 minutes, 31 seconds]