The Joe Rogan ExperienceThe Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #1617 - Mike Baker

Joe Rogan and Mike Baker on ex-CIA Operative Explains Cyber War, China’s Rise, And American Chaos.

Joe RoganhostMike Bakerguest
Jun 27, 20242h 59mWatch on YouTube ↗
Chinese and Russian cyber operations, SolarWinds, and Microsoft Exchange hacksChina’s long-term strategy: intellectual property theft, military buildup, and regional dominanceVulnerabilities in U.S. critical infrastructure, especially power grids, and cyber warfare escalationForeign disinformation campaigns, social media echo chambers, and U.S. political polarizationCOVID-19: vaccines, public messaging, mask mandates, school closures, and risk perceptionCivil liberties, gun rights, and differing views on security versus freedomUFOs, secrecy in government programs, and speculation about advanced technology

In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Joe Rogan and Narrator, Joe Rogan Experience #1617 - Mike Baker explores ex-CIA Operative Explains Cyber War, China’s Rise, And American Chaos Joe Rogan and former CIA officer Mike Baker discuss global cyber warfare, focusing on sophisticated Russian and Chinese hacks, intellectual property theft, and the fragility of U.S. infrastructure and power grids.

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Ex-CIA Operative Explains Cyber War, China’s Rise, And American Chaos

  1. Joe Rogan and former CIA officer Mike Baker discuss global cyber warfare, focusing on sophisticated Russian and Chinese hacks, intellectual property theft, and the fragility of U.S. infrastructure and power grids.
  2. They explore China’s long‑term strategic ambitions—military, technological, economic—and how U.S. corporations and policymakers are responding, or failing to respond, to that challenge.
  3. Domestically, they dissect social-media-fueled division, foreign disinformation campaigns, pandemic responses, election distrust, and how these forces are eroding trust in institutions and each other.
  4. The conversation ranges widely into vaccines, civil liberties, guns, UFOs, old cars, health scares, and the future of human-technology integration, using Baker’s intelligence background to ground many of the geopolitical points.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

7 ideas

China is pursuing a decades-long plan to overtake the U.S. using cyber theft and industrial espionage.

Baker argues China’s strategy is to “hoover up everything” from IP to research, reverse engineer it, and bypass the cost and time of R&D, with recent Microsoft Exchange hacks being a major example.

U.S. critical infrastructure is highly vulnerable to cyber attacks that could be used in future conflicts.

Power grids are outdated, patchworked systems never designed for physical or cyber defense, and adversaries like China and Russia have been mapping vulnerabilities for years, preparing playbooks for potential escalation.

Foreign actors actively exploit U.S. social and political fault lines to create chaos and distrust.

Russia (and likely China and Iran) use covert online campaigns to push both sides of divisive issues—elections, vaccines, race, identity—simply to deepen polarization and undermine faith in democratic systems.

Inconsistent public health messaging has damaged trust, even when underlying science is evolving.

They highlight shifting guidance from authorities (e.g., Fauci on masks, risk estimates) and argue that medicine is inherently probabilistic, but the public expects certainty, which fuels skepticism and conspiracy thinking.

Election systems need both accessibility and verifiable integrity to avoid long-term legitimacy crises.

Baker insists all citizens should have easy access to voting, but procedures must be transparent and auditable enough that both sides can trust outcomes; otherwise distrust is weaponized by domestic actors and foreign adversaries.

Most people share similar basic goals, but algorithms and media incentives reward outrage over nuance.

Rogan and Baker argue that in everyday life, people largely get along, yet online ecosystems amplify extreme voices, reduce complex issues to tribal identity, and drown out centrist or pragmatic positions.

Technological integration with the human mind could be both a solution to misinformation and a threat to humanity.

Rogan speculates that future brain-computer interfaces might reveal intent and reduce propaganda’s power, while Baker is skeptical, fearing it won’t change basic human nature and could strip away the uncertainty that makes life human.

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

We better hope that we stay up there… because if it’s China or Russia at the top, they don’t view anything in an altruistic manner.

Mike Baker

The problem with cyber shenanigans is there’s no real clear definition… in cyberspace, coming up with an appropriate response hasn’t been done yet.

Mike Baker

Most of us get along. Most of us, Republicans or Democrats, don’t give a shit because they’re worried about their daily life.

Joe Rogan

If there’s an opportunity for fraud, I don’t think Republicans are less inclined than Democrats or vice versa. It’s just the way it works.

Mike Baker

Technology is increasing at a pace that biology can’t possibly keep up with… we still have the same tribal instincts we had 10,000 years ago.

Joe Rogan

QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE

5 questions

How should the U.S. practically balance engagement with China as an economic partner while countering its cyber and geopolitical aggression?

Joe Rogan and former CIA officer Mike Baker discuss global cyber warfare, focusing on sophisticated Russian and Chinese hacks, intellectual property theft, and the fragility of U.S. infrastructure and power grids.

What concrete steps could be taken in the next five years to harden U.S. infrastructure against the kind of cyber-physical attacks Baker describes?

They explore China’s long‑term strategic ambitions—military, technological, economic—and how U.S. corporations and policymakers are responding, or failing to respond, to that challenge.

How can democratic societies design social media and information systems that resist foreign manipulation without resorting to heavy-handed censorship?

Domestically, they dissect social-media-fueled division, foreign disinformation campaigns, pandemic responses, election distrust, and how these forces are eroding trust in institutions and each other.

What kind of election reforms would simultaneously maximize voter access and create the level of transparency needed to restore bipartisan trust in outcomes?

The conversation ranges widely into vaccines, civil liberties, guns, UFOs, old cars, health scares, and the future of human-technology integration, using Baker’s intelligence background to ground many of the geopolitical points.

If brain-computer interfaces or similar tech become viable, who should set the ethical boundaries for reading intent or thoughts, and how do we prevent authoritarian abuse?

EVERY SPOKEN WORD

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