Jun 3, 2024
On this week's
Stansberry Investor
Hour, Dan and Corey
welcome Dave Collum back to the
show. Dave is a professor of
chemistry at Cornell University and associate editor of
the
Journal of Organic
Chemistry. He's
outspoken about many topics and issues ranging from
finance to politics and
everything in between. And he brings this same
no-holds-barred
attitude to today's
podcast. Dave starts off
by discussing the link between vaccines and autism, why "live"
attenuated vaccines are
better than "dead" ones, and the effects of the COVID-19 vaccine.
He specifically mentions
how children in the U.S. receive about 72 vaccinations
during
childhood, while children in
Europe receive only three. He also argues that the war
in
Ukraine is a direct result of
NATO interfering and forcing Russian President Vladimir
Putin's
hand. (5:31)
Next, Dave talks all about the
U.S. government. He breaks down why the U.S. has
never
supported burgeoning
democracies abroad and why it's a better move geopolitically for
the
country to work with a single
leader or a select few in power. He compares President
Joe
Biden with former President
Donald Trump and asserts that Biden wouldn't be able to
make
tough calls in a time of
crisis. After, Dave makes his case for why we're headed for a
40-year
bear market that will drag down
Americans' standard of living. (24:27)
Lastly, Dave contends that AI
risks taking the human element out of everything,
dampening
creativity, and cluttering
scientific literature. He then discusses the role of pedophilia
in geopolitics and the
prevalence of child trafficking. And he leaves younger listeners
with some sage financial
advice. (45:39)
Dan and Corey close the show by
discussing the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge
– the core personal consumption
expenditures ("PCE") index. The newest core PCE data
shows that inflation has
stabilized at 2.8% for the past three readings. Even though this
is down from much higher
levels in 2022, Dan and Corey point out that everyday
consumers are still
struggling with far higher prices while their paychecks don't keep
pace. (1:11:12)