café snake - Polymarket et JD Vance dans l'groupchat [Extrait Patreon]

Episode Date: April 1, 2025

Patreon : patreon.com/cafesnakeMounir couvre l'ajout accidentel du rédacteur en chef du magazine The Atlantic à une conversation de groupe sur Signal où le VP JD Vance ainsi que tous les plus h...auts dirigeants américains planifiaient une opération militaire. Daphné revient sur Polymarket, la plateforme de paris en ligne, en la considérant comme un organe médiatique avec un parti pris éditorial.Ghibli AI, Élections Semaine 1, IShowSpeed en Chine, Golf du Mexique (?) +++++

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear for an hour. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that movie. It's coffee snake. Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear for an hour. I was really frustrated.
Starting point is 00:00:10 I don't watch that movie. It's coffee snake. Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear for an hour. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that movie. It's coffee snake. Hello, I'm Daphne.
Starting point is 00:00:18 I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear for an hour. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that movie. It's coffee snake. Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear for an hour. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that! Today it's an entirely available episode on our Patreon. Patreon.com bar oblique Café Snake. You have access to just one
Starting point is 00:00:39 excerpt for the new Café Snake auditors. One episode out of two is available entirely, only on our Patreon. Thank you to everyone who has already subscribed, everyone who wants to do it. And by the way, you listen to Kaffee Snake, it's the podcast of the year according to the show Dans les Média which was broadcast on TV Quebec. Yay, thank you very much to those who have... A bottle of champagne on the plane! So the price of the ballad has generated intense conversations. We made our choice on a walk that has recently appeared.
Starting point is 00:01:06 Café Snake. Thank you very much to those who voted for us, Agues. Yeah, well, more importantly, thank you to everyone who listens. Café Snake, everyone who shares, the mouth stop. Café Snakers are strong. What are you going to talk about today, my name? Today I'm going to come back to what we call in the United States the Single Gate. So the incident with the chief editor of the magazine The Atlantic,
Starting point is 00:01:28 which was added in a group chat, in a group conversation, which included several of the top leaders of the United States, including the Vice President and the National Security Advisor. How he was able to actually assist in planning a military operation in Yemen, and all the discussions that followed this controversy. What are you going to talk about today Daphne? I'm going to come back. I see all the comments we have on the Patreon, the suggestions of subjects. All the subjects seem really interesting and I'm thinking I'm going to cover them at some point. But that's not what I'm doing today. I'm coming back to our speculative reality concept and I'm going to re-investigate the little polymarket, the online predictive market,
Starting point is 00:02:07 rising in prominence during the American elections. So without further ado, place O... DG News! Trourou! You want my trick? Deep fried, juicy lookin' breast, swing stick thighs. You want my trick?
Starting point is 00:02:20 Deep fried, juicy lookin' breast, swing sportin'. I'm like if a hell belly hick was a big booty bitch runnin' low and... We're just in the morning at the National Assembly for the Bayon for expropriation to favor the multi-billionaire Stablex who will blow up toxic waste that comes for 50% of the United States. A real shame. The CAC is a real shame. I'm not strong about that for the waste of the others. Ramadan Mubarak. A real shame.
Starting point is 00:02:57 The CAC is a real shame. Monday, Muslims are responsible for an egg pincer. Tuesday, they spread bedspreads in public transport. Wednesday, women wear the veil, threaten the Republic. Thursday, Arab schools serve for a minute to defend Islam. You will never return. But if you leave now, you may have an opportunity to return and enjoy your life. This is the craziest shit in the fucking world, like...
Starting point is 00:03:22 America welcomes those who respect our loss. He liked my profile. He didn't remember me anymore. So he liked my profile. I saw that he liked my profile, I liked his profile and I wrote it. ... on the orange line. Other messages are coming. So first of the G-News, I called it the Ghiblification. You probably want to go through it.
Starting point is 00:03:44 So there's a new image generator from Openei that generated a wave of images inspired by the Ghibli studio. There were all kinds of criticisms, especially because they say that the animation studio philosophy of the director Ayao Miyazaki started to use the Ghibli effect to Ghibli-file existing photos, even the coffee snake does it. The Ghibli studio films for people who are not familiar with it, but the most popular is Spirited Away which won an Oscar or Ponyo or other of these films that have a very clear aesthetic. I think the animation is part of the storytelling. There is all kinds of criticism because it goes against the philosophy of the studio and even the legendary director Ayao Miyazaki. He even said in a documentary
Starting point is 00:04:26 in 2016 that he was pretty against artificial intelligence, that it disgusted him, that he would never want to integrate this technology into his work. He even said, I firmly believe that it is an insult to life itself. We sometimes talk about the aura of a work, especially Walter Benjamin, who talked about the loss of the aura of a work in the era of its technical reproducibility, we could say that now the work of art is in the era of its technical generativity. What I found interesting in this is a tweet from Sam Altman, the director of OpenAI. I translated it into Quebecois, so I'm going to read it in Quebecois. To be me, and there's like an arrow, is to spend a decade trying to create a super intelligence to cure cancer or whatever.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Then everyone sticks together for 7.5 years, and for 2.5 years everyone hates you for everything. Then you wake up one day with hundreds of messages that say Look, transformed you into a ghibli twink. Haha. And then they find it really funny. Obviously what caught my attention was the very beginning of his tweet when he said that he went through years to cure cancer or whatever. It's really, we're always talking about a story, it's really a quick story. A quick story, a rebrand of the endless greed of hypercapitalists like him, of the accumulation of wealth, which would become a personal sacrifice, a real gift of self. Yes, especially when Sam Altman is the best example, because he was literally in the discovery of his pursuit between OpenAI and Elon Musk, you see their exchange of emails from him who constantly tries to bribe Elon,
Starting point is 00:06:11 who pleads to receive more and more large sums of money. There has been the mega big backing of the biggest investors in the world to do his project. So he's pretending he's been working on his computer for 7 years. Well, a chance that Sam Altman is chance to give us the opportunity to transform ourselves into characters from the Ghibli studio. What I find interesting about this is that, in relation to the research I do on the great explorers, especially from Antarctica,
Starting point is 00:06:38 but also from way back, I'm interested in the great stories, the conquest of the West. It's the same colonial spirit, the pursuit of colonial business. It reminds me of those discourses, this story. I don't know if you put it in your notes, but how did you glorify the fact that it caught the scurvy? Yes, I didn't put it in my notes, but it's in my book. It's so interesting because their scurvy, that's it, it's an infection, a disease that develops when you lack vitamin C. They said it was the disease of the marines because often in the great explorations, the great navigations,
Starting point is 00:07:14 we started to miss fresh teeth and we developed the scurvy. Sam Altman developed the scurvy because he was so dedicated to super intelligence that they stopped feeding themselves. To go back to this figure of the great polar explorers, we are at the end of the 19th century, even the beginning of the 20th century. It participates in a vision of the hero, the way in which heroes are turned in history and changed. It is written in a tradition that is the Sacrificial Warrior. So the soldier who dies in the fight, the one who sacrifices for his nation. It's a bit like the image that Sam Altman invokes, what we could call an imperial hero, as theorized by some. That's what I was talking about the conquest of the US. We have figures like that, for example General Coster. And there it says American figure of the Indian wars. I don't know if it's a politically correct term,
Starting point is 00:08:07 Indian wars, but that's what's on Wikipedia. So they escalated from 1778 to 1890, wars that opposed the colonists and the First Nations. And it's written in the colonization of the quote-unquote New World. That's it, war is the word the word, because it's a genocide. Totally. It was so bloody, it was so horrible that from their living, these mythical figures, these heroes, they felt the importance
Starting point is 00:08:34 of transmitting their vision of history. Precursors, I would even say, of self-fiction, where they published fake biographies, they really fictionalized the great battles and even formed an eminent circus called the Wild West Show. These are large-scale, in-depth shows that took place in the United States, in Europe,
Starting point is 00:08:53 and put on stage stereotypes, that of the Indian cowboy, to make people, even Europeans, who had no idea what was going on, the myth of the conquest of the West. So we are already in a relationship with fiction. It's the same thing for explorers, because when they explored the countries, for example Antarctica, it was directly linked with the written press, the apogee, the age of the written press. When they came back from their expedition, what they did was write. I'm just going to read you something that I find interesting because basically what happens is that at the moment there are no more geographical borders to explore.
Starting point is 00:09:28 So what borders are we going to explore? The technological borders. It's in space or in this idea of ​​a race to super intelligence that the imperialist appetite of the moment will articulate. Right now, that's what the imperialist powers of the world are facing at the level of technology. When we talk about imperial hero, it's a quote that I take from my book, the Antarctic Destiny, which I will put in the notes. The great explorers developed an instrumental power, because they were used to explain and justify the rise of the imperial state. Personifying the nationalist grandeur, they offered examples of abnegation to the service of the current generation. They were lighters that penetrated the geographical and ethnic space, preparing the way to a moral conquest.
Starting point is 00:10:14 They were used to embody the collective will, the stereotypes of a shared culture, and the promoters of unity against fragmentation. They also served as a warning for the future to an elite that feared its decline. And they acted as instruments of pressure groups and interests in the formulation of policies. That's exactly what we see in American politics, especially the second administration of Trump, where these technological explorers play a pivotal role. Another way we can see the appetite for the cross-border exploration of borders that have never been crossed is through a relatively recent winter event, that of Ocean Gate.
Starting point is 00:10:57 The business man who was in charge of this Richard Stockton Rush III, he had this ambition to go explore places that are not explored. That's what he said in an interview, he said that one of the only land borders that we haven't investigated enough is the seabed. It's just to say that it's part of the ethos of businessmen to consider themselves explorers in the extension of the colonial adventure. Interesting. Yeah, that's it. So the second DG News is a new segment that I decided to call the Carnival. So it's
Starting point is 00:11:34 Mark Carney Vault. It's going to be a segment until the elections because I'm going to summarize my observations from the campaign week. As it was the first week of the federal campaign, I'll remind you that the debate in French will take place on April 16th on my Twitch channel. The elections are on April 28th. We'll start with Mark Carney. Because this week, it was really day after day. There was a new thing that was coming out on Mark Carney. Whether it's his professional hysterics.
Starting point is 00:11:56 He also refused to debate with Kébékar at TVA. Which really oriented the whole Kébékar group against him, it would seem. I think it's really not a good thing that happened. Yesterday I saw on TVE Nouvelle, at the Montreal Show, the cover was Who is the real Mark Carney with the links to Davos, the links to Bilderberg, a little more and he was putting the freemasons. We are discovering the character. That's it! I even came across a TikTok, last night we were watching it together and me on my feed, it's famous women.
Starting point is 00:12:23 And there's a woman who says, he's really cute. Mark Carney. It's a silver fox. I thought it must supposed to be propaganda. That's the only good thing he did this week, it's when Trump didn't call him governor, he called him prime minister. So the only good thing about Mark Carney is Trump who gave him what is still...
Starting point is 00:12:58 I don't know how this dynamic between the candidates and Trump will have a role to play in the vote as such, because we always try to paint Poiliev as our mini Trump. But Trump doesn't seem to really like Mark Carney more. We are really in the deconstruction of the character of a banker. Because that's how we were introduced at the beginning, it was very superficial. Ah, it's a banker.
Starting point is 00:13:18 We even saw someone on TikTok who said, it's not just a banker, it's THE banker. Create an aura that makes sure that we didn't even question his professional activities. The poilier speech has been a pain in the ass in Canada for the last few years. And to say, Trudeau sucks. It wasn't deep enough for our allies. There was a leader who had to emerge from that. And I think it's clear now that this leader is Mark Carney.
Starting point is 00:13:39 Mark Carney is not just a banker, he's THE banker. Otherwise, another good blow, how do you judge, is that this week we even had the right to a small intersection between Poiliev's curve and the one of Mike Carney on Polymarket. As Daphne will talk to you later about Polymarket more broadly. But he really plays a definitive role in the online media coverage of this election. So we will post on the day the day the variations. This week they met for the first time in a few days. And now they crossed each other again.
Starting point is 00:14:09 So Poliev took the lead in the middle of the week. And then, following the call between Trump and Carney, Carney took the lead again. Trump talked about Carney as if he was going to be the prime minister after the elections. But just specify that Polymarket is a platform to make bets. It's like a bet, but on real events. Polymarket played such a big role in the American election, it was so surprised with the results of the polls. On Polymarket, the day before the election was certain,
Starting point is 00:14:34 if we only trusted that Trump would win, while the polls gave a much less convincing result. And as we know, the result was quite decisive a few hours after the closing of the offices of the curtain. So it means that Polymarket had this big rise in pre-?ance and we're recovering it here in Canada. So I'm going to ask myself, is Polymarket being manipulated right now? We'll talk about it later. It's going to be very interesting. Because what I suppose, my hypothesis, is that Polymarket is no longer just a platform of speculative bet,
Starting point is 00:15:04 it's also a media with an editorial policy. Yes, that's interesting. So subscribe to the Pétuande. It's important. What did I think Carnie's strength was and finally her biggest weakness at the time? The fact that he wasn't... So that was the end of the free section of the episode of Café Snake. To listen to the full episode, you have to subscribe to our Patreon, the Patreon.com, with the word Café Snake. For all the new Café Snake auditors, because we see the beautiful charade, the propaganda works, we have to continue.
Starting point is 00:15:34 But I just want to tell you that there are a lot of episodes that are just on Patreon, that will interest you, of our best episodes that are there. So I recommend it, it's a great subscription. Yes, indeed! So that's it for this complete episode, it's going to be next week. Bye! Kisses!

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