Cleared Hot - Powered By BRCC - CyberTrucks and Green Berets
Episode Date: January 10, 2025The events that occurred in Las Vegas were not only tragic, but they should serve as a reminder for those who create content as to what can happen when your desire is to be "first." Conspiracy theorie...s are sometimes real, but I worry that sometimes people want them to be true more than they want to look at the data objectively. This episode attempts to explain and provide a thought process that has served me well in life when it comes to separating the "wheat from the chaff" of information overload. Today's sponsors: AG1: https://DrinkAG1.com/clearedhot Mando: https://shopmando.com Control Body Odor ANYWHERE with Mando and get $5 off your Starter Pack (that's over 40% off) with promo code "ClearedHot"
Transcript
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Morning, everybody. Here we go again. I find myself in a position today on this Friday episode. I'm not going to say creating content that I don't want to create. I'm going to be having a conversation largely one way because you can't talk back to me about something that happened recently that I normally would not say anything about. And it's tied to last Friday's episode. Last Friday I talked about the attack in New Orleans and I briefly talked about the cyber truck explosion.
in front of the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas.
Today, I'm going to focus exclusively on the cyber truck and the individual that was driving it.
And the rush to be first that was associated with that and the problem that I see with that.
The incident itself, I'll break down how I feel about that after the intro and the ad break.
the incident itself highlights for me and the reason that I'm willing to even create something around
this, it highlights a theory of thinking that I am worried more and more people are getting trapped in.
And I wanted to share something with anybody willing to listen that has really helped me in my life
when it comes to separating truth from potential fiction.
objectivity from emotionality.
And I'm going to share that.
So that's what we're going to be talking about today.
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Let's get back into the show.
I'm looking at danger close now.
Okay, here we go.
I need to do exactly what I did last Friday.
and that is I have to watermark or time capsule this episode and discuss what I do know in this moment and what I don't know because the internet lives forever and this episode will be around for a long time.
And absent that context of what is known or certain and unknown or in question, man, the validity of things coming out of somebody's mouth could really be put into question.
So I think it's very important to start with that.
It is Thursday, January 9th in the morning.
It's not an accident that I waited this long to record this episode because just like last week when I waited until Thursday, I think I might have done that one in the afternoon.
I wanted to at least allow for as much information as possible to come out before I hit the record button.
And that's what I did today.
but what is known to me and what is unknown to me in this moment before moving forward.
Last Friday, there was a loose connection by, I'm going to call it traditional media sources.
They didn't directly tie what happened in Las Vegas to what had happened in New Orleans,
but they left it out there for people to make up their own minds as to whether or not the two were connected,
as to whether or not the two were terrorist attacks. New Orleans clearly was. It has come to,
I would say, concrete certainty that what happened in Las Vegas was not associated with and not
attached to in any way, shape, or form, even though both of the people involved did serve in the
military. It appears that there was no crossover of their time in service. They were unconnected.
One had nothing to do with the other. The timing, interesting for sure, but not connected. I think
that's a very important part to start with.
We know a lot more about the person who was behind the wheel of the vehicle.
We have an understanding of their military background.
I would say we have an understanding of pretty clearly the mental health space that they were in before taking these actions.
And that helps paint a think a better picture of, I hesitate to say the why, because it's so hard to put yourself
in somebody's shoes like that.
But as opposed to making what happened very blurry and hard to distinguish,
I think it brings it into focus a little bit more.
Before I go any farther, let me say this.
I can't fathom the difficulty for the family of the man who drove that vehicle.
His name is Master Sergeant Matthew Livelylzberger.
Just imagine having to not only deal with the death
of a loved one for the parents, a son, a husband, a father.
That in and of itself is a valley of darkness that is hard enough to walk through.
And you layer on top of that, at least at a national level here in the United States,
but I would suspect globally your name is known for reasons that you would never want it to be known.
My heart breaks for this family.
I don't have the vocabulary to describe the level of empathy and sorrow that I have for them.
This sucks.
There's no other way to put it.
It doesn't make the situation any easier to deal with for sure.
Like I said, you're already in a pressure cooker.
And I guess, I don't know, strap some dynamite to that.
Horrible, horrible, horrible situation.
My condolences to the family.
Let's start there.
God, I wish you didn't have to go through this.
Okay, who is the driver?
Let's talk about this.
Well, the military at this point has released,
and I'm going to read it for clarity,
so I don't get any of this wrong.
This is the Army's full statement about the driver,
and I'm going to unpack this as we go
and get to the point of this whole episode here in a few minutes
and why I'm even willing to bring this up and talk about it
because it's not actually about this man
and about this situation.
it's about how we think about these things.
So this is the Army's full statement.
Master Sergeant Matthew Allen Livelyelsberger enlisted it as an 18 X-ray.
I was never in the Army, but my understanding is this is a special forces contract,
similar to in the Navy you sign up,
and it guarantees you at least a pipeline or a path to the initial selection pipeline
for the special operations, or in this case, special forces pipeline in the Army.
And he served in the active duty army from January 26th to March, 2000.
He then joined the National Guard from March 2011 to July 2012, followed by the Army Reserves from July 2012 to December 2012.
He entered the active duty Army in December 2012 as a U.S. Army Special Operations Soldier, 18 Zulu, I don't know what that is, assigned to the 10th Special Forces Group in Stuttgart, Germany.
Additionally, U.S. Army Special Operations Command can confirm Livalberger was assigned to the command and on approved
to leave at the time of his death. That means he went through the official chain of command
in process, which is purely a paperwork drill, to be approved, to not be at work, to travel back
to the United States. They were aware that he was in the U.S. Obviously, they weren't aware of what
his plans were at the time. U.S.S.S.S.ok is in full cooperation with federal and state law
enforcement agencies, but as a matter of policy will not comment on ongoing investigations. That's fair.
his awards include the bronze star medal with valor the bronze star medal or b s times four meritori service
medal army commendation medal with valor army commendation medal times three army achievement
medal times two army good conduct medal times five national defense service medal afghanistan
campaign medal with uh star times three global war on terrorism expeditionary medal global war on terrorism
service metal non-commission officer professional development ribbon times three army service ribbon
overseas service ribbon natal metal times two special forces tab combat infantryman badge
parachutist badge and free fall badge that last paragraph explaining what all of those things mean
is a two-hour episode in and of itself i would suggest you go on to google and look at those things
when i read this as somebody who spent just under 17 years in the military
I have an understanding of who this person was.
I have an understanding of when they served, where they went,
whether or not they did or did not see combat,
the roles that they may have held.
This man was experienced.
He was well-traveled.
And I'm going to get to the potential consequences of those things
at the tail end of the episode.
He was not new to the military.
He was senior.
Having never met the man,
I'm going to make an assumption or a guess
and both knowledge and experience.
And Rank, he was a master sergeant at the time.
This is an incredible military service record.
Now, last Friday, I tried to paint the picture
that I have no interest in being a provocateur
or somebody who is rushing to be first to release information.
I feel that way, because in my experience in life,
if you're going to rush to be first,
not in a car race or a foot race or any of those things.
If you're going to create content
and you are going to be in a rush to be first,
if you were to extend the tape measure,
you know, on a normal tape measure,
the tick marks you got inches and quarter of an inches
and all those things and probably centimeters
and weird metric shit on the other side,
that's not what is on the tape measure in this race.
if you're trying to be first with information.
What you're measured by is your distance often from the truth.
You may be doing your best and you may be reporting the most up-to-day information that you have,
but nearly always the first information that comes out is the least accurate.
And depending on who you are in the size of the platform that you have,
I personally believe that that can be a very dangerous thing.
I think that the person who is going to create that content and put it out
to the world, especially as your platform grows, has an obligation and responsibility not only to
themselves to maintain their integrity, but to the listeners. And in this case, I believe that you have
an obligation to this person who chose to take their life to make sure that what you're putting
out is accurate. So rush to be first if you want. But for those of you who are listening,
to this, just remember that yardstick, that measuring stick is often, the metric used,
is often the distance you were going to be from the truth. The slower you go. And I understand,
like there's a difference between, hey, there's an incoming terrorist attack and there's
aircraft in the air like on 9-11. Probably want to get that information out there.
Is there value to rushing on something like this? My personal answer to that is no.
because I would rather take my time and be as correct as possible than rush into something
in the hopes of being first and potentially gaining a larger platform or more notoriety from
that.
That's just my personal feelings.
And by the way, everything I'm saying in this episode, I'm not throwing shade at anyone.
I respect everybody's decision to do whatever the fuck they want to do.
I am talking about how I feel about things.
What worries me is some cascading consequences, right?
So people are free to do what they want, but there are.
cascading consequences sometimes depending on those actions. This particular instance had some of those
consequences. And there was some pretty wild conjecture thrown out there, which led to what I am going to
describe some conspiracy theories around this event. There was reports of China being involved, or this
individual at the 10th Special Forces group being a gateway or a whistleblower.
and a potential holder of information at national level,
like super high up,
it would have been buried deep inside of a sap
or a special access program information
that he wanted to blow the whistle on.
And I'm going to say this too.
For anybody who was reached out to,
I'm not saying that this individual didn't write the letters or messages
or even believe in his own brain
that he had that type of information.
So again, those who are,
might have been on the receiving end of this, right? You can't control that. And the person sending
that information may have believed it to be incredibly valid. And I'm going to touch on that in a
minute here when I get to this, the critical point of what I'm trying to say when it comes to
observing and assessing these type of situations. There was talk about China. There was talk about
anti-gravity engines. There were talk about, you know, murder accounts and emails. And like I said,
all of those things might be true. And the talk of China and the anti-gravity engines,
engines, all those things, probably came through that. But this brings me to my personal question and
concern. And that is why do people want those conspiracies to be true? This is the thing that
rattles my brain a little bit that I don't understand. I understand that some of them are very
sticky. And I understand that some of them can easily get your hooks into or can get their hooks into
people. But it's optional. You have to participate in that and you have to allow that stickiness or those
hooks to get into you to continue down that path. And this brings me to a principle or a thought
process that has served me very, very well in life. And before I say anything else,
not trying to insult anybody's intelligence. What I'm about to say is not something that I came up with.
This is the way I have thought for the vast majority of my life. And probably 10 years ago,
I found the actual description of this, which has existed and predated me by a long stretch.
And quite simply, it is called Occam's Razor. I'm going to read what this is and explain
why I think it is so important. So what is Ackham's Razor? This has come straight off the internet.
Occam's Razor is a principle of theory, construction, or evaluation according to which other things equal explanations that posit fewer entities or fewer kinds of entities are to be preferred to explanations that posit more.
If you're anything like me, I don't know what the fuck that means.
So I found an easier definition.
This one makes a lot of sense.
Occam's Razor is a problem-solving principle that states the simplest explanation is usually the best one.
It is also known as the principle of parsimony.
I don't really know what that last sentence means, but I like the first one.
A problem-solving principle that states the simplest explanation is usually the best one.
If there was something that stood on the other side of the road from conspiracy theories that was the axis or as close to being the exact opposite from a conspiracy theory, I do believe it would be this approach, the Occam's Razor approach.
Again, I didn't come up with this.
I didn't even understand that the way that I generally viewed things had a name like this.
So I am just sharing with people who may never have heard about this in the hopes that you can dig into it a little bit.
And that it can at least give you a moment of pause when you were presented with information like many people were hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people were in the last seven days.
I think it can help and create a barrier to conspiracy theories.
And having said that, I understand why conspiracy theories are sticky.
And I also understand, would be the first person to admit, that a lot of times there are or is an essence of these theories that is correct.
And I think that's why it makes them so sticky, because you can prove individual pieces of it, and it,
puts you down this pathway where,
son of a bitch, well, this is objectively true and that's objectively true.
And you can kind of make this leap in an assumption.
It's dangerous because if you find a couple that are proven to be true,
which of course, they are out there.
There are examples of those.
I think the tenuous place that you end up is, well, shit, that last one was true.
So maybe they all are.
And I just think that's a dangerous place.
I think it makes you very susceptible to manipulation.
I think it makes you very susceptible to being driven by emotion,
maybe even fear, uncertainty, and distrust.
Should you have all those things at sometimes,
depending on the entity or the subject that you're talking about?
Yes.
But should you have them at all times?
I don't know.
I think you probably need to find a balance in that.
So when this information was coming out,
I'm going to explain how I viewed
the situation through that lens,
and that lens being the simplest explanation
is usually the best one.
To do that,
I apologize
up front
to everybody who holds
the special operations community
on a pedestal that is beyond reproach.
I hope that there aren't people
that truly do that,
but I know that there are people
who want to.
They want people
in the military,
at large.
They want to view them in that way.
But then if you narrow it down more and you, you know, you chisel a little bit way,
a little more away at that marble, when it gets to special operations, and for people who are
not super familiar with these terms, special operations is the entire special operations component
and contingent inside of the U.S. military.
Very often confused term with special forces, which this individual came from that community,
but that specifically means green beret.
So I'm using the term special operations to blanket all the military branches and their special operations forces inside of that.
They want that person on that pedestal to be Captain America.
They want them to have perfection.
They want them to be bulletproof.
They want them to be wearing a Teflon suit at all times where they can do the unimaginable on timelines that are unreasonable and not be impacted by it.
and that it just is not the case.
So I will be the first to admit my experience in the military gives me a much deeper insight
into this particular situation.
And that is what allowed me to use the Akma's Razor approach to critically think about
some of the information that was coming in and not allow it to get its hooks into me.
So let's talk about the reality of special operations,
especially during the time period of the global war on terror.
And we could argue about when that started and ended or whether it even actually has.
There was no work-life balance for people in those roles.
You're either overseas doing your job or you are back in the United States spending almost all of your time training for your job overseas.
A lot of the training that we do, you have to travel to do it.
whether you're trying to get access to a long distance shooting range,
or maybe you just need to get access to altitude so you can train before you go.
Maybe you need access to environmental conditions or specialty schools and courses
that are offered where you may live or where your duty station may be.
Maybe you need to link up with joint assets that don't have the ability to travel to where you.
If it's a maritime asset, probably not going to be meeting you in Idaho.
If it's a J-Soc helicopter-borne asset, they can probably make.
their way to you, but from a budgetary perspective, it might be cheaper and allow you to do more
training if you make your way to them. My point in saying all of this is, life in that community
is extremely difficult, and it is defined by your lack of work life balance. Most of the people
that I worked with, if not all of them, would never allow the job to suffer first. They would always
allow themselves and their personal relationships, and by that I'm talking about their familial
those suffer first. The job never suffers. Are people making that decision as it like they're
opening a book and they're checking a box in the morning? I don't think so. I think it was more
subconscious. But the level of buy-in exceeds my vocabulary in it in its ability to describe it.
If given a choice to train to the standard to be able to be a razor sharp scalpel to deploy overseas
or skip a training trip or a deployment to spend time with your family.
I'm here to tell you right now.
Most people, if not all, are picking the former and not the latter.
It is a tenuous work-life balance.
There is an emotional and physical toll with the job.
As much as people think that Special Operations soldiers look like Adonis
and wear the Marvel Captain America uniform and they are impervious.
That is not the case.
Now, there is a spectrum of abilities to burden or bear the burden of the emotional and
physical weight that comes with the occupation. But there is a point for us all, regardless of the
selection course that you went through, the beret that you may wear, the pin that you may have on
your chest, the tab that you may have, the awards that you may have, the color of the uniform that
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I think that's probably a 16 ounce cup.
Okay, so if maybe for me, I can hold 16 ounces.
When I get to the top of that, it's going to spill over.
And the things that lead me to getting to that lip
may only take somebody else to the halfway mark in their container.
I might snap and they may not.
And I have no understanding for why some people have a size of a vessel that is larger than others or why they can tolerate more and why some people seem to have the ability to drain it out over time, which I think we all do, but you need to have an intentional approach to doing so.
I think it can happen accidentally, but it's much faster if you are intentional and what you're trying to do.
The point in all of that is when it overflows, it overflows.
in addition to the emotional, I'll put that in the emotional category,
there's a physical burden to your job as well,
which in the long run can actually really impact your emotional state,
especially when you start losing your physical capability.
The job is hard.
Necks, shoulders, knees, and backs, I would say,
are the biggest issues of the people that I worked with.
Because doing this stuff and running around and banging up your body is one thing.
When you start to layer on top of that,
a lot of weight, and I'm not talking 20 to 30% of your body weight, which is kind of the number
I've heard thrown around is the acceptable burden or load, physical load that the human body is
capable of carrying over a long period of time. I'm talking 50, 60, 70, 80, sometimes over 100%
of your body weight and just beating the shit out of your body, which a lot of times is going to
terminate in injuries, rehab, surgeries, back to rehab, back to trying to be operational. And you see
people working through injuries that would put most people in the sidelines for the rest of their life.
When their body starts failing them, what I have seen at least is they're taking fluid and just
starting to pour it inside of that vessel. And it's getting closer and closer to the top.
In addition to those things, the work life balance or lack thereof, the emotional and physical
toll, those lead towards the divorce rate in the special operations community. So I'm going to narrowly
tranche this down into the seal community because that's all I can speak for, but I suspect this is the same
for all communities under the Special Operations umbrella. I believe the national average right now in
the United States is slightly over 50% for divorce. That sucks. I mean, that's a coin toss in and of
itself. The Special Operations community, in the Naval Special Warfare community, that number is well
above 50%.
And a few podcasts ago,
I got a little loose with some percentages
and saying where I thought that they were
and I'm going to try to be a little bit more cautious than this.
Anecdotally, in my own experience,
I think it's very safe to say it's at 75%.
I believe it's into the 80s
and probably closer to the 90th percentile
than the 80th percentile.
it is a legitimate issue.
The community will not only would shipper individuals,
but if you allow it,
it will woodchipper your marriages as well.
And it happens.
The divorce rate is exceptionally high.
There are some reasons for this.
One, the time away.
Two, and maybe this is a little bit more meaningful than the time away or paired with it.
Let's be honest.
what type of people want to do that job?
They're aggressive.
They are overachievers.
They could probably scientifically be described as a little bit odd.
We're a little bit different.
And I say that looking in the mirror at myself.
It has taken me a long time to realize that I am perhaps a little bit atypical in my beliefs
and who I am as a person than most of the people that I surround myself with in daily
life. It's not a bad thing, but I think it's important to recognize. Personally, I still believe
I'm the most normal person that I've ever met. I've been told by enough people that I have met
that that isn't the case that I'm at least questioning that. But I still think I'm pretty normal.
They're not always the best behaved. They don't always make the right decisions. There are absolutely
issues of substance and chemical abuse. And there are absolutely issues of people acting like
every ounce of the man whore that nobody would want to think happens in that community.
But it does.
That is not a statement applying to everybody.
But anybody who comes from this world knows exactly what I am talking about.
And we'll leave it at that one.
That's the lens that I view this situation from.
And just like I started this episode, my heart breaks for this person and this family.
because I understand how he got to the place that he did and it has nothing to do with a conspiracy
theory. It has everything to do with what I just described. The realities of the job, the work life
balance, the emotional and physical toll that it takes and the relationship strain that can
occur from that. It has come out that this individual, by other people's words, not my own,
may have been struggling with mental health.
He may have been in the throes
and in the middle of a mental health crisis.
And quite frankly, that to me makes the most sense.
Somebody's brain starts to misfire.
And they get to a place where they think
that the reasonable solution is to load a vehicle with fireworks,
drive it to the front of a hotel,
kill themselves, and then detonate those fireworks.
works. Using the Occam's Razor approach, that is, quite frankly, the simplest explanation.
That is far simpler than people talking about a body being killed because they were getting
ready to be a whistleblower due to emails and messages that were sent through burner accounts.
The body being killed before, stuffed inside of a Tesla cyber truck, putting it on the autopilot.
I don't know the exact terminology.
It's something like that, autonomous driving mode, whatever it may be.
Programming it to arrive at the front of the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas and detonating remotely.
Now, if you do some research, yes, the vehicles are capable of self-driving to a degree.
Are they capable of that level of sophistication?
I'm not sure, but in the research that I have done recently, it would be difficult because there are safety mechanisms that are in place to make sure that the driver is alert and aware.
right you're not supposed to be handing over the vehicle complete autonomous control without at least driver impact or not impact input and attention the simplest explanation to this is that this man because of the life that he chose found himself in a place where his cup overflowed and it had catastrophic offense
offense, effects, as it does often in the community when that happens. And there's one little
flyer detail that was associated with this that people really, really hooked on to. And that was,
there were reports that the DNA from the body in the vehicle didn't match the DNA from his
child. Now, I'm a fan of the TV show CSI as well. And I appreciate in a 44 minute episode,
they can solve very complex cases and get results back on very complicated scientific methods and data within that 44 minutes.
Usually it's within like five to ten.
And the people I know who work in this world, that's not the case, right?
It's measured in days, if not weeks, if not months to get that information.
Even a high profile case, it's probably going to take a bit.
People latched onto this one almost immediately.
And it was sticky.
That concept was sticky for people.
They wanted to attach themselves to that.
And again, I'm going to go back to Occam's Razor and my own personal experience on this.
this, narrowly tranching this again back into the SEAL community.
I know of, I'm not going to say a lot, but I know of enough people who have had horrendous dynamics in their relationship with their significant other that terminated in not or that terminated in both, at least one, but oftentimes both.
straying from the vows of their marriage.
Sometimes when that happens, for anybody familiar with the birds and the bees,
which is a total side note that has absolutely nothing to do with what I'm talking about.
Is there anybody else out there who is fascinated when somebody announces that they're pregnant and they say they,
I don't know, I don't know what happened.
I mean, I'm pretty sure I know what happened.
I could tell you what happened.
I could help you with that if you want because it goes back to the birds and the bees.
Well, if men and women are playing birds and bees, sometimes they get baby birds and bees.
In this instance, the simplest explanation as to why the DNA may not match the child is that he would not be the first person that I am aware of, again, specifically in the seal community, that is raising a child as his own that isn't.
Are they open and vocal about that?
Almost always not.
But that is a far more likely explanation than somebody being snatched up by a government entity or an entity high up in our intelligence infrastructure and coordinating this whole affair of this is how we're going to do it, this is where we're going to do it, but he's going to be dead first, all of these things.
There's another layer into this as well, too.
I get really weird emails.
Not every day, but every week.
I mean, I'm talking emails from people who claim that they are in government testing facilities
and that human research is being done on them and they want me to email whoever it is in charge
or do what I can to turn off a device that they will list like a name and a frequency and a number with.
And the reason that they're there is because they hold information and they have information.
and they have information that they are unwilling to provide to that government agency,
but they want to share it with me.
And I read these emails and pooh, some of them are a little bit shocking.
I almost always, actually I always do up to this point land on,
I feel really bad for the person sending it because it's clear they're having a mental health break in crisis.
It is possible that this man being a part of special operations for,
close to 20 years was read into some special access programs that could have peripherally
included China and anti-gravity and all of those things. But if you take a second and you take a step
back, anybody with experience in this world would realize that's really, really unlikely because
it's not going to be a master sergeant in the army stationed in Stuttard, Germany that's actually
going to likely be the holder of this information. That is, is it, is it possible? Yes. Is it probable? No. It is
improbable. You know, he probably had a TSSC clearance as I did when I was in and they, and there are
clearances above that. And I believe TSSCI is category one, two, three, and four. Who knows, as you get
into those categories, you start getting read into programs. I was right into two programs,
neither of which blew my hair back.
I'm not saying that there aren't ones out there that wouldn't blow your hair back,
but I was never exposed to,
and this is while I was at a J-Soc command,
I was never exposed to programs or information rising to this level.
If there is a program that is at that level,
it is going to be so high up in the infrastructure of the military industry.
Military Industrial Complex and our information gathering apparatus, I feel it's exceptionally unlikely
that this individual in this place, in this role, would have access to that. And anybody who came
from the military should know that. And it should, at least as you're rushing towards that line to be
first, hopefully give you some pause. Because what good comes from putting out that information
if shortly thereafter, it's just proven to be not true.
Now, the person writing this email in the middle of the mental health crisis might have thought it was true.
And maybe that was just something that they said to try to get the attention of the person they were trying to get the attention of.
I'm not going to fault them for that.
Actually, fault is not the right word to use.
That might have been their motivation.
But the person receiving those emails, take a beat.
Take a breath.
Take a second.
that's how I view this particular situation.
That's why I didn't rush to say anything about it.
And that is honestly how I view almost every situation in my life.
I don't understand why some people want conspiracy theories to be true.
Is it they, they're living a more mundane life and they want to have a little bit more sensationalism in their life?
do they do they want to believe that somebody there is this entity out there that is trying to lie to them and control them and manipulate them because then they can say well it's not in my control so they don't have to worry about it right it's this handing off of responsibility to them i don't know fortunately with the podcast i'm able to talk with people who are experts in the brain and the next time i do or if somebody's seeing this is an expert on the brain please put it into the comments why why do people want conspiracy theories to be true what is it
that makes that the case.
I don't understand it because although I agree and admit that sometimes they are true,
I don't want them to be true.
I'm not looking, I mean, I look at them critically and objectively,
and I view them through the lens of what I've already covered in today's episode.
And it helps me separate the wheat from the chaff.
It also gives me a moment of pause before I take action,
because I look at these things and I ask myself,
this is what's being said, but is that realistic?
Is there a more simple and reasonable explanation?
Shouldn't I take the time to find that out?
And that's what I want to leave people with.
Hopefully, if you have heard of Occam's Razor,
I apologize for wasting your time.
If you haven't heard of it, take a look at it.
And the next time that you encounter something like this,
maybe just take a beat, literally metaphorically,
take a breath, sit down,
and work your way through that simplest approach,
as opposed to emotionally attaching yourself to the more flashy approach.
And that's all I have for today.
Other than to end it with, again,
my condolences to the family and anybody impacted by this
with the cascading downstream effects,
the death alone would be hard enough.
The public nature of it, I can't even imagine.
So my heart goes out to you guys,
and that's all I have for this Friday.
next week.
