Palmer Luckey Develops Mass-Production Cruise Missiles Built in Auto Factories
"One of the key things that Anduril has done that is different from many other companies is design our cruise missiles so that they can be very easily manufactured by automotive-style assembly lines, workers, and manufacturing equipment. Most other companies design very exquisite missiles that are built by high-end aerospace factories, but by building missiles with 90% less parts, they can be built in 10% of the time."
About this episode
Tom Bilyeu examines a weekend of major geopolitical upheaval on this episode, beginning with the sudden death of Senator Lindsey Graham at 71 shortly after visiting Ukraine. Graham died from aortic dissection attributed to cardiovascular disease, but the timing—immediately after a Ukrainian weapons facility he visited was allegedly struck and while he appeared on an Iranian hit list—sparked numerous conspiracy theories blaming Russia, Iran, or Mossad. Bilyeu argues the medical evidence points to poor diet rather than assassination.
The episode's primary focus is escalating Middle East conflict, with the U.S. conducting its largest strikes against Iran since the June ceasefire, hitting roughly 140 military targets. Trump warned of 1,000 additional missiles ready for launch after Iran allegedly attacked a container ship one hour after promising cooperation in negotiations. Bilyeu explores why diplomatic efforts consistently fail with Iran, attributing it to fundamental cultural and values misalignment between Western negotiators and Iranian hardliners who view concessions as weakness. He predicts Trump will continue escalating strikes on Iranian infrastructure until the country is economically devastated.
In surprising economic news, oil prices remain stable around $72 despite active warfare in the Strait of Hormuz, defying predictions of $200 per barrel. Hedge fund manager Ken Griffin attributes this to unexpected demand elasticity from China, while economist Jeff Snider warns it signals dangerous demand destruction from a weakening global economy. The U.S. and Canada are edging toward trade war as Trump refuses to renew the USMCA and threatens 100% tariffs after Canada slashed tariffs on Chinese EVs and deepened ties with Beijing.
Bilyeu highlights Palmer Luckey's Anduril missiles designed for mass production in automotive factories as a breakthrough in American manufacturing and deterrence strategy against China. In technology news, Apple sued OpenAI for systematic trade secret theft through former employees, potentially devastating OpenAI's upcoming IPO. The episode concludes with a military security breach where Army nuclear scientist Andrew Hug was caught on hidden camera allegedly divulging classified information to an attractive woman in a classic honeypot operation.
Key takeaways
- U.S. conducted largest Iran bombing campaign since ceasefire with 140 targets hit and Trump threatening 1,000 additional missiles after alleged Iranian container ship attack
- Senator Lindsey Graham died at 71 from aortic dissection shortly after Ukraine visit and appearance on Iranian hit list, sparking multiple assassination conspiracy theories
- Palmer Luckey's Anduril developed mass-production cruise missiles using 90% fewer parts designed for automotive factory manufacturing to deter Chinese invasion of Taiwan
- Oil prices remain stable around $72 despite Strait of Hormuz conflict, either from Chinese demand flexibility or signaling hidden global economic weakness according to analysts
- Apple sued OpenAI for industrial-scale trade secret theft through former employees who brought hardware parts to interviews and downloaded confidential manufacturing documents
- U.S. and Canada moving toward trade war as Trump refuses USMCA renewal and threatens 100% tariffs after Canada cut Chinese EV tariffs and deepened Beijing ties
- Army nuclear scientist Andrew Hug placed on leave after O'Keefe Media Group caught him on hidden camera allegedly disclosing classified nuclear weapons information to attractive woman