Engineering vs Lawyerly Societies: The US-China Competition with Dan Wang
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Dan Wang is a research fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institute and author of "Breakneck: China's Quest to Engineer the Future." After spending six years living in Hong Kong, Beijing, and Shanghai (2017-2023), Dan witnessed China's technology growth, the US-China trade and tech war, Xi Jinping's increasing authoritarianism, and three years of zero-COVID pandemic controls firsthand.
What you'll learn:
- Dan's framework of "engineering societies vs lawyerly societies" for understanding the US-China competition
- How China deliberately promoted engineers to power—by 2002, all nine Politburo Standing Committee members had engineering degrees
- Why the one-child policy and zero-COVID demonstrate the dangers of literal-minded engineering applied to society
- How America transformed from building the transcontinental railroad and Apollo missions to being unable to fix its subway systems
- Why lawyers took over American governance in the 1960s and created a self-reinforcing system
- The stark reality: China builds 500 gigawatts of solar capacity annually vs America's 50, and has 30 nuclear plants under construction vs zero
- Why China's electricity advantage could determine who wins the AI race—not just better models
- How American AI leadership is threatened by power constraints and Chinese researchers potentially returning home
- Why robotics applications of AI matter more than reasoning models for geopolitical competition
- The dual reality of America: trillion-dollar tech companies exist alongside broken infrastructure that only works for the wealthy
- Dan's writing process: traveling, eating (twice), reading novels and history, and being deliberately provocative
- The future of US-China competition in semiconductors, aviation, manufacturing, and whether America's technological lead is sustainable
In this episode, we cover:
(00:00) Introduction and Dan's AI/electricity thesis
(01:15) Dan's journey from San Francisco tech to China analyst
(03:40) Engineering society vs lawyerly society framework
(04:21) Why engineers running governments can be dangerous
(05:46) The one-child policy: designed by a missile scientist
(06:56) China's path from Mao to engineering-focused leadership
(09:51) America's transformation from builder to regulator (1960s shift)
(11:08) Can the pendulum swing back? Housing, transit, and infrastructure failures
(13:12) The self-reinforcing nature of lawyerly societies
(14:12) Yale Law ambition vs Stanford engineering ambition
(16:13) Is there bipartisan consensus on building?
(17:41) Why left and right can't agree on solutions
(19:32) China's engineering design flaws and authoritarian feedback loops
(22:19) US technological advantages: semiconductors, AI, aviation
(23:07) The electricity bottleneck: China's massive power advantage
(24:31) If AI is everything, what should America do?
(26:29) Why Dan doesn't buy the "AI is everything" premise
(27:27) Robotics as the real AI battleground
(29:35) Silicon Valley codes, China builds power plants
(30:37) Anti-AI populism emerging on left and right
(33:41) Dan's meta process: philosophy, eating, traveling, reading, being provocative
(37:20) China's rural infrastructure and redistribution through building
(40:39) Peter Thiel question: acknowledging China's dual reality
(44:54) America's core tension: works great for the rich, broken for everyone else
(46:35) Will China get stuck in the 2010s like Japan in the 1980s?
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