Why the West Can't Defend Itself: How Material Scarcity Is Reshaping Global Power with Craig Tindale
The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens
Nate Hagens
4.8 • 549 Ratings
🗓️ 14 January 2026
⏱️ 102 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
For decades, the West has outsourced its own material production to other countries, in favor of lower costs and short-term returns over more expensive, long-duration investments like mining and manufacturing. But while this has seemed like a success on the surface, it has left us with a society based on consumption, unable to produce what we need on our own. What are the deeper costs of this long-term offshoring – including for our geopolitical, climate, and technological ambitions?
In this conversation, Nate is joined by materials expert and investor Craig Tindale, who explores the profound vulnerabilities facing Western economies by what he calls "Industrialization 2.0." Craig argues that decades of central banking policies favoring consumption and short-term returns have led the West to offshore virtually all materials production and processing to China – limiting the West's ability to defend itself, as well as rebuild industrial capacity to address the growing technological needs of climate and AI. Tindale also introduces his "four clocks" framework, which describes how corporate quarterly cycles, 10-20 year climate urgency, immediate defense needs, and continuous consumption addiction are all ticking at different speeds and pulling society in incompatible directions. Furthermore, he posits that Silicon Valley's "unspoken bet" is on human obsolescence, with capital flowing to robot owners rather than human workers.
How do all of these pieces – monetary policy, critical materials, climate action, geopolitical risk, and technological displacement – fit together to create a perfect storm for humanity's future? Why might the only path to a circular economy be "through the valley of death" – forced by necessity rather than choice? And what types of practical investments and technological innovations are needed to make our societies more resilient in the face of impending geopolitical and economic turbulence?
(Conversation recorded on December 10th, 2025)
About Craig Tindale:
Craig Tindale is a private investor who has spent nearly four decades working in software development, business strategy, and infrastructure planning, including in leadership positions at Telstra, Oracle, and IBM. Additionally, he has direct experience working in east-to-west supply chains, including as the CEO and Asia Regional Director for DataDirect Technologies.
He's now pivoted to investing in groundbreaking ideas such as drone reforestation through Air Seed Technologies, and uses his knowledge of Chinese industrial strategy and Western tech demand to identify the choke points in Critical Metals markets. Most recently he released the white paper, Critical Materials: A Strategic Analysis, which offers a systems synthesis on how the race for rare earths and the return of material constraints is shaping geopolitical relationships.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | We need energy security. What's central to this is our central banking. |
| 0:04.5 | We've created a situation where the short-term cost of capital is better suited to software, |
| 0:10.5 | where you can invest a lot of capital and get a quick return. |
| 0:14.2 | But things like mines and manufacturing and solar panels are long-term investments. |
| 0:20.0 | They cost a lot of capital up front. |
| 0:22.2 | We worked into a throwaway society that can no longer produce things, |
| 0:26.5 | it can no longer defend itself, |
| 0:28.3 | that can no longer battle the wars of, |
| 0:31.7 | whether they're military conflicts of the traditional variety, |
| 0:35.3 | or whether they're the war of climate. We can no longer take |
| 0:39.3 | actions to create a sustainable and resilient society. You're listening to the Great |
| 0:48.5 | Simplification. I'm Nate Higgins. On this show, we describe how energy, the economy, the environment, and human |
| 0:55.7 | behavior all fit together and what it might mean for our future. By sharing insights from |
| 1:01.3 | global thinkers, we hope to inform and inspire more humans to play emergent roles in |
| 1:07.4 | the coming great simplification. |
| 1:17.6 | Today I'm joined by private investor Craig Tyndale for a macro-level discussion on how energy, technology, |
| 1:22.2 | geopolitics, and especially rare earth metals, |
| 1:25.5 | are now actively shaping our world. |
| 1:27.9 | Craig has spent nearly four decades working in software development, business strategy, and |
| 1:32.2 | infrastructure planning, including in leadership positions at Oracle, IBM, and Telstra. |
| 1:39.0 | Additionally, he has direct experience working in East to West supply chains, including |
| 1:43.5 | as the CEO and Asia Director |
... |
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