The David Knight Show - 4Sep23 BEST of INTERVIEWS - AI Weapons, SSRI MurderSuicides, Growing Food, FBI Whistleblower
Episode Date: September 4, 2023Stephen FriendWhat does a politicized police force do to a whistleblower? You'll be amazed at the vindictive and vicious dirty tricks they tried. But Stephen Friend kept his integrity and kept out of ...jail. And now he's written a must-read book, "TRUE BLUE: My Journey from Beat Cop to Suspended FBI Whistleblower" Kim WitczakSelf-described "accidental activist", Kim Witczak, WoodyMatters.com, became active when her husband committed suicide under the influence of an SSRI drug. Since the tragedy, she's seen from the inside what happens with the approval process, serving as a current Consumer Representative on an FDA Drug Advisory Committee, and successfully fighting for "Black Box" labeling for SSRI's. Yet, mainstream media black out makes it hard for consumers to understand the dangers.Paul SharreWhile the book "Four Battlegrounds: Power in the Age of Artificial Intelligence" focuses on AI in the context of power and competition between US & China, Mr Scharre writes "This book is about the darker side of AI". It's not the usual concerns about AI becoming sentient and malicious, but AI used maliciously by humans. Paul Scharre, former Army Ranger who served in Iraq & Afghanistan, and author of award winning study of autonomous weapons — "Army of None", VP & Director of Studies at Center for a New American Security. Noah SandersA system born out of necessity when commercial techniques failed became the lifeline when Zimbabwe stole farms from white farmersgardening without plowing or tillingthermal compost & natural organic fertilizerseight simple questions to create an easy, but effective garden planYour best prepping may be in training neighbors to grow food, thereby building community. Noah Sanders, RedeemingTheDirtAcademy.comFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money is only what YOU hold: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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edc.ca slash export for more. Welcome back and joining us now is Stephen Friend. I have talked
about Mr. Friend and what he did in terms of standing up to the weaponized, politicized FBI, coming
after people after January the 6th.
And of course, what began with January the 6th is now metastasized to the Department
of Justice and the FBI being concerned about parents who show up at a PTA meeting or at
a school board meeting or things like that.
This is the danger of this,
and I'm always interested in talking to whistleblowers. I've talked to John Kiriakou
many times about blowing the whistle on CIA torture program, which ultimately bore the
fruit of lying us into the war in Iraq. I've talked to Joe Bannister, who was an IRS agent,
who was an investigator, part of the criminal investigation unit, carried a gun.
And he did that for a number of years.
And then he came across some things that people were saying.
He said, well, how do I answer this?
How do I answer this concern that they've got about the income tax code?
The supervisor said, don't talk about that.
What? When you look at people who are honestly concerned
about the law and about justice, this creates a real conflict of conscience for them. And of
course, many had that same kind of situation presented to them throughout 2020 and 2021
with the mandates and the lockdowns. And do I give up my job?
What do I do?
I'm violating my religious principles if I take this type of thing.
These types of tests are always coming to us.
He's now written a book.
It came out yesterday.
True Blue, My Journey from Beat Cop to Suspended FBI Whistleblower.
And it dropped yesterday.
You can find it on Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, all the regular places that you buy books.
Again, it is True Blue.
The author is Stephen Friend, who joins us right now.
Thank you for joining us, sir.
Thank you very much for having me today.
And thank you for being a whistleblower.
I really do appreciate it.
I mean, I know that's a difficult thing.
I know that it had tremendous consequences for you and for your family.
And I want to talk about those. But first but first tell us what was the tipping point?
You had worked as an FBI agent for what was it?
12 years, I think.
No, actually today would have been my nine year anniversary date of my hiring.
I'd worked in law enforcement though before that.
So I've got about 14 years of law enforcement experience at a state, local and federal level.
So what was it that you saw in this that I I can't go along with that, is what you had
to say.
Tell us a little bit about that.
Yeah, I didn't really have a moment where I sat down and said, I'm going to become a
whistleblower.
I just had a concern about the cases that were in my office that were January 6th related.
And to take a brief step back on my background, I joined the FBI in 2014.
I spent my first seven years on Indian reservations. And the nature of those cases
are quickly evolving. You have a huge, tremendous volume of cases. And as a result of that,
I became very familiar with the FBI's rule book for how to work cases and brought that with me
when I eventually transferred to Daytona Beach,
Florida, where I am currently. And once I was reassigned to work domestic terrorism cases in
my office, I was reassigned from child pornography cases and told that those were no longer going to
be resourced. Those were local matter. Really? Correct. What kind of cases were you seeing at
the Indian reservations? I mean, it was a lot of drug trafficking and stuff like that and violent crime, things like that.
Yes, it's violent crime, major offenses.
I've worked a lot of aggravated assaults and homicides, sexual assaults, child molestation.
You really do the work of like a city violent crime detective on the reservations.
And it's an interesting jurisdiction that the FBI has to take on due to some weird federal laws that we currently have on the reservations. And it's an interesting jurisdiction that the FBI has to take on
due to some weird federal laws that we currently have on the books. And it basically precludes
the tribal police officers from investigating some defendants who aren't Native American,
and then even from bringing heavy charges against others. So they could only really
charge misdemeanors for some fairly significant crimes. And the FBI has to come in and fill that gap.
Wow.
That's interesting.
So you were a police officer.
And then when you started working for the FBI on these Indian reservations, you're still
kind of doing police officer type of work that you're doing that.
When you became an FBI agent, they'd first put you on child pornography and things like
that.
Yes, I accepted a transfer in the summer of 2021.
And my understanding was it was going to be a position in the office to work on pornography
cases and human trafficking cases, which are sort of a weird kissing cousin to the Indian
reservations within the FBI because they're very hard to staff.
Just people don't want to work it.
It's sort of the violation that you can actually beg out of because it so mentally uh taxing for a lot of folks oh i imagine but it also it also gives you a great
opportunity to work with local law enforcement which is what i believe is the uh the prime
directive of the fbi i wanted to work with local detectives deputies from the sheriff's offices the
police departments and uh and and learn from them and then
basically partner with them. And if we could bring something federally, then I was all in to do that.
But the end of the fiscal year happens and the decision was made to reallocate resources and
manpower, which is another major problem within the FBI. They basically have a quota system that
they try to hit every year. And when I the january 6 cases it was immediately apparent to me
that the fbi is not following its rules with those cases um and i became concerned about
because not because i had any sort of political ideology attached to it i'm not a simp to one
side or another but i'm a law enforcement professional. And when I go to
trial, I want to make sure that my cases is buttoned up as properly. And the fact that
these cases have been just rubber stamped as they've gone through the District of Columbia
doesn't mean anything to me. If my name's at the top, I want to make sure my case is buttoned up.
And I knew for a fact that these cases were not in, they were departing from the FBI's rules for how they managed the cases,
which was interfering with how we were able to actually do our investigations.
We were waiting for directives from Washington,
DC when we were on paper,
supposed to be in charge of our own cases.
Wow.
So it's coming straight from DC.
Your,
your concern is like a prosecutor.
I don't want to take this to case because this case to court,
because I could lose. Right. And you don't want to have a long streak of losses there but you're concerned about
that and this is coming straight out of the district of columbia they're identifying people
and uh you know telling you uh to do what to them well they're the january 6th case should be one
case with however many subjects uh are that are being investigated.
But very early on in the process, a decision was made that they were going to open up a separate case for every single person.
And then instead of running those from Washington, D.C., where the incident happened, they were going to assign those cases to the field, to all the various 56 field offices around the country where the subject lived. So if you
lived in Florida and you went to the Capitol that day, the office in Florida would be handling your
case. And you could make the case that it is in compliance with the FBI rules. It's a little
atypical, but it certainly presents a statistical narrative that domestic terrorism is on the rise
significantly because now you have thousands of
cases and they're spread around the country yeah as opposed to a one-time four-hour incident at the
at the capital which could be attributed to a black swan incident and i compared it to uh the
september 11th uh world trade center so if you look at police officers in the land of duty deaths
there's a spike in 2001 and that's because there were a look at police officers in the line of duty deaths, there's a spike in 2001.
And that's because there were a significant number of officers in the towers who died.
That doesn't mean that nationwide there was a spike in violence against police officers. It's
a statistical anomaly. And the FBI has now perpetuated that and has brought it the last
three fiscal years and argued in front of Congress the need to enhance salary funding. And then on top of that,
the bosses in each one of the field offices get bonuses for hitting the quotas because there's a
demand for domestic terrorism cases. It is the charge du jour that we're seeing now from the
political leadership in Washington. So the FBI, if you ask for it, you shall receive. And because of
the quota system, the FBI that's been around for the last 10 years, it's, it's
not really a mystery why the number of domestic terrorism cases has quadrupled in the last
10 years.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like any other bureaucracy.
They're trying to make a case to grow.
Uh, they, they, they succeed by growing their little fiefdom.
That means a bigger head count.
That means a more responsibility and a higher salary for everybody at the top if
they if they do that and the big game they always play is statistics and we've seen these types of
games played by a lot of different agencies the fbi has played these kind of statistical games to
to show that you know you got to increase um increase their department but again they're like
every other bureaucracy and there's a federal bureaucracy of investigation.
If you, if you look at it that way, you know, we have seen this, uh, Steven, we've seen
in the past, uh, the FBI has, in my opinion, been weaponized against people on the left
and conservatives said, that's right.
Yeah.
We don't like those people.
Let's go after this.
And they kind of bent some of the rules with that stuff in the past, but now the politics
has, the pendulum has swung in the other direction and now they're starting to come
after people, uh, who are conservative. And it,
it really does seem like a politicized issue here. Uh,
but before we get into, um, into that, I'm jumping ahead a little bit here. Uh,
tell us a little bit about some of the, um, incidents that you had that,
that really bothered you. because you mentioned one of them
in particular that you went to interview somebody. Tell us a little bit about that.
Yeah, the cases that were in my office were basically investigated and there wasn't much
to do on them, which is again, they were sitting in Washington, D.C., our own cases. We weren't
really in charge of them. So I didn't have a whole lot of investigative work to do. I really had only a couple things. One was I was tasked to go and interview a gentleman who was said to have been
at the Capitol that day and had been inflicting violence against police officers. The folks in
Washington, D.C. had done a workup on his phone GPS, and that was negative. The facial recognition
that they had was negative. And it was an anonymous
tip. So there was really no way we could actually bring a successful prosecution forward, even if
the man were to confess because he could just be a crazy person. But nevertheless, I was told that
I didn't have the option to just say it shouldn't be resourced. And I went and contacted that
gentleman at his house and wasn't going to waste his time,
but it was very direct and said, we're at the Capitol on January 6th. And he responded that he was not because that was the day of his son's funeral.
And that is just one case of the collateral damage of this giant dragnet that the FBI
has now inflicted on the population. And we see that even with righteous subjects who
may have committed crimes on January 6th. And in the case with my office, where I eventually came
forward and said I didn't want to participate, was an individual who's going to be charged with
a felony, but had pledged to be cooperative with the FBI. And when he'd spoken to the felony, but had pledged to be cooperative with the FBI. When he'd spoken to the FBI,
a year and a half had transpired between him being recontacted and they were going to send SWAT to
his house to arrest him. I'm a SWAT guy. I was on SWAT for five years, but I know that that is not
in keeping with the tradition of law enforcement. You should be using the least amount of force necessary. That's an unnecessary risk to the public, to our personnel. And I voiced my concern, I would have voiced a concern. Well, I was there
for that incident that I foresaw the potential to have another incident like Ruby Ridge or Waco.
And I wanted to voice my concern. And unfortunately for me, for my professional future with the FBI,
at every level, I went to three different levels of management. I was rebuffed and I was told that
I had a really great reputation and that I was risking my career by expressing my concerns. And I voiced that I had
an oath of office to upkeep. I had specific training where at the FBI Academy, they send
you to the Holocaust Memorial Museum and they send you to the MLK Memorial. And the purpose of that
is to really hammer home that unless someone
throws the flag in law enforcement and law enforcement just puts their head down and
follows orders, that can only lead to civil rights atrocities and genocide. And it was my
sincere belief that that is what the FBI is on course to do at this point. But again, management
didn't share my sentiment and actually pushed back when I said
that I had an oath to upkeep. They told me I had a duty to the FBI and had to follow orders and was
being insubordinate. Wow. And we've seen this even with military who were told that they had to take
the vaccine. And they said, well, you know, we've got a lot of problems with that. You know, religious
liberty, for example, is one of those that I have. And people say, well, you have an obligation to obey orders.
I said, no, I have an obligation to defend the Constitution, and that's what I'm doing by defending my rights.
You're very right to point out how, you know, Ruby Ridge and Waco blew up because of the excessive use of force and so many people died. I wanted to get back though to this person that they reported to you that was
an anonymous tip or something that somebody had accused them. There were so many people who were
flagged because of geofence information because how the phone companies and Google and all the
rest of them turning over people's records if they were anywhere in that area. We had Bank of America go even further, and they gave a list to the FBI, presumably, of
anybody who had any financial transactions around the Capitol, but not necessarily buying
anything there at the Capitol, but anywhere in Washington, D.C., or in the suburbs of
Virginia or Maryland.
I mean, they had a very big net.
Anybody that bought anything went to the FBI.
And presumably the FBI then looked at their political background
and looked at whether they owned guns or anything like that.
And it was that type of circumstantial stuff that got people caught up.
Did you have any situations like that,
that kind of wild circumstantial geofencing or
transactions?
And then, oh, by the way, this person's also a conservative, maybe owns a gun, so let's
go visit them.
Was that what you were saying too?
I know that the individuals in my office saw that, but when it came to my involvement,
I was moved over in October of 2021 and all of that background work had already been done.
But that is very consistent with everything I've talked about with the other agents who investigated those cases, and not my office, but a multitude of other offices.
And I think it's sort of in line with, you know, we were warned in President Eisenhower's farewell address about a military industrial complex and a scientific industrial complex. There's now an information industrial complex that exists with the ease of which digital
information is shared.
And there's a collusion that has gone on between the federal government and private
industry to share that information.
And it is circumventing the constitutional protections.
And they sort of think they've found a hack.
But nobody's in the room saying, well, if you're doing
the bidding of the government, regardless of whether or not they've asked you to with the
proper service, a proper subpoena or a search warrant, you are in fact an agent of the government.
And that needs to be challenged in court. It needs to be upheld and it needs to be confronted
at a legislative level by our by our elect officials.
I'm glad to hear you say that. I've talked for the longest time about, you know, everybody likes to talk about the deep state, the dark state, all the rest of stuff.
It's the deputized state. And we've seen it as you talk about information. We've seen it with censorship.
They deputize the social media companies, but they also deputize Bank of America to do the search warrants for them. And the pretense that they've got, of course, with it, Stephen, is that they always go back to the rulings where AT&T was spying on people.
And they said, well, you know, we want to get this information from them.
We got the PIN number stuff.
And it's data that belongs to you.
So would you like to turn it over to us since, you know, we give you a nice monopoly of all the phone lines and all the rest of the stuff?
Sure, yeah, we'll turn this over to you.
We're happy to be of help to you.
And so that's really kind of, you know, part of, there's a lot of different things that are going on to violate the Constitution, due process, search warrants, and all the rest of the stuff to say that, well, this data belongs to the corporation.
The corporation is voluntarily complying with us.
And we're not actually doing it.
Now we see that there's all these back channels where they're actually telling them who they wanted to come after and all the rest of the corporation. The corporation is voluntarily complying with us and we're not actually doing it. Now we see that there's all these back channels where they're actually telling them who they
wanted to come after and all the rest of this stuff. This is very concerning and I'm glad that
you're talking about this because I think as a whistleblower who has seen this kind of stuff
happening, you've got a lot of weight and a lot of integrity for standing up to this. Tell us a
little bit about how, again, you raised your concern and
they said, well, gee, you know, we really would like, you got a great job here and a great work
history, would really hate for you to ruin it. I mean, how did they really respond to this?
Was that kind of it? And then what happened? Yeah. So the real seminal moment for me was
the day before the arrest operations were going to be happening. I was
summoned to my headquarters in Jacksonville. So I drove up there and had a long conversation with
two assistant special agents in charge of my office. I expressed all the concerns here that
I've spoken about and said, I believe that we could be people's.
Oh, did we lose be people. Oh,
did we lose a,
okay.
Well,
shoot.
Okay. We're going to try to reestablish contact there.
Um,
is it,
has it dropped or still connected?
Okay.
Drop it and then try to reconnect with him.
And,
we just lost our,
our line there.
Uh,
but I do want to ask him about that and I want to ask him,
is he back? Okay. Oh, good. Okay, great. We lost a, I never lost you there. Uh, but I do want to ask him about that. And I want to ask him, is he back? Okay. Oh,
good. Okay, great. We lost a guy. I never lost you there. Sorry. Oh, you didn't. Okay. All right.
Good. Well, we froze up on, on our end for some reason. Uh, I'm sorry. You were in the middle of
talking about how, um, they responded when you told them that you weren't good with this. If
you can back up a little bit. Yeah so i mean i i expressed that to them
we had a long conversation about it uh they during that course that meeting uh several remarks were
made to me that were incredibly concerning especially when i said i have an oath of office
and they they said i had a duty to the fbi one of the uh one of the the bosses in the room said that
police officers were killed on january 6th by the by the protesters uh and when i said that police officers were killed on January 6th by the protesters. And when I said
that that was not actually accurate, he told me I needed to go and re-examine the facts.
I proposed alternatives that we could use to bring folks into custody. I mean, it could just be a
phone call to an attorney, surrender. We could send local law enforcement we could use surveillance to interdict
somebody I didn't feel that SWAT was necessary um but to all those were were turned down and at the
end of the meeting um you know we kind of I just I'm a pretty straight shooter so I said you know
fellows uh where where were we left with this and I was given the assurance that uh this was a going
to be a long process uh this is the federal government and things take a really long time.
And I went on my merry way.
And three hours later, got an email
that told me that I was insubordinate
and I was ordered to stay home the following day
and report myself as AWOL.
So I never actually had the opportunity
to be insubordinate and not show or something like that.
I was ordered to be AWOL,
which I did and
was Dr. Days Bay before returning to work. And then subsequently had a meeting with the next
level of the chain of command and with the special agent in charge, wherein which she told me that I
was a conspiracy theorist and that I represented a fringe belief and that I needed to do soul
searching to determine if I wanted to have a future with the agency. And then after that, she told me she had already referred
me for investigation to the FBI's inspection division and to the security division. And at
that point, I kind of knew that the writing was on the wall because the FBI has retaliated against whistleblowers using a very nefarious process.
And that is the security clearance.
Because in order to work at the FBI, you need to have a security clearance.
So my security clearance was suspended 30 days after my initial disclosures that I made to my bosses.
And the reason that it was suspended was not because I blew the whistle or raised
concerns. It was because they determined I accessed the employee handbook improperly.
And therefore, they had to do a full investigation of that and walk me out the building. I was placed
in a unpaid yet still employed status, which is a strategy that they use
to essentially wait people out
and hopefully, I hope that due to financial stress
that they will resign
and then they can attribute any sort of accusations
that you make as being the concerns of an angry ex-employee
and not taken seriously.
But unfortunately for them, I'm pretty stubborn and I'm also pretty
financially savvy. I had done a fair amount of saving in preparation to be fired during the
COVID vaccines. I knew that they were developing a registry and I told my wife, look, we're going
to have to prepare for a time that I'm going to be looking for a new job. So we had sort of a war
chest built up. Didn't anticipate having her lose her job, which did happen a few weeks after my suspension
under some suspicious circumstances. Her Facebook account was also shut down immediately. And I was
denied my training records, which I would need for outside employment. I put in two requests
for outside employment, which you're entitled to do when you're unpaid. And they denied both requests. My medical information was leaked to the New York
Times. And they also told the Times that I was accused of shooting a firearm in my backyard.
And finally, I received communication from the FBI inspection division that attempted to put a gag order on me.
And I was told that I was not allowed to speak about anything that was happening as far as the investigation of the allegations against me with anyone,
to include my family, friends, attorney, which is an illegal gag order.
So this is just a long, long train of humiliations and abuses that came from the FBI and ultimately culminated where I had
an opportunity.
I had a job offer from the Center for Renewing America.
They had a fellowship come available that I applied for, submitted samples of my writing
and interviewed for and was actually offered a position for and ultimately accepted the
day that I testified in a closed deposition for the Select Committee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government.
And I want to talk to you about that.
I want to talk to you about the organization that you're working for now.
But that is absolutely amazing.
The fact is that they were the ones who were insubordinate.
They were insubordinate to the Constitution.
They told you you had a duty to the FBI.
You got a duty to the Constitution.
You are supposed to be subordinate to that. And yet, you know, it, it doesn't surprise me that they would call you a conspiracy theorist
because of course that's what the FBI coined, uh, that phrase, you know, in terms of JFK
assassination, but it is truly amazing to see the links that they will go to in order to set up
dirty tricks and, uh to, again, leak what
they think is derogatory information about you, make accusations about you that aren't
true, shut down your wife's social media account to try to gag you with all this stuff.
That truly is amazing.
But I've seen this before, Steve.
I talked about how I've interviewed Whistleblower for the CIA, John Kiriakou, and Joe Bannister from the IRS.
But, of course, I also talked to some NSA whistleblowers, Thomas Drake, William Benny.
Thomas Drake, when you mentioned the fact that they accused you of something about the employee manual,
they tried to get Thomas Drake sent to prison because they said that he had taken home documents with him.
He denied that he had them.
But the documents that they had were things like securities, my friend.
It was an opening employee trainer manual.
And it was ludicrous what they even considered to be documents that were of concern.
And then the fact that they tried to set him up with those and tried to put him in jail.
Did they ever come after you with any kind of criminal charges?
I mean, you're mentioning things about, you know,
well, he had accusation of shooting a firearm in his backyard
and other things like that.
Was it even a setup to try to say,
we're going to take your security clearance
and then wait and see if you latched a hold of something
that had a security classification on it?
Was that part of it?
They tried to set me up
to be charged with a process crime for lying uh to an investigator so i had to submit to a
compelled interview with the fbi security division um and then the one thing that you have to know
is in the meeting that i had with my two assistant special agents in charge um i wanted to memorialize
and i was law enforcement i consulted a, I live in the state of
Florida. It's a two-party consent state. There's a law enforcement exemption to recording conversations,
consulted with state certified law enforcement beforehand to confirm that I was in the good
to do that. I might be outside of the FBI's policy, but policy isn't the law. And I recorded
the conversation that I had with them. And when I submitted to this compelled interview with the security division, they asked me point blank, did you record the interview?
And I answered honestly, yes, I had. And there was very apparent to me, and it's sort of like
one magician trying to impress another magician with a trick. When you're a trained investigator,
a trained interviewer, I kind of knew what they were doing. And the natural follow-up to that
question where I had made some, I'd given them some information that there had been some pretty damning statements
made during this interview, this meeting that I had with these executives that were trying to
compel me to violate my oath of office. You would think the natural follow-up would be,
Steve, can we get a copy of that interview? And they never did that. They
were hoping that I was going to say no, and then they could cut the search warrant for my house
and charge me with lying to a federal investigator. Because in going back and having listened to
that meeting that I had, which I actually have transcribed and it is in my book,
so anybody who gets a copy will have access to they and then the fbi
tried to get me to redact during the publication process but i'm not going to do that um they it
was very clear to me that they were recording the interview as well they were trying to divorce my
my ability to come forward as a whistleblower from my orders to submit to to to participating in
those those uh operations uh and And they repeatedly kept saying,
so what you're telling me, Steve, is you're refusing to do your job. And I kept saying,
no, I'm doing my job. So I think that they have a recording of it. They know what was said,
and they weren't concerned about what was said. They were just worried about the exposure
that the FBI has, because the FBI is their prime directive is
protect the image, protect the shield. That is the reputation. That is, is all that matters to the
FBI. Well, I'll tell you what, their reputation is in the toilet. Now it's the things that have
happened in the last few years, especially, uh, that must be a very interesting transcript
because I can imagine. And that is what I've always said about all this Trump stuff.
I said his real jeopardy is going to be a perjury trap, you know, blathering about something and carelessly talking about things.
And so you know that.
You know things like how they come after celebrities like Martha Stewart.
You know, they got her for lying to the FBI, not for insider trading. So this must've been a real mental battle to try to carefully phrase these terms in ways
that they could not get you with a perjury trap. It must be a fascinating read. Of course,
that transcript is in your book, a true blue Steven friend. Uh, I, I imagine that would be
worth the price of the book right there to see that back and forth with you and these interrogators trying to entrap you, you know, any kind of an error that you would make, you know, any kind of factual error.
They would come after you as a crime to lock you up.
It's truly amazing.
And it is frightening for the rest of us because you know how those rules are and you know how they're operating and but the rest of us
don't we're babes in the woods right somebody is accused of something and our first instinct if
we're innocent is to say yeah i don't mind talking about this i've got nothing to hide i'm innocent
and it's that kind of an entrapment that is really a danger for the average citizen isn't it exactly
right and uh we've got to a point now where uh the fbi is no longer an objective force
for good uh they have weaponized the uh the process crimes to go after people we saw that
happen with somebody like mike flynn where james comey sent agents over to specifically get him to
answer a question that lacked candor or could be contrived to have lacked candor in a way and they
could bring charges to force his either criminal charge or at least his firing from the national security advisor
um and uh and and that is why we'll see this these ongoing investigations of somebody like
former President Trump where they could just say well you you weren't an illegal necktie and he
could say that's a ridiculous that's not illegal I'm not going to participate in your in your witch
hunt and he could and they could say oh well now you've obstructed our investigation
and we'll charge you with the process crime wow yeah it truly is amazing what has happened now
you are working uh since you testify well let's before we get into what you're doing right now
the center for renewing america let's talk a little bit about the response uh from washington
congressional hearings all the rest of the stuff i mean what has been the response from Washington, congressional hearings, all the rest of this
stuff. I mean, what has been the response, since this is a politicized investigation,
what has been the response from Republicans, for example, to any of this, or even from Democrats?
You know, do Democrats care? Are they full on with this? What have the Republicans said,
if anything? There was definitely some appetite from some of the Republicans on the select
committee on the weaponization of the Republicans on the select committee,
on the weaponization of the federal government. Matt Gaetz and Dan Bishop both participated in
my deposition. They both brought questions forward and seemed genuinely interested in
not only the information I had as a whistleblower, but also other information and concerns that I
have, which I feel is vitally important to bring to not just Congress's attention, but to the American population's attention. Unfortunately, the FBI and the Democrat Party and mainstream media
have all colluded and attacked the messenger. And here's the thing about being a quote unquote
whistleblower. I've been a self-styled whistleblower, as I believe what CNN says I am.
It's 5 U.S.C. 2303. I followed it, the letter of the law. I made a protected disclosure to
numerous members of my chain of command, the inspector general, the office of special counsel,
and to Congress, both Democrat and Republican. So I've gone through a list of those. Each one of those
was a protected activity on my part. I don't have to be right about my concerns. I just have to be
reasonable. And it is incumbent on those authorities to take that information and do
a appropriate investigation and assessment as to whether or not I'm right. And I've continued to
say that I brought that information and they could say steve you're wrong
here's why and i would have said okay going back to work now or they could say steve you're right
we're going to fix a problem and i said okay i'm going back to work now but instead all of the guns
were turned all the energy and the resources of the fbi and the democrat party and the media were
turned against myself and the other gentlemen that were at the table with me when we testified last month which in fact mean can only mean one thing you you get
the flack when you're over the Target they are not willing to uh entertain any of the information we
brought forward which we were prepared to discuss in great length in great detail but instead uh the
the members of the minority there were were happy to just pontificate for five minutes each and then accused Marcus Allen of tweeting improperly, even though that wasn't his Twitter account.
And accused me and Gerard O'Boyle of being bought and paid for when we were given a charitable donation several months after being suspended indefinitely without pay.
And we're accused of doing that by Dan Goldman,
who is one of the wealthiest members of Congress.
Truly is amazing.
How many other people were there?
Were they other FBI whistleblowers in this testimony
or were they from other agencies?
Were they all FBI people?
How many were there?
There were three FBI whistleblowers
and Tristan Levitt,
who was an attorney for Empower Oversight,
who represents me.
And that's an organization, 501c3, that represents government whistleblowers.
And then they've been defending me as well as Marcus.
So he was there to sort of be a subject matter expert and share his knowledge.
He has a wealth of it with Congress.
But it was just the three FBI personnel, two agents, and one support staff.
And we were able to present some information.
I mean, obviously, I wanted to get in the, you know, there's the more salacious information about, you know, having gone to school board meetings and gotten license plates from people as part of the FBI's effort to marry school board protesters with domestic terrorists.
But to me, my project now at this point is the integrated program management system that
the FBI has and has had for 10 years, which is the quota system.
That's the ticket book for the traffic cop, where there are quotas for opening a number
of cases and using certain tools and getting a certain number of arrests.
And in order to keep the budgets flowing, there's games played,
like where they will open up thousands of domestic terrorism cases off of January 6th,
which is not an adequate or accurate representation of what that actually was.
And now you have the special agents in charge of all 56 field offices
since those cases were spread around the country.
They're all collecting bonuses somewhere in the area between $30,000 and $50,000
because those numbers were met.
Wow. Wow. That's amazing.
I've covered the case of Adrian Schoolcraft,
who is a New York City whistleblower for the police.
And he had situations like that where they said, you know, hey, it's Halloween.
I just want you to round up anybody that you can bring them back, and we'll book them,
and we'll find out what to charge them with later.
We don't care.
Just bring people in.
You know, you've got to quote a type of system like that.
And he started recording and recording other police officers.
Once they found out about that, his father was a police officer.
And he was a, again, your book is True Blue.
He was a True Blue believer as well.
He really believed in being a cop.
They tried to punish him by making him walk a beat.
And he goes, well, that's good.
I think it's a good thing for me to be out there and deter crime and get to know the people in the community.
He didn't see that as a punishment.
But they eventually came around and he had another recording that was up on the wall behind some books that memorialized what had happened with that.
But they went to his apartment, the guy who was number two in the New York City Police Department.
They arrested him and put him in an insane asylum.
His father, who was a retired cop, found the other recording and got him out.
But, I mean, that's the thing.
They turn against people. And when the institution becomes that level of being corrupt,
exactly what do you think we should do with the FBI?
I mean, is it to the point where it is salvageable?
I don't think it is.
I think you need to do away with the FBI entirely.
And I know that sounds scary to people, but this country existed before the FBI. It can exist after the FBI. There's a strong argument
that I've been making for the last several months that the FBI is an a constitutional organization.
It was not, there was no legislation brought forward to originate it. It was actually
backdated. And so the FBI was about preserving status quo not necessarily about
protecting the constitution or the rights of americans uh so in the 30s 40s and 50s uh the fbi
had to preserve the status quo went after communists and i think americans assumed that
they were the good guys um but then the fbi went after draft dodgers because you know and then you
can have the debate over whether legitimacy of the Vietnam War.
And I think there were still people that thought they were doing good work.
But COINTELPRO and infiltrating the Black Panthers, there's some civil rights concerns there. And we can jump all the way into the 21st century, where after 9-11 and national security, mission creeps started to occur because our military stomped down the
the foreign threats significantly the fbi had to justify its national security branch existence and
and budget uh so they started to look from uh from counterterrorism uh abroad to homegrown terrorism
and that's where you saw some entrapment of muslim americans and then uh when they ran out of those
now they've come after
violent, domestic violent extremists, as they call them, which are the conservative Americans.
And you look no further than last September, the red speech that President Biden delivered
at Independence Hall, he identified Republicans, first it was MAGA Republicans, then it eventually
evolved into Republicans as being anti-government white
supremacist. And two of the top priorities for the FBI in counterterrorism are anti-government
extremism and ethnic extremism, parenthetically white supremacy. So you've now got the FBI
preserving the status quo for a very radical left that is in charge of our government yeah it is so to answer
the question about the FBI um I think that you can look to locals I think very similar to the way we
used to elect senators in this country where they came from the state houses we can eliminate the
FBI and empower U.S Marshals to deputize more we're there to currently do it but more local
detectives in sheriff's offices,
police departments, and allow those guys who have the local knowledge of what's going on in their
town, they know the usual suspects, they know the crime that's going on on Main Street,
they can pursue criminal cases that at a federal level, local, state, however they see adequate,
bring those cases to a U.S. Attorney's office if it's appropriate, and that will empower the
local agencies to essentially staff the federal government and really let federal law enforcement
do what's best for the locals as opposed to what their minders are asking them to do in Washington,
D.C. I couldn't agree with you more. I am so happy to hear somebody give an honest assessment of the
FBI. And of course, it goes all the way back to the beginning of the Palmer raids and J. Edgar Hoover and his,
and his, uh, he was a master politician. He was a master salesman, if you will. I mean,
he was the one who was behind the FBI series with Ephraim Zimbalist Jr. That's how he built this,
this reputation. And of course, since they were coming after, as you point out, the communists
and people on the left, everybody was concerned about them at that time, and now they have switched which side
that they're on.
And now a lot of people who have been applauding them are seeing this, but it's always been
that way.
And it's always been an unconstitutional agency.
Let me ask you, because we talked about the deputized state, what about things like the
Southern Poverty Law Center has been used as a consultant for the FBI in the past, pointing the finger at other people. It gives them plausible deniability. It gives more
credibility to these charges, but they work in a kind of public-private partnership type of thing.
Did you see some of that when you were working there? Yes, yes. Even at the FBI Academy,
when we had training on terrorism, we had to watch a video provided to us by the Southern Poverty Law Center where they ranked pro-life activists as higher on the threat level than ISIS. Wow, really? That's amazing.
Doesn't surprise me, I guess, but that truly is amazing. Let's talk about what you're doing right
now with the Center for Renewing America. You're a senior fellow on domestic intelligence and
security service. Tell us a little bit about the organization first and then tell us
what you're doing there. Well, thank you for that. So Russ Vogt, the director of the OMB under the
Trump administration, is our president and founder of this organization. And we are focused on
confronting woke and weaponized government in any way we can.
And my contribution to that is in this domestic intelligence and security sphere.
So bringing my knowledge about the FBI and the problems within the agency forward and producing some white papers and also some policy recommendations. And CRA liaises very well with many of the congressmen who stood up against Speaker McCarthy's
speakership during that week-long event that we had in January and brings those concerns
forward and has basically crafted a new budget that should be implemented on day one if power
were to change hands.
And I'm trying to just provide my insight there,
as well as advising this select committee
on the weaponization of the federal government.
So in a cruel twist of irony,
I get to investigate the FBI who was investigating me.
And they continue to just represent
what this group means and speak out.
And I've just started to come around to the message of,
I'm swinging a hammer at a giant stone and it might not break for the first 999 times, but on a thousandth strike it does.
And that doesn't mean that my 1000th swing of the hammer was what did it.
It was everything along the way.
And then I'll just continue to hammer away to, to get this message out there as many people as possible.
That's right.
The price of liberty is eternal vigilance and it's persistence as well. And this is such a dangerous thing with the power, the money, and the technology that is behind the federal government.
For it to have this massive, weaponized, politicized police force is a very, very dangerous thing for all of us.
I mean, we should learn the lesson from the Stasi. And they didn't have, you know, but only a fraction of the power and the technology that is currently possessed by modern states.
And if they're going to be allowed to act in a lawless way without any restraint whatsoever, then we do have essentially, you know, a much more powerful Stasi that
is there.
This truly is, uh, something that is, should be a concern to everybody.
And I think it's very important that people read your book.
Uh, and I hope that they get that again.
The book is a true blue and, um, Stephen friend is the author.
You can find it whenever, wherever books are sold.
He doesn't have a separate website to sell that, but you can find it Amazon anywhere that you buy your books.
Is there anything else that you would like to, in kind of a parting way, to tell people in America about the dangers of this or anything else you'd like to tell us?
Well, yeah, thank you.
And thank you for allowing me the opportunity to share the information about the book.
It's not intended to be.
It's not political in any way. It's just the information about the book um you know it's not intended to be it's it's not political in any way it's just the information being brought
forward and i certainly share your sentiment um with uh the this this growing intelligence state
that is now the fbi has evolved into an intelligence agency with a law enforcement
capability um if there's any you know final idea that i just threw out into the ether uh everybody
wants to say that their first amendment uh absolutist, and the Second Amendment is there to support that. I think we need to
start looking at our Third Amendment. And I know that that's the quartering of soldiers and kind
of makes an eyebrow raise. But when we look at things like the way that big tech has colluded
with government, there's not a whole lot different than a red coat listening on your bedroom wall from the guest room than the cell phone that's next to your night table that you're
charging every night. Boy, Stephen, you and I are on the same page. I have said that so many times.
They're living on your computer. It's even worse than sitting on your couch asking you for potato
chips. That is so good. We are in 100% agreement on these things, and I'm so glad to
hear you saying that. You have so much credibility for walking the walk. Freedom is not free.
Somebody has to pay the price for it. You've paid the price for this. You have kept your integrity.
You've been honest and faithful to the Constitution. I cannot thank you enough,
and certainly you are spot on in understanding what the real dangers are here, and you have the courage to speak out.
I can't thank you enough for doing that.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Have a great day, and God bless you.
Thank you.
Again, the book is True Blue.
The author is Stephen Friend.
And I think it would be worth the price of admission just to see the transcripts going back and forth between him and the FBI.
Obviously, he won because he's not in jail. Thank you, Stephen. Decoding the mainstream propaganda.
It's the david knight show
kim witzak she is someone who has worked and had a lot of experience and we're going to talk about her own personal experience uh with um uh ssris and she's had a tragic experience in her life.
And she has worked very hard to try to make sure that this doesn't happen to other people.
As she pointed out, she became an accidental advocate for people to be informed about the
risks and dangers of SSRI and many other drugs that are out there.
Her site is WoodyMatters.com.
Woody was her husband, and we're going to talk about that and about SSRIs.
Thank you for joining us, Kim.
Great. Thanks for having me.
Thank you. Tell us a little bit about, you said you became an accidental advocate.
Tell us a little bit about your story and your husband's story.
Sure. Well, I like to call myself the accidental advocate because I certainly did not choose to
do this work, but sometimes our greatest life purposes choose us. So I was married, it was
almost, it'll be 20 years ago this August, but I was married on August 6, 2003. I'll never forget
the phone call that changed the trajectory of my life.
My dad called to tell me that my husband, Woody, was found hanging from the rafters of our garage dead at age 37.
Woody was not depressed.
Woody had no history of depression or any other mental illness. He had just started his dream job with a startup company and was having trouble
sleeping, which is not really that uncommon for entrepreneurs. And so, but what he did is, you
know, I always call Woody the athlete who, you know, used doctors because they put him back
Humpty Dumpty, you know, they put him back. So Woody went and saw his gp somebody he's trusted for a long time and
was given a three week sample pack of zoloft which is an antidepressant for insomnia and said it
would take the edge off and help him sleep and yeah it's really crazy and when i look back and
you know i was out of the country the first three weeks he was on the drug.
We both lived, we had very successful careers in advertising. So I was out of the country.
It was our busy time in production.
So I wasn't even there when he first got put on these drugs.
And like I said, the three-week sample pack automatically doubled the dose.
And so that's really the story. But what, what put, you know,
like, we never once and I'll tell you one thing that happened right before Woody's death.
I came home and Woody walked in the back door completely sweat through his blue dress shirt,
fell to the floor in a fetal position with his hands around his head like a vice.
Kim, you got to help me.
I don't know what's happening to me.
My head's outside my body looking in.
And I remember like, yeah, it was really, you know, and at that point we'd been married
for 10 years.
I've never seen this kind of behavior.
And we calmed him down.
He called his doctor and the doctor said, give him four, you got to give the drug four
to six weeks to work, to kick in.
Wow.
Yeah.
Give it time, yeah.
It's amazing when you look at this, and we look up the definition of SSRIs,
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
What you will see on the internet, they'll say,
well, it's the first line of pharmacotherapy for depression and other psychological issues due to its safety, its efficacy, and its tolerance.
It's amazing that they can put this message out there after all the stuff that's happened.
And I've talked in the past, Kim, to people who have just started collecting SSRI stories.
They call it SSRISstories.net.
They've got over 7,000 of those.
And we're trying to get this information out there.
You know, when we look at this and how destructive this has become,
how people will commit suicide, and how sometimes as part of that is mass murder.
We've seen that being a factor in many of the shootings that are out there.
And yet the public doesn't really understand.
And there's so much trust in the doctors and in the pills that people are taking.
I imagine, as you talked about the dosages, when I've talked to the people at SSRIstories.net,
they said where it gets really dangerous is when people are having negative effects and
they decide that they're going to adjust the dosage, maybe even cutting it, not even taking more of it.
But just changing the dosage one way or the other, more or less, can trigger these types of suicides or murder suicide.
Correct.
And it's like they always say, you know, we never, like you just mentioned, we never once questioned a drug because, you know, it's advertised safe and effective, given to him by his doctor and the FDA. And, you know, the most, and at the time,
Woody's death, there were no warnings. So that became kind of our mission. And the night that
Woody was found, the coroner gave us a gift. And I call it a gift because intuitively I knew like
something didn't make sense. Like my husband who loved life we just booked our 10-year anniversary trip that he took his life but she asked one
simple question was would he take in any medication yeah and the only medication he was taking was
zoloft and she said to us that we are going to have to take it with us it might have something
to do with his death so they took the bottle of Zoloft with her.
So that became clue number one.
Ironically, on the front page of our Minneapolis paper, they had an article that said the UK
finds link between antidepressants and suicide in teens.
Wow.
So that was the same night, which is, you know, I look back now and I feel like, you know, that was Woody's
note because there was no note, right? And that became our mission and started to go out to DC.
So what a lot of families don't realize is before this time, when we Googled Zoloft and suicide,
we had no idea that the FDA had hearings in 1991 on the emergence of violence and suicide
with Prozac and did nothing.
And every, you know, did nothing.
They never warned.
And they said to study suicidality, the Eli Lilly never did.
The FDA never followed up.
And meanwhile, here comes Zoloft from Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline,
Paxil, it gets approved for kids. And so that became our mission to get black box suicide
warnings added to these drugs in 2004 for kids, and then 2006 for adults. But a lot of people
don't aren't really aware of that because they just assume and our commercials, you know, a lot of people aren't really aware of that because, you know, they just assume, you know, our commercials.
I mean, the whole thing is just, it is a very important topic that we must constantly keep in front of people like you're doing with this show.
Well, yeah.
You know, when we look at it, you got on your site, Woody Matters.
Woody was your husband's name.
WoodyMatters.com.
You have some interesting
factoids and graphics that are there. You say that there are $19 spent on ads by the pharmaceutical
industry for every $1 that they spend on research. That's pretty astounding. And of course, that's
the Ask Your Doctor commercials. And those things really exploded in the 90s. That's when that first
phenomenon started happening. I've talked many times about how we had not seen, we moved to an
area where we didn't have TV reception. Then we're traveling a few years after this stuff happened.
We're in a hotel and we turn on the TV and it's like, wow, it's just one pharmaceutical ad after
another. I've never seen anything like that before. But $19 worth of ads for every $1 they spend
on research.
That's amazing.
Yeah, it's a great, you know, that was a study that was done by a couple of researchers.
And it's fascinating because it's not just, you know, advertising that we see on television,
but it's all of this other marketing.
You know, there's so much marketing And I, you know, have been,
the interesting thing is I'm still in advertising and marketing. So I have a lens that looks at everything through the marketing and, and advertising lens. And, you know, it's, it's the
perfect, especially when you look at this, it's, you know, the drug commercial, then we've created
all these side industries, and then we've created the advertising with the media networks. All of
this influences that. But then you look at the, I could, you know, call it, like I said, the spider
web, and it's all the trappings of marketing that doctors aren't even aware that they're being
marketed to. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, it can be very, very subtle. It can be very overt. And what we saw with the opioid industry,
they were selling this as like the panacea for everything. Give it for every type of
thing. Getting a lot of people addicted to it. And when they went back and they saw that,
they saw how they were influencing doctors and spending so much
money on vacations and even on hookers with some of them.
It was amazing what they were doing with that.
And so you can imagine that if all the commercials that we see on television,
on cable news especially, are just the tip of the spear.
How much is being spent with the rest of this stuff?
And with free samples and all kinds of studies that they fund.
But, of course, all those commercials guarantee that the news agencies, the big news agencies
on cable aren't really going to cover this topic.
You talked about the fact that whenever the coroner was looking at your husband, Woody,
to ask you, you know, what kind of drugs is he on?
Oh, Zoloft.
Okay, I'm going to take a look.
Whenever we see some kind of a crazy mass shooting,
that has been for the longest time what I try to get to.
Oh, look, this person was under psychological evaluation
and under medication, but they won't say,
typically won't say what it is.
They always still cover for the pharmaceutical companies.
And if you dig far enough, you probably will find,
in almost all these cases, that it is SSRIs or something like that that is a part of that.
It's part of this medication.
But it's very interesting to see how many of these shootings it's been involved with and how the press now doesn't like to mention that whatsoever.
Yeah, you know, again, I go back to the simple question of where was he on any drugs, right?
So that gave me another insight.
So every time there's a mass shooting, a lot of these shootings really started since the advent of antidepressants.
And you look at whether, you know, there's some of the, there's a famous one that had the Donald shell case down in Kentucky
and you know, the, the, they actually settled with, um, with the, the company settled. And so
it became like, so there wouldn't be a jury verdict, um, when the drug was on the trial.
Right. And so these guys have known about it for a long time. It's a simple question. I have always
like, one of the things that we've been out there advocating for is anytime there's a shooting, we as the public,
you know, your HIPAA rules no longer apply. We need to know what medications, again,
it does not say it's causation, right? But is there a link? Is there a curiosity that we should be asking? We should be knowing what medications
they were on. And their privacy doesn't really matter because we are all sitting ducks. And we
should, as a member of the public, we should be demanding that our legislators are pushing for
information or this kind of information or investigations
when we do have big shootings because we need to get to the bottom of
what's going on with this increase.
Why are we seeing it?
Again, I always say it's not causation, but is there a link?
And we need to be curious.
Yeah, they're going to great lengths to keep this manifesto from this shooter
in Nashville under wraps,
but I'd be as interested, if not more interested,
in finding out what was going on with her
with the evaluation, the treatment,
the psychological treatment that she was undergoing.
What kind of medication was she on?
We need to take a look at that as well as the manifesto.
Tell us a little bit about this Donald Schell case that you referred to, where they settled.
Donald Schell was in the 90s, and he was a factory worker, and he shot up
some of the people. I think it was in Kentucky.
I believe it was in Kentucky, Louisville. But anyways, the judge didn't
know that there was a secret settlement. I actually just tweeted about it
earlier in the month. But there was a secret settlement. It was just, I actually just tweeted about it earlier last, earlier in the month, but there was a secret settlement that the judge found out about, but it
really gave, it let the drug company off, which was Eli Lilly, because it was Prozac. They left,
they let them off the hook. And, you know, one of the things I didn't mention as part of my,
as I call battle for Woody, we had a lawsuit against, a wrongful death failure to warn lawsuit against Pfizer, where we were able to get a bunch of documents out from under seal.
And there were some in there that, like Pfizer helped to create, why would a drug company help to create or why would there need to be a prosecutor manual being helped for the, and it was called the Zoloft prosecutor manual, to be used for any time somebody used the Zoloft defense or the drug made me do it.
Again, that's from the 90s.
Then you go back.
I mean, it's really crazy.
They really war game this they
war game all this stuff they war game all the different stories about what they're going to
tell people you know about the warp speed vaccines and everything they've got it planned from the
very beginning so they if somebody says that you know they were under the influence of zoloft
here's what you do to take that away wow yeah again from the the 90s and then you know what
a lot of people also don't realize is you know know, Prozac in Germany was never approved for a couple of reasons initially.
Risk of suicide, lack of efficacy.
And eventually it did get approved, but with a tranquilizer.
Now, that idea of with a tranquilizer never got translated to our u.s right and so
you know that is what we have to remember there's that whole agitation and um akathisia which is
the side effect that can cause you know when woody was having that head outside the body
or it's this extreme agitation this extreme um psychosis that actually Pfizer's chief medical officer
wrote an entire article about akathisia.
And if people would get experience akathisia, quote unquote, his words, not mine, death
may be a welcome result.
Wow.
And so that journal article is public, right? But what
wasn't in public and came out in my documents was a letter that the chief medical officer wrote to
his salespeople that said the attached journal article is not suitable for general practitioners,
but maybe for neurologically inclined psychiatrists.
And I was like, they intentionally kept the side effect of akathisia from the GPs. But you know,
80%, what, 70, 80% of these drugs are written by GPs and not by the psychiatrists.
Wow. And akathisia, that was similar to what your husband
Woody was experiencing with his mind outside of his body type of thing? Yep. And it's like an
extreme agitation. It's like, you know, where you just want it out, you know, I just want it out.
And that's the thing that they said would be, death would be considered to be preferable for
many people like that. And of course, a lot of people, if you're having situations like that,
and some people would alter their dosage for SSRIs
because of physical things that were happening to them, right?
Not just a mental thing that was happening to them.
They might be doing other things to their body,
and so they would adjust the dosage for that or get off of it.
You weren't there when your husband committed suicide.
So you're not sure if he was having this akathisia and it was driving him nuts.
Maybe he made the connection and just didn't take it.
Maybe that could have sent him over the edge as well because it will exacerbate changing your dosage.
This is an important thing for people to know. Changing the dosage can really trigger this thing
and it's almost like taking an overdose for it.
In many cases, even to reduce it a little bit.
Tell people about the black box warning
that is on these things that you were able to get put on,
the FDA black box warning.
So the black box warning is the most serious of all warnings.
That means that there's some type of serious adverse event or death that can be associated with the drug.
It is literally in a black box in your paperwork that you get from, you know, the pharmacist.
But more importantly, it is a conversation that your doctors should be having with us, the patient or the caregiver at the time of prescribing.
And, you know, there's also for kids, there's an FDA medication guide for parents that talks about the suicide, where the dangers are also with some of the anxiety medications, how there's addictive,
you know, qualities to them or that they're on the DEA schedule too. So these are all very,
very important conversations. And you know, it's funny, I always say when people are like,
well, everybody, you know, the media sometimes will say, everybody knows that there's warnings
on these drugs, they just have to put it on. I said, no, that's not true. If you like in 1991, I was a young kid. I didn't even know that the FDA was having hearings
on Prozac and it was a big deal, Prozac and suicide and violence. Right. So in 2004 or 2006,
when I was in the thick of advocating for those and out in DC, you know, almost every other week.
If you were like these parents now, if they were kids, they didn't know anything about this, right?
So I think it's one of those things that we have to constantly be reminding people.
And, you know, just recently, there was a study that looked at, that was done by Dr. David Healy and Peter Goetje out of Copenhagen.
And they looked at, they got the data
that was used to originally approve Prozac for kids,
where it's called, it's part of the reanalysis
of the original clinical trial.
And then they can look at what the data says
and then compare it to what the journals say about the medication.
Well, they just did and looked at Prozac approval that came out of using the MRHA,
which is the UK version of the FDA regulatory body.
And they reanalyzed it and looked at what the data said that was used to get approval
and then what it looks like in the journal and
how it got reported and they left out suicides so they're actually calling for the journals to
actually update their data because they've re-analyzed it but you know it's funny looking
at what we've seen in the last couple years with just the you know the COVID vaccines and all of the censoring and talking about it.
We didn't have that same experience, meaning we didn't have social media
and the media environment when we were trying to get the antidepressant black box warnings.
But now I'm seeing anything to do with antidepressants,
especially around the shootings, but also this re-analyzed study
that just came out.
We're not, the mainstream media has not touched it.
And it should be one of those game-changing findings, this new study that is using old
original data that was used to get the drug approved.
So, you know, I feel like there's so many parallels between those two worlds, but we are living in a different world and, and we have to like, at the end of the day,
it's you and I, the, the, the, the people who either are taking, or we have loved ones or
that we need to be the ones questioning and pushing our officials. You know, I today sit on the FDA advisory board,
the same advisory board that in 1991 didn't do their job and they all took money.
So I have a very unique perspective also sitting on the psychopharmacologic drugs advisory committee,
seeing how new drugs are coming to market using fast tracking and breakthrough.
So I think there's just a lot of,
you know, the system is not really built to protect you and I. It's really protecting others'
interests. And a lot of interests are at play when it comes to the medications that we take.
And it's an unbelievable amount of money that is involved. You know, I mean,
people are willing to kill for billions of dollars.
I mean, we've seen it.
Certainly corporations are.
But tell us a little bit about that experience that you have sitting in there on the FDA committee.
And your role in that is as a consumer advocate.
Tell us what you're seeing.
You mentioned that they're speeding things up.
And, of course, now we're seeing that as they come out with one new vaccine after the other they have established this paradigm we heard fauci talking
about in october 2019 at a milken institute thing they said you know how do we get everybody take a
flu uh shot that we haven't uh tested and he goes well we do it from the inside we do it with
disruption and we do it iteratively well they, they have now established a protocol where they can just run through all these tests
without waiting for a decade, as they were talking about.
We're seeing one vaccine coming after the other with mRNA without really any testing.
Is that what is happening to the psychological drugs that you're looking at in your committee?
How are they speeding that up there, or are they?
Yes, they are.
And so one of the things that Congress kind of granted
is something called a breakthrough.
There's all the fast-tracking mechanisms,
because back in, I think it was the 80s,
with AIDS drugs, and you remember all the groups
were saying, hey, it's taking you too long
to approve these drugs, right?
That was another Fauci thing.
Yeah, it's taking too long.
We've got to get it right.
We've got to make it faster.
Right.
So that was one thing with like, you know, PDUFA.
But then they're also with Congress. They started, they have different regulatory, like it's called breakthrough therapy, fast tracking.
Everything is, if you start watching and listening to the drugs that we take, everything is an unmet need. And so
when there's an unmet need, that means that you can like bypass some of the, some of the more
stringent or what I used to think were gold standards with our clinical trials. So a lot
of the drugs that are coming before my committee, and I've been on it. I've just been extended till the end of next year,
which I still laugh because I tend to be the only one that votes no. And it's very interesting
because I see it from a very different, like, it's not about just, I mean, market, you know,
to get these drugs, you got to remember what clinical trials are. The whole idea is that's,
that is there because they want to get it on the market for marketing purposes. Right. And so they can get it. So, you know, it's about getting, doing the data, getting the best, you know, like a lot of the clinical trials don't even, you know, aren't real world scenarios. They're the best case scenario for something then you have and so that's one thing but then if you don't have sheer volume or numbers because like you know I had a couple of drugs
and I just actually it's an article that's coming out today it was the
result II which is an anti-psychotic that's currently on the market but they
want it the big unmet need right now is Alzheimer's, dementia, agitation.
And so they have been for years with the elderly been using antipsychotics.
But, you know, they got the government cracked down on it because they literally have been killing elderly people regardless.
And so this company, the drug is already on the market and they just
got approval from the FDA. And I was the only, the data that they use was marginally beneficial
for a patient. There was no, or I should say, I almost think this was more for the caregivers
or the nursing homes, as opposed to the patient.
There were no patient, you know, satisfaction type, you know, where a lot of those drugs can deaden somebody.
As well as then it also had a four times rate of death over the other, the drugs.
But this, I was the only one that voted no.
And it's amazing to me. And I really, you know,
I leave these meetings often thinking, am I the only one that's seeing this? You know,
am I the only one? You know, I'm like, why bother? I want to hit my head against the,
you know, the concrete, like, it doesn't make a difference. But here's where I do think,
you know, at least I'm on record, I get to challenge the drug companies. I get to challenge
the FDA officials. And I come from a safety lens and I will always come with a safety lens because,
you know, these drugs are coming to market really with smaller clinical trials. And it
ultimately is what happens when millions of people take the drugs.
And then we start seeing, you know, the different issues happen.
But, you know,
Or what time, or what time.
And as you point out on your website, I encourage people to go there,
WoodyMatters.com.
You say there have been no initiated drug studies by the FDA.
They don't do the studies.
It's the people who are going to sell you the stuff that do the studies,
right?
Exactly.
I mean,
that was shocking too.
And then the other thing that I'll say that was also shocking to me when I
got into this work,
again,
the accidental advocate work,
uh,
I would have assumed that doctors learn about the,
how the FDA works and how this work in med school.
But I was,
I found out they don't learn how the FDA works.
That is not part of, and all of this critical thinking kind of things that you got to be aware
of, of the marketing, the ugly side that's behind the scenes, just so that as a doctor,
you can be a little bit more aware, uh, versus, you know, versus just being educated by pharma.
So the idea that, you know, they're not learning about it was shocking.
The idea that, wait, the FDA doesn't do the trials.
You mean you're doing it and you are the one that wants to sell the product to me?
Of course.
Like we do this all the time in advertising.
We know how to set up clinical trials.
We know how to like play the game. We know how to play the game.
That's right.
So anyways.
And you see that all the time.
You'll have three different companies making a drug for the same thing at the same time, right?
And they'll all run their own studies and they'll say, well, mine is better than brand X and Y.
And then brand X and Y will do it and theirs will win as well.
They rig these studies so much.
It's such a rigged market.
And, of course, the real key is education,
and that's why what you're doing is so important.
At WoodyMatters.com, thank you so much, Kim.
Kim Witsak, I'm so sorry about what happened to turn you into an advocate,
but thank you for being an advocate,
and thank you for being eyes and ears as to what is happening inside the FDA.
We all need to understand what is happening with that.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for having me.
Appreciate it.
Bye-bye.
All right, we'll be right back, folks. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
You're listening to The David Knight Show. Joining us now is Paul Charret.
He has a previous book, The Army of None, about artificial intelligence.
He is a former Army Ranger who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.
His book, Autonomous Weapons and the Army of None, was an award-winning study.
He is Vice President and Director of Studies None was an award-winning study. He is Vice
President Director of Studies at the Center for a New American Security and
this book which is a real page-turner for something that is heavy into
technology but also politics, geopolitics, covers a wide range of areas and I got to
say I really did enjoy it. It's a massive book, but I did enjoy reading it.
The book is Four Battlegrounds, Power in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.
Thank you for joining us, Mr. Shari.
Thank you so much for having me.
Really appreciate it.
Well, thank you.
I want to focus at the very beginning of the book, and this is one of the things that hooked
me.
This book is about the darker side of AI.
And that's what I want to focus on.
Too often, we get this Pollyanna vision
version of the future, you know,
and everything is going to be just shiny new
toys and technology, but the reality
is a little bit concerning,
isn't it? I thought it was interesting
that you began the book
with a talk about an AI dogfight.
That is, and again, there's a lot
of great anecdotes through this, which makes
it such a good book to read. Tell people what was happening in DARPA's ACE program, there's a lot of great anecdotes through this, which makes it such a good book to read.
Tell people what was happening in DARPA's ACE program.
That's Air Combat Evolution.
Yeah, thanks so much.
Well, I'm glad you enjoyed that one.
I thought it was really exciting to learn about.
I talk at the opening of the book about DARPA's ACE program, Air Combat Evolution, and the DARPA Alpha Dogfight Challenge.
So the ACE program is designed to create an AI agent that can go into the cockpit to assist human pilots.
And the Alpha Dogfight Challenge that DARPA did a few years ago,
taking a page from AlphaGo that beat the best humans at Go,
was designed to beat a human in dogfighting in a simulator.
And there's a lot of caveats that apply from a simulator to the real world.
It's not the same.
Right.
But nevertheless, a big challenge because that's a very difficult environment for humans.
You're maneuvering at high speed, requires quick reflexes, situational awareness, anticipating
where's the other pilot going to go.
Yeah, let me interject here and say, you know, one of the things that surprised me about
that was that because of technology, typically missile technology, right, you don't have dogfights anymore.
But that's really a measure of pilot skill is how they were using that.
So tell us how it went.
That's right.
Pilot skill, and in some ways, pilot trust, pilot trust in the AI, right?
If the AI can do dogfighting, then it's going to help pilots trust it more.
So in this competition,
a number of different companies brought their AIs. They competed against each other.
Now, the winner was a previously unheard of company called Heron Systems, beat out Lockheed
Martin in the finals. And then their AI went head to head against the human experienced Air Force
pilot, totally crushed the human. 15 to zero, human didn't get a single shot off against the ai
and the thing that was most interesting to me was the ai was able to make these superhuman
precision shots when the aircraft are racing at each other hundreds of miles an hour head to head
that are basically impossible for humans to make so the ai actually was not just better than the
human but was fighting differently than the human. Yeah. And as you point out in the thing, typically we've all seen dog fights in movies
over and over again, even in Star Wars, the whole thing is to maneuver around and get behind the guy
and take the shot from behind, but it operated differently. What did the AI do? So for humans,
exactly. They want to maneuver behind, get into the six o'clock position behind the enemy and then
get a shot off. But there are these split second opportunities when aircraft are circling
and they're nose to nose. And there's just a fraction of a second where you could get a shot
off when they're racing at each other head to head. And the AI system was able to do this.
It's a shot that's basically impossible for humans to make. It's actually banned in training
because it's risky for humans to even try because they risk a collision when the aircraft are racing at each other head to head.
But the AI was able to make that shot, avoid a collision. And the really wild thing is AI learned
to do that all on its own. It wasn't programmed to do that. It simply learned to do that by flying
in a simulator. Wow. So it's basically playing chicken with the other plane and then taking a kill shot and getting out of the way and not getting out. That's pretty amazing.
Pretty amazing. Now, of course, you point out in the book that it has complete situational
awareness, okay, which is something that helps it. But later in the book, you talk about poker,
and I thought that was very interesting because for all the years, I haven't been following
all the different
game stuff that's been happening you know we had all these competitions where you had uh computers
against chess players and against go players and all the rest of this stuff but I remember at the
time the early days when I was looking at that stuff they were saying well the real thing would
be poker because in poker you don't have uh you don't know the world, the entire world situation.
Don't have a complete surveillance of everything that's there.
And now as of 2017, you talked about what happened with poker.
Tell people where AI is with poker and how it got to that situation.
Exactly.
So poker is a really exciting challenge for AI.
It's difficult because it's what's called an imperfect information game.
There is this hidden information that's critical to the game.
So in chess, in Go, the AI can see the entire board.
You can see all of the pieces and where they are.
But for poker, the most important information, your opponent's cards, is hidden from you.
And so human players have to make estimations.
What do I think this other player has based on their betting and based on the cards that have come out so far?
And it's a really hard problem for AI.
It is yet another game that has fallen to AIs.
And I talk in the book about Libratus, the first AI that was able to achieve superhuman performance in head-to-head, Texas Hold'em.
And then Pluribus, which actually could do this against multiple players, which is way harder from a computational standpoint, because now
there's way more factors. And the really wild thing to me about this was that when you think
about what it would take to achieve superhuman performance in poker, you think you would need
something like a theory of mind, understanding, okay, this other player, what are they thinking
about? Are they bluffing? Turns out, actually, you don't need you know, what are they thinking about? You know, are they bluffing?
Turns out actually you don't need any of that.
You just need to be really, really good at probabilities.
And he is able to do that and to beat the best players in the world.
Wow.
Wow.
I'd like to see it do a game of a blackjack 21.
Definitely be banned at the, uh, that'd be an easy one for it to do that. But yeah, that is the answer.
And you tied that into your experience
in iraq i guess it was maybe as afghanistan but imagine iraq with uh ieds and and how people would
try to guess which path that would be least likely to hit an ied talk a little bit about that and how
the application of this ability to scope stuff out and probabilities and poker, how that applies to a real world situation like that. Yeah. So I tell the story in the book about sort of what is, you
know, how might these tools that are valuable in poker be used for warfare in a variety of ways?
And in fact, the company or the researchers rather that built the Labradus, the system that
achieves superhuman performance in poker, they now have a defense
startup and they're doing work with the defense department
trying to take this technology and apply it to
military applications. So I talk about
some of the things that I saw in
Iraq during the war there where
you're worried about
IEDs, roadside bombs, being
on the side of the road and
I would have discussions with other soldiers about
okay, what's the strategy here, right?
Do you swerve from side to side to keep them guessing where you're going to be?
Do you drive down the middle?
If you see a pothole, do you drive around the pothole, right, to avoid it?
Because there might be an ID hidden in the pothole.
Or is, you know, they know you're going to drive around the pothole,
and then if you go around it, there might be a bomb on the side of the road, and you should drive through it.
And there's not a good answer to these.
That's right.
The things that soldiers talk about when they're in the war and trying to figure out what to do.
But one of the things that's really compelling about this technology is it might give militaries the ability to be more strategic and instead of apply sort of like, you know, just guesswork,
which is basically what we were doing, to then apply a little more of a rigorous strategic approach to keep the enemy constantly guessing.
It's interesting, you know, in your book, you point out how the AI in some of these
war games was super aggressive, always on the attack, never tired, never exhausted.
My son said in Terminator, the Terminator would block blows from humans.
And actually, I wouldn't do this.
It's not a threat.
It would take the blow and immediately kill the person.
You know, that's that's a but it is very different in the way that it fights.
And people are saying this is going to change everything as it gets onto the battlefield,
isn't it?
Well, that's what's amazing is, you know, I talked about how this AI dogfighting agent
fights differently than human pilots and uses different tactics.
That's true across all of these games.
So the AI system that plays poker, it actually uses different betting strategies than human
poker players.
That's also true in chess, in Go, in real-time computer strategy
games like StarCraft 2 and Dota 2. We have these simulated battlefields with different units.
And there are some commonalities actually across how the AI systems are different than humans
across all of these games. And so one of them is that in some of these computer games where these
AI agents are fighting against the human units.
The human players talk about the AIs exhibiting superhuman levels of aggressiveness that they constantly feel pressured all the time in the game because there'll be these little skirmishes among these units.
And then for humans, the battles over and they have to turn their attention elsewhere.
And then they look to a different part of the game and they figure out, OK, what am I going to do over here now?
And the AI can look at the whole game at the same time and it doesn't need to take a break.
It doesn't need to turn its attention somewhere else. So this is really significant effects for warfare because when you look at how real wars unfold among people, there are lulls in combat.
The enemy has to take a rest. They have to refit. They have to sleep. They have to eat.
They have to go reload their ammunition. They have to focus their attention and say, okay,
what are we going to do next? The AI doesn't have those challenges. It's not going to get tired.
It's not going to be emotionally stressed. And so we could see not just the AI is changing the
tactics of warfare in the future, but even the psychology.
Wow. Yeah. You go back and you look at World world war one, the trench warfare, you know, people waiting
long periods of time.
And then it'd be, uh, I've heard many people say, uh, you know, war is, uh, these long
periods of boredom where nothing happens and then sheer terror, you know, that type of
thing.
And even going back to the civil war, I mean, they would even fight seasonably, right.
You know, we'd take the winter off or something like that.
Uh, but so the pace of all this stuff has been accelerating.
But now with AI involved, it really puts the pedal to the metal.
And I want to talk about the four different battlegrounds here and a little bit about deep learning.
But before we do, you've also talked about the ethics of some of these things.
Things like, will it surrender?
It sounds like it's pretty aggressive and will it recognize surrender, I should say.
Will it recognize surrender or will it just keep coming? And that's one of the ethical issues about
this. I mean, what do we do in terms of trying to keep control of this, even on a battlefield,
so that it doesn't get out of control and just keep going even? Does it recognize that it wins even?
Right.
And this is a central problem in AI, whether we're talking about a chatbot like chat GPT
or Bing or a military AI system, where the consequences could be much more severe.
How do we make sure that these systems are going to do what we want them to do?
How do we maintain control over them?
Some Chinese scholars have hypothesized about this idea
of a singularity on the battlefield. At some point in time in the future, where the pace of AI-driven
combat exceeds humans' ability to keep up, and militaries have to effectively turn over the keys
to machines just to be effective. And that is a very troubling prospect, because then how do you
control escalation? How do you end a war, end right if it's happening at superhuman speed yeah yeah and there's no answers to that right now
that's the thing there are no good answers yeah yeah this is hanging over our heads and this
technology again it's uh you know we can't have an ai gap so everybody's working along these lines
it's one of the things that reminded me as i as your book, reminds me of Michael Crichton and the reason that he wrote Jurassic Park was to awaken people
to how rapidly genetic technology was changing and the fact that people were not talking
about it in terms of how to control this or the ethics involved in it.
It's just like, can we do this, you know, and just run with it.
And it seems like we're getting in that situation with this as well. Uh, let's talk, um, again, before we get into the
four battlegrounds, the whole idea of, uh, swarms of hundreds of thousands of drones, as my son said,
nothing good ever comes in a swarm. Uh, so this, this aspect of it, have you ever read the, um,
the book, uh, kill decision by Daniel Suarez is back in 2012. It's kind of the theme of that, where they had come up with swarms. Are you familiar
with that? That's my, it's been a while, but yes, that's a great book. Yeah. And so, so where are
we in, you know, that kind of scenario where you've got this massive swarm of, of, uh, you know,
killer drones that are communicating with each other. We don't have to get into how they
communicate, but it basically is kind of following on an insect model.
Is there a defense against that?
Is that something that is in his book essentially made ships obsolete,
made all the conventional weapons obsolete,
and the military industrial complex had to reset the board and make all new
weapons, and they liked that.
Yeah. Well, I mean, I think we're're not there yet but i do think it's coming so right now today drones are largely remotely controlled
there's a human on the other end if not directly flying the drone by a joystick at least telling
the drone where to go giving it the gps coordinates and then the drone goes there
and generally speaking there's like one person to one drone
but that's limited because that means that for every drone you put on the battlefield you need
a person behind it and people are expensive people are limited and so this idea of swarming is that
now you could have one person controlling many drones tens hundreds thousands of drones all at
the same time and the human obviously is not telling each drone where to go. They're just telling the swarm what to do. So telling the swarm, go conduct reconnaissance,
or look over this area, find the enemy and attack them. Or it could be for logistics, right?
Resupply our troops, give the troops the ammunition and supplies that they need. And the
swarm figures all that out on its own by these individual drones, or there could be robotic
units on the ground or
undersea, autonomously coordinating with one another, it is likely to be a major paradigm
shift in warfare, a huge shift in what militaries call command and control, the way that militaries
organize themselves. So we're not there yet. Most of the systems today pretty remotely controlled,
little bits of autonomy, but that's likely the path that this is taking us, and it's going to transform warfare in very significant
ways.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You talked about earlier, when we talked about the ACE program that DARPA had, combat warfare.
Of course, DARPA runs these contests all the time.
I think the first one they had was autonomous cars, but they've had some, one of them, intelligent UAV swarm challenge.
Tell us a little bit about that and how that turned out. So we're seeing the U.S. military
and the Chinese military invest heavily in these new types of experimentations and demonstrations.
So the U.S. has done a number of swarm demonstrations where they'll take swarms out
to the desert somewhere
and drop them off of an airplane and swarming drones and have them coordinated together.
China is doing the same. So they're taking a page from what the U.S. is doing. They're often
following up with experiments of their own. And the really difficult thing for the U.S. military
is this technology is so widely available. So, for example, we're already seeing drones used in Ukraine,
commercially available drones.
There are some military ones coming from Iran and Turkey,
but also commercially available drones
like you could buy online for a few hundred dollars.
And civilians are using them.
They're using them to assist the Ukrainian military.
And in some cases, we've even seen artificial intelligence
integrated into these
drones. So AI-based image classifiers that can identify tanks, for example, and find them using
AI. And so just the widespread nature of AI and autonomy is a real challenge for militaries.
Think about how do you control this technology? Huge problem for the US military because
all of the US.S.'s advantages
are negated when anyone else has access to this.
Wow. Yeah.
And it's kind of interesting
that they're being used for mainly reconnaissance.
Like we saw, that was one of the key things
that early planes were used for in World War I
was mainly reconnaissance.
Before that, they had reconnaissance balloons
in Civil War and that type of thing.
Then eventually they start dropping small munitions and then it's on, you know, and so it's going to escalate much faster with that.
One of the things that you've talked about is, again, in terms of the AI running away from us, you talk about a flash crash of stocks.
Talk about what that would look like with a flash war. We've got
circuit breakers for the stock market. What do we do for that again? What is the problem?
Define the problem. Right. So the essence of the problem is how do you control operations going on
at machine speed and in a competitive environment? So we envision what this might look like in warfare. So our machines are operating at machine speed faster than a competitive environment. So envision what this might look like in warfare.
So our machines are operating at machine speed faster than humans can keep up.
Their machines are doing the same.
They're interacting.
We're not going to share our algorithms with adversaries.
They're not going to share their algorithms with us.
There's this potential for these unexpected interactions.
Things to spiral out of control.
Well, we've seen this.
Actually, we've seen this in stock trading,
where there are algorithms executing trades in milliseconds, far faster than humans can respond.
And we've had accidents like these flash crashes, where the algorithms interact in some unexpected way with market conditions, in these rapid movements in the price. And the way that
regulators have dealt with this in the financial system is they put in these circuit breakers you
talked about. They take a stock offline. The price moves too quickly in a very short period of time,
but there's no referee to call timeout in. So who's the regulator? There's nobody.
And so if you're going to have some kind of human circuit breaker, that's something that
militaries have to do on their own, or they have to work with competitors to agree to do that, which is, needless to say, that's really hard to
do.
Yeah, not too likely to happen.
That is a very concerning circumstance.
Again, as you point out, it's a great analogy in the stock market.
We've already seen how that works, but there is no referee in a war.
Talk a little bit about the non-belligerent use of artificial intelligence other than as killing machines.
So AI is a widespread, multi-use technology.
We're seeing AI integrated into any aspect of society, in medicine, in finance, in transportation.
One of the really troubling applications that I talk about in the book is the use of AI for domestic surveillance. And we've seen this
really extreme implementation of this inside China, where half of the world's 1 billion
surveillance cameras are in China. And the Chinese Communist Party is building up this
really dystopian model of this tech-enabled authoritarianism. Because if you've got half
a billion cameras, how are you going to monitor that? Well, use AI. And they're using AI for facial recognition, gait recognition,
voice recognition, tracking people's movements, in some cases for really trivial infractions.
Facial recognition being used to go after people for jaywalking, using too much toilet paper in
public restrooms. But also, of course, to go after political dissidents and to clamp down on control that the Chinese Communist Party has and to repress its citizens and minorities.
Hang on right there. I want to show people this little clip. I know you can't see it there.
This is actually a China restaurant. And in order to get toilet paper,
the guy has to go up to a screen and it gets a facial scan of him.
And then it spits out just a little bit of toilet paper but that's the state of where this is i mean uh this is uh
this is kind of where it hits the fan isn't it i mean it's even for that and perhaps they're
going to grab his dna who knows uh this is the toilet paper. You talked about going to China and, um, I don't know what year you went to China.
It was a very different situation from when my family went about 2000.
What was it?
2005, 2006.
And, um, now you talk about what it's like coming into the country.
What do they do when you come in, um, uh, to the country now tell people.
Sure.
So I did several trips to China, um actually COVID hit, was able to get in there
before all the restrictions came down and got to see firsthand how a lot of AI technology
is being employed by the Chinese Communist Party to surveil its citizens.
So one of the first things that happens is you get your face scanned when you come through
into the country and it gets recorded in their database.
Now, I'll point out that also happens at many border checkpoints here in the US.
Yeah, it's rolling out in the TSA now, yeah.
That's right.
So when I came back through Dulles Airport in Washington, DC, also got my face scanned.
Now, what are some of the differences, right?
So same technology, but it's being used, same application that is to check that people are who they say they are, but under very different kinds of political structures and governance regimes.
So here in the U.S., there are laws that govern how the government can do that.
They're set by the elected representatives, by the people. There's also a lot more transparency here in the U.S. So when I walk through a border checkpoint in the U.S., there are signs that say, we're going to collect your facial record, your
face, and we're storing it in a database. It tells you for how long that information is going to be
stored, gives you a link you can go online to get more information on the website. And in fact,
the first place I learned about this wasn't going through a checkpoint in the U.S.,
it was reading about in the Washington Post. So the fact that we have independent media in the US also a way to have
more checks and balances and government power and authority, none of which exists in China.
And that to me just really highlights, it's not about the technology, it's about how we use it.
And are we going to use it to protect human freedom or the Chinese model to crush human freedom yes it's hard power versus
soft power soft power is going to be coming from our dedication to the rule of law to individual
liberty uh to those types of things and um you know and the problem is is that you know it's
getting to the point now where if they want to collect your face, uh, facial information in order to fly, uh, they may tell you all about it, but if you don't want to have your facial scan done, maybe you won't fly.
And that'll be your choice.
You don't get to fly, but, uh, we'll, we'll tell you we're going to do this.
And so it's that kind of level of coercion that kind of has, uh, you know, the pretense of, of choice with it. I'm very concerned that we're just a couple of half steps behind the
Chinese and that most people in this country, as well as elected representatives, most people are
sleepwalking through it. Most elected representatives don't really have it on their,
what they're looking at. But talk a little bit about what is happening
in the area that they are so focused on, the Uyghur area, and as they
were looking at that particular population, how they weaponized it there. So China in particular,
the most sort of extreme version of this techno-dystopian model that China's building
is in Xinjiang, where China has been very active in repressing the Uyghurs there as part of a mass
campaign of repression against them, including imprisonment, home confinement. And then
throughout the area in the major cities, a series of police checkpoints that dot the cities every
few hundred meters that check people via facial recognition, gate recognition, that scan their phones, that use biometric databases,
all to track the movements of these citizens and where they're going.
So for example, if someone drives through an area, a camera checking the license plate on the car,
and then seeking that to other data like the person's face or their geolocation data for their
phone and saying, okay, is this a person who owns the car?
And if not, bam, you get flagged and the government's going to come take a look at you.
And, you know, it's all part of this model.
The Chinese Communist Party is built to control every aspect of its citizens movements.
Because if you can control how much toilet paper people are using, then you're not going
to have people rising up against the government.
That's right.
Yeah.
And of course, you know, as I've said, we look at central bank digital currency,
that gets us there really fast. But these other aspects, constant surveillance,
geospatial intelligence, even being used to anticipate where people are going to go,
anticipatory intelligence, talk a little bit about that, what people typically think of as
pre-crime from a minority report, talk about how they are pulling all this data together,
data mining it, and making decisions about what you're going to do in the future and who their
suspects are going to be. That's right. So one of the things that they built is a platform for
looking at people's behavior, tracking it. China's put together a social credit system,
scoring people based on activities that they're doing,
including sometimes trivial infractions,
like not sorting the recycling.
That might get you docked points
to try to shape people's behavior.
And then also trying to anticipate
where they might find something that looks suspicious.
So if someone books a hotel room on their credit card
in the same city that they live in, that gets flagged by the police and the new police
cloud database that many police departments in major cities and provinces are building in China,
where they'll say, okay, well, that's suspicious. What are you doing? We're going to look at you,
looking at geolocation data. So if they see a person is going to be in an internet cafe
the same time as another person, multiple times during the week.
They're linking these people and saying, okay, what's going on between them?
Trying to ferret out any kind of behavior that the party might see as a threat to it.
Yeah, and that's the thing that's very concerning.
And, of course, the reason you're talking about this is because it's artificial intelligence that allows them to be able to make these correlations and to sort through
just a staggering amount of information.
If we go back and we look at the Stasi, they were keeping track of everybody.
And you point out that they put in some Han Chinese and the Uyghur area to be informants.
But that's nothing compared to all the biometric surveillance and the artificial intelligence
and how they can put that stuff together.
You know, they had so much information.
Everybody was spying.
More than half the people were spies and informants on the other less than half of the people.
And yet they didn't have a way to put that stuff together.
That's the kind of leverage that this technology now gives to dictators, right?
That's what's chilling about it.
It allows this surveillance at a scale that's not possible with humans.
And it's not just that AI can be used for repression.
Lots of technologies can be used for oppression.
A police baton can be used for oppression.
It's the fact that AI can enhance the system of oppression itself and further entrench it
so that it's even harder for citizens to rise up against the government.
So it's not that the Chinese Communist Party is just using this to crack down and find
the dissidents if there's another Tiananmen Square protest in the future.
I walked through Tiananmen Square, surveillance cameras everywhere, as you might expect.
I estimated about 200 cameras across the square at every poll, watching every single movement.
It's the goal really for the party is making sure that the dissidents
never even make it to the square.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I imagine if you did something there in Tiananmen Square
that indicated that you were concerned about that,
that would really put you on their list for sure.
Talk a little bit about Sharp Eyes.
This is something that came out about 2015.
I remember when this program came out.
Talk about the Sharp Eyes initiative in China. So China's been steadily building components of this digital
infrastructure to control its population. So one of the first components of this was the great
firewall, firewalling off information inside China. There's a propaganda component of this.
But increasingly with programs like Skynet and Sharp Eyes, China has been creating the physical infrastructure as well. So not just
controlling information, but now controlling physical space. So Sharp Eyes is a massive
government program to build out surveillance cameras in every aspect of China so that every
single place is covered. Bus stations, train stations, airplanes, hotels, banks, grocery stores.
Every kind of public area is surveilled so that any place someone goes inside China, there's a camera watching them and tracking their movements.
And you mentioned Skynet.
You mentioned in the book that they didn't name it after Terminator, but it's kind of a transliteration of what they've got.
But it's essentially going to be the same thing, I guess, once they hook it up with some military equipment.
Let's talk about the four battlegrounds because that's what your book lays out. military, I think, to look at where we are relative to China in terms of, you don't really
talk that much about Russia.
You do have a quote at the beginning from both Xi Jinping and from Putin about the importance
of artificial intelligence, but the real threat seems to be coming from China in this.
And so you look at this from a power standpoint and you talk about four different
areas. Talk about the first one, data. Sure. So how can the U.S. stay ahead of China in this
really critical technology? Well, data is essential. Data is essentially the fuel for
machine learning systems. Machine learning systems are trained on data. Now, it's often said, or people might have this impression
that China has an advantage in data because they have half a billion surveillance cameras. They're
collecting data on their citizens. When I dove into this, my conclusion ultimately was that
that's not true, that China doesn't have an advantage in data for a couple of reasons.
One is that what matters more than the population size of a country is the user base of these tech companies.
So China's got a bigger population than the U.S. or Europe.
There's more people. They're going to collect more data on their citizens.
But U.S. tech companies aren't confined to the United States.
So platforms like Facebook and YouTube have over 2 billion global users each.
Whereas, in fact, China's WeChat has only
1.2 billion users. And other than TikTok, Chinese companies have really struggled to make it
outside of China and break into the global marketplace. So that's an area where the
population turns out to be not really an advantage for China. In fact, the US probably has
advantages in global reach of these companies. Another reason why people think that China might
have an advantage is because the Chinese government's doing all the surveillance.
Well, it turns out that the Chinese government doesn't let Chinese companies necessarily do that
same level of surveillance. So the Chinese Communist Party is actually pretty restrictive
about who gets its spying powers. They don't want Chinese companies to have the same spying powers
that they do. And they've been passing consumer data privacy laws.
So even though there's no regulations inside China on what the government can do, they actually are passing regulations on what Chinese companies can do to Chinese consumers.
So those same spying powers don't necessarily exist on the corporate side. Of course, in the U.S., U.S. consumers have actually acquiesced a fair amount to this sort of model of corporate surveillance of U.S. tech companies hoovering up lots of their personal data without a lot of pushback, grumbling, but there's no federal data privacy regulations.
And so you apply these things.
We've said for the longest time, if it's free, you are the data.
You're the product, right?
Your data is the product.
And that really underscores how much better they're able to get that information from people just by providing a free product.
And we give them all the information about ourselves.
That's right.
So we actually are giving up a ton of information voluntarily, at least to companies, if not to the government.
And so I'm not sure that China actually has an advantage here.
I think both countries are going to have access to ample data.
The more important thing is going to be building pipelines within companies
or their militaries to take this data, to harness it, to clean it up,
to turn it to useful AI applications.
Yeah, talk a little bit about how that is used by AI, why data is so important.
As you mentioned, people said data is the new oil or whatever, because of machine learning. Tell
people why there's so much concern and emphasis on the quantity of data that they've been able
to collect about us. How's that used? Yeah. So as I'm sure people are aware,
it's why we're having this conversation, part of it is there's been this huge explosion in
artificial intelligence in the last decade. And we've seen tremendous progress through what's
called the deep learning revolution. So not all of AI, we talked about poker, it doesn't use
machine learning, but a lot of the progress right now is using machine learning and a type of
machine learning called deep learning that uses deep neural networks, which are a connectionist paradigm that are loosely modeled on
human brains. And in machine learning, rather than have a set of rules that are written down
by human experts about what the AI should do. And that's how, for example, like a commercial
airplane autopilot functions, a set of rules for what the airplane should do in any given circumstance.
Machine learning doesn't work that way.
And instead, the algorithm is trained on data.
And so people can take data of some kind of behavior
and then train this AI system.
For example, on faces, right?
If you have enough pictures of people's faces
and then they're labeled with those people's names,
you can feed that into a neural network and then they're labeled with those people's names. You can feed
that into a neural network and it can learn to identify who people are based on really subtle
patterns in the faces, the same way that we do. Really subconscious, not even thinking about it,
we can identify faces. And the thing is you need massive amounts of data. So AI systems that do
image classification, for example, that identify objects based on images, use databases with millions of images.
Text models like ChatGPT or Bing use hundreds of gigabytes of text.
In fact, a good portion of the text on the internet.
And so having large amounts of data and having it ready to train these systems is really
foundational to using AI effectively.
Yeah.
One of the examples that you have is being able to distinguish between an apple and a tomato. Talk a little bit about that.
So if you think about a rule-based system, the old model of AI, how would you build a
rule-based system to tell the difference between an apple and a tomato? So they're both, right,
they're both round, they're red, sometimes green, they're shiny. Maybe they have a green stem on
top.
Like if you're trying to tell the difference to someone who'd never seen one before, that's actually kind of tricky to do.
But they look different.
And in fact, a toddler can tell the difference between them if they've seen both of them.
And it turns out that, you know, building a rule by system for AI to tell the difference is really hard. But if you feed enough labeled images of apples and tomatoes to a machine learning system, it can just learn to tell the
difference. The same way that humans do based on all of these subtle cues about the texture and
the shape and how they're different. And so that's a great example of these kinds of problems that AI
is really powerful for using machine learning.
Yeah. You know, when we look at generative AI, the AI that people are using so much for artwork and that type of thing, and you compare it to the chat programs that we've seen and the real
colorful episodes that people had as they were working with it, you know, it's the same type
of thing, essentially. They're able to create this interesting artwork because they've got so many
different images that they have seen and just pull these elements together.
But that's exactly what they're doing with the chat when it goes off the deep
end as well.
They're they've,
they've had all of this massive amount of conversation and,
uh,
you know,
scripts or whatever novels,
and they're able to pull that kind of stuff together
just like they pull together the interesting elements of artwork
to make something that's different.
Isn't that a good analogy, or what do you say?
Oh, absolutely.
They're doing essentially the exact same thing,
just one with images and one with text,
where you've seen this explosion in generative AI,
like chat GPT, like these AI art generators.
They're really, really powerful.
And they're not actually sort of copying and pasting from the database.
What they do is they have a model that's trained on these massive databases of images or text.
And then what happens is they build a statistical model of statistically associations of text or associations of pixels and what an image looks like.
And then with a prompt, if you're talking to, say, chat GPT or to Bing, you start having a conversation, you give it a prompt, and then it's going to spit back a response.
And almost all of the really weird stuff that these language models are doing, when you think about it, it's modeling something that exists on the internet.
So these models, they can get argumentative they're they're arguing with users they're trying to deceive them you know
one case uh the model is telling this user that it's in love with him and he should leave his
wife well all of it seems like really loony behavior but there's all that stuff on the
internet yeah like there's all sorts of weird wacky things on the internet. Yeah. Like there's all sorts of weird, wacky things on the internet. So it's learned based on this text on the internet,
those kinds of behaviors.
And then it's no surprise that it spits them back at us
when we prompted to do so.
Yeah.
Even coming up with a kind of a how scenario,
like from 2001,
I was watching these people on the cameras.
They didn't know I was watching them on the cameras,
that type of thing.
Yeah.
It strikes me as we're talking about the importance and I don't really understand.
How these machine learning models work.
I mean, I've just come after this from a procedural standpoint, you know, it
was an engineering and programming.
Uh, so I don't really understand how these things can assimilate this and
build these models from looking at, uh, you know, pictures, a lot of pictures
of tomatoes and apples and everything, but, uh, they do it somehow. But the key thing with all this appears to be the data. And so I was
wondering, because I've been wondering why there's so much fear and concern about TikTok
with various people. And I know part of it is that, you know, it's going to be able,
it's going to be easier to scrape this data off of,
if they own the platform,
they can get the data more easily than they could
if they were just trying to scrape it off publicly
because everything on Facebook
and all the social media is out there publicly.
But the key thing about this,
I imagine besides getting information
about interesting individuals,
might be the larger
access to, you know, having that big platform of data, because you're talking about, you know,
feeding as, as kind of a strategic resource for nations, the fact that you can get this stuff from
Facebook or other things to feed into your artificial intelligence. Is that part of it?
You think with a TikTok? Absolutely. Data is part of it. And then the algorithm behind TikTok is another big part of it.
So TikTok looks really innocuous. I do think it's a major threat to US national security,
not because the platform itself is a problem, because the ownership is a problem. Because the
company's owned by a Chinese company, It's ultimately beholden to the Chinese
Communist Party. And so one of the problems is that the app could be used to take people's
personal data. So it's on your phone. Your phone will sometimes ask for permission. Oh,
this app can access other information about you, your location, can access other apps.
And you know, I'll be honest, like myself, maybe a lot of people just, okay, allow,
sure. Right. But then all of a sudden that app's grabbing all sorts of information. Maybe your apps and you know i'll be honest like myself maybe a lot of people just okay allow sure right but
then all of a sudden that apps grabbing all sorts of information maybe your contact list maybe it's
grabbing your geolocation maybe it's seeing what you're doing with other apps and it's sending it
back and in the case of tick tock if the chinese communist party says we need access to that data
company has no choice if they say, they go to jail, right?
They can't.
So when the FBI told Apple, you need to unlock this phone, Apple fought the FBI.
They fought them in court and they fought them in the court of public opinion.
And neither of those things exist inside China.
A Chinese company can't fight against the government in that same way.
They don't have any kind of freedom from the government.
And so that's a main problem, but it's also the algorithm behind this information. Because in TikTok, that's true
for all the social media platforms, true for Facebook and Twitter and YouTube.
Right. Yeah. Facebook does it to us. Occasionally they will push back against the government,
but for the most part, they're going to do what the government wants to do. And they're grabbing
all that stuff on as well, right?
Right.
So for all these platforms, they're feeding you information based on this algorithm saying,
okay, we think you should look at this information.
And companies are all very opaque about this.
They're not very transparent about what's in the algorithm. There's been a lot of controversy about many of the U.S. platforms that maybe they're pushing
people towards more extremist content. The problem
with TikTok in particular is that this algorithm could be a vehicle for censoring information.
And in fact, it has been. And in fact, there's been leaks coming out of TikTok that shows
their internal censorship guidelines. That's been leaked. We've seen it. We've seen extra
guidelines. And TikTok has said they would censor political content.
So anything that might be offensive to the Chinese Communist Party, something about the Tiananmen Square massacre, that's censored.
And so that's a real problem when we think about this is an information environment that Americans using.
This would be like the Chinese Communist Party owning a major cable news network in the United States.
That's a real threat to U.S. national security,
and we have to find ways to address it.
Sure, yeah.
It's kind of like what we saw with the Twitter files.
We saw how at the beck and call of officials and government
that they would censor or they would give them information on people.
And, of course, we see the same thing when we look at 5G.
They're concerned about Huawei because the Chinese government
is going to use it to surveil us.
But again, our government is going to use the, uh, the other 5g that's made
by our companies to surveil us as well.
Uh, talk a little bit about, um, you know, while we're on data, uh, the,
the issue of synthetic data, cause I thought it was interesting as I mentioned
earlier, you know, the, the first, uh, competition that DARPA had was a self
driving cars and, uh, in your book, you talk about the fact that Waymo, the number of miles that they've driven and then how they've synthesized this data.
Talk a little bit about that.
Sure.
So synthetic data is AI-generated data.
That could be AI-generated text like some out of chat GPT.
It could be AI-generated text like sums out of chat GPT. It could be AI-generated artwork.
But it's also a tool that companies can use in building more robust AI systems.
So self-driving car companies, for example, are collecting data driving on the roads.
They have the cars that are driving around with all the sensors and all the cameras,
and they're scooping up data as they're driving around.
But they're also using synthetic data in simulations. So Waymo's talked about they're collecting data on roads, but they're
also running simulations. I think they've done 10 million miles on roads, collecting up data.
And I think it's 10 million miles a day, they've said that they're doing in simulation. So they're
able to supplement with many orders of magnitude more because they can run these
simulations at accelerated speed.
And so now if there's a situation, they see where there's a car, there's a new situation
on the highway they've never seen before.
Car cuts them off, does something weird.
They capture that data, they put it in a simulation.
Now they can rerun it different times of day, different lighting conditions, different weather
conditions.
And all of that can make the car more robust and more safe.
So it can be a really valuable tool as a supplement to real-world data, or in some cases, just
as a complete replacement.
And this is what the Alpha Dogfight did.
That AI agent was trained of 30 years of time in a simulation.
So synthetic data in a simulation, teaching them how to perform a task.
That's interesting.
And, you know, when we look at it, you point out 10 million driving miles every single day,
10 billion simulated miles as of 2020.
And yet, you know, we look at this and some skeptics of AI are talking about the fact
that we've gone through a couple of different waves of AI where everybody was excited about it and then things didn't pan out and it dropped off.
And we were now like the third time of that.
We've just had Waymo lay off 8% of their labor force and they're having a problem with it.
It was in san francisco i don't know if i think it was cruise maybe maybe not waymo where their their vehicles all went to one intersection and blocked it you know so you know
there's certain hang-ups like this that are happening but uh even in san francisco where
waymo is headquartered they were all very upset about the um the fact that the cars are moving
slow they're having difficulty, you know,
if you've got a situation at a four-way stop or something, they have difficulty negotiating
with the humans as to who's going to go next, and so they just sit there.
Talk about that.
Is that showing a real Achilles heel for artificial intelligence, what we're seeing in a self-driving
car?
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, we're talking about all the amazing things that AI could do, but it's worth keeping in mind that a lot of the things
we're talking about are really narrow, like playing Go or poker or even generating art images.
And humans have the ability to perform all of these different tasks, right? So humans can
write an essay. They can make a painting, maybe not a great one, but they can do it.
They can use a camera to take a picture. They can get in a car and drive. They can make a pot of
coffee. They can have a conversation. We can have some special purpose AI systems that can do some
of those things, but the AI systems are really brittle. And so if there's something that comes
up that's not in their training data, they might do something super weird.
And that's a big problem for self-driving cars because you need a self-driving car that's
good, not just some of the time, not just 80% of the time or 90%, but the right that's
good all the time.
It's safer than humans.
I think we'll get there eventually, but we're seeing the self-driving cars, how hard that
is out in the real world in an unconstrained environment.
And the human brain, for now, remains the most advanced cognitive processing system on the
planet. And so when we think about using AI, there are going to be some tasks where we might be able
to use AI instead of people. But people are still going to need to be involved in all sorts of
aspects of our society because humans have the ability to take a step back, look at the bigger picture, understand the context,
apply judgment in a way that even the best AI systems can't do.
Yeah. And you know, when, when you look at it in terms of the,
the self-driving car, you know,
you got the different levels of driving ability five is fully autonomous.
Four is like, we're doing most of it for you, but if it's an emergency,
we're going to kick control back to you. And of of course that that's a really dangerous one because typically at that
point in time the person is fast asleep or playing a video game or whatever and it's like you know
here take this take the wheel right now and uh so you know when we see that i would imagine that's
really the big issue you know we started talking about the dog fight i imagine that's the really
big issue with the pilots you know it's like oh okay now we're in a tight spot here. It's up to
you now. I can't handle it. I'm going to kick it back to the pilot. I mean, I'm sure that's the
issue with them as well, right? That's a huge problem. It's a huge problem because right now,
you know, if you had this AI, can you do some things, but not everything? How do you balance
what the AI does and what the human does?
And what we often do, which is a terrible approach, like you're saying, is we can have the
AI do as much as it can, and then we expect the human to fill in the gaps. And that leads to
situations that are just not realistic for humans. So the idea that someone's going to be sitting in
this car, going on the highway at 70 miles an hour, not paying attention because the AI is driving.
And then in a split second, the human's going to realize, uh-oh, something's wrong.
I need to take control, see what's happening, grab control of the steering wheels to the car.
It's not realistic.
Humans can't do that.
And so we need a model for human machines working together that also works for human
psychology.
And in fact, one of the things that this DARPA program is doing with putting an AI in the cockpit is looking at things like pilot trust.
And in fact, what they're doing is now they're taking these AI systems,
they're on a simulators, they're putting them in real world F-16 aircraft, they're flying them up
in the sky, the AI is doing maneuvering of a real airplane. And that itself is challenging,
moving from a simulator to the real world because the real world's a lot more complicated than a simulator but they're
also looking at what's the pilot doing so they've instrumented the whole cockpit and they're looking
at things like tracking up what's the pilot looking at why is the pilot looking at the map
and thinking about the higher level mission which is what we want the pilot doing there's the pilot
looking at the controls trying to figure out what the AI is doing, looking out
the window because the pilot doesn't
trust the AI.
And getting to that level of trust,
getting to that seamless coordination
between humans and AI is going to be really important
to using AI effectively.
Let's talk about the other
three battlegrounds. We talked about
data. The next
one is compute. Tell people what that
represents. So compute means computing hardware or chips that machine learning systems run on. So
machine learning systems are trained on data. They're trained using computing hardware or
computing chips, sometimes massive amounts of computing infrastructure. And for a large
language model like ChatGPT, it's trained on hundreds of gigabytes of text,
often trained for thousands of specialized AI chips, like graphics processing units or
GPUs, running for weeks at a time, churning through all this data, training them up.
If data is a relatively level playing field between the U.S. and China, and hardware and computing power, or it's sometimes called compute, the U.S. has a tremendous advantage.
Because while the global semiconductor supply chains, they're very globalized, they fall through a number of countries.
And in fact, the most advanced chips are not made in the U.S.
Zero percent of the most advanced chips in the world are made here in the United States. They depend on U.S. technology.
And they're made using technology, tooling, and software from U.S. companies.
And it gives the U.S. control over key choke points in the semiconductor supply chain.
And the U.S. has used this to deny China access to semiconductor technology when it was strategically
advantaged to the United States.
The U.S. did this to Huawei. When it turned off Huawei's access to the most advanced 5G chips,
they weren't made in America, they were made in Taiwan, but they were made using U.S. equipment.
And so the U.S. said, using export control regulations to Taiwan, you're not allowed to
export any chips to China of this certain type to Huawei that are made using U.S. equipment.
And now the U.S. has done this actually across the board.
Biden administration put this out in October, very sweeping export controls to China on
semiconductor technology and the most advanced AI chips.
And then on the equipment, this is really critical for China to make its own chips,
holding back China's own domestic production.
Yeah, that's changed quite a bit since I was a young engineer.
We had, you know, the state of the art in terms of geometries,
they were unable to domestically here,
the company I worked for was unable to do it here.
All of their yield was coming out of Japan.
They were able to do it.
But we had, in terms of commodity products,
that had already been seeded 40 years ago to offshore sources,
but we had kind of the lock on CPUs and things like that.
That now has changed, as you pointed out,
and I was surprised to see that in the book,
that pretty much all the sophisticated chips are coming out of Taiwan.
You said Taiwan has 90% of the most advanced chips in the world made in Taiwan.
And so that's one of the things that we're looking at here with China and Taiwan that is extremely important.
And why I think that's going to be a source of conflict,
flashpoint, all the rest of the stuff, why we're seeing this tension build up there
as the Chinese are moving towards Taiwan.
It's because of the advanced chips there and how it is really kind of at the center
of the state of the art of the semiconductor industry,
whereas we've just kind of got a few choke points here and there in the semiconductor industry.
They've got the
big foundries as well as the most advanced foundries there, right?
Absolutely. So 90% of the world's most advanced chips are made in Taiwan, as you said.
And that's a real problem when we think about security of supply chains,
because Taiwan's an island 100 miles off the coast of china the chinese communist party has pledged to absorb
by force if necessary uh so taiwanese independence protecting taiwan is critically important and um
finding ways to to ensure that china doesn't engage in that military aggression as important
political and economic and and military reasons yeah yeah and that's important to understand as
people look at this conflict building up,
the strategic interest that the U.S. perceives in this.
And as you point out,
I thought it was kind of interesting,
you know, looking at Moore's law,
very familiar with that, the computing that the chips
would increase an exponential rate,
doubling every couple of years but you
pointed out that there's another law that i had not heard of rock's law that semiconductor
fabrication doubles every four years and that computer usage because of all this deep learning
stuff is doubling every six months so it's outpacing it but the cost of the semiconductor
manufacturing facilities is causing an amazing concentration because of the capital cost involved in putting up these state-of-the-art facilities and foundries.
That's right.
So the technology that's used in making these most advanced chips is simply unbelievable.
It's some of the most advanced, difficult technologies on the planet. And as the costs continue to go up, so a leading-edge foundry might cost anywhere from $20 to $40 billion to build that foundry using the most state-of-the-art technology.
What we've seen, of course, as a result of these market pressures and rising costs is the number of companies operating at the leading nodes of semiconductor fabrication has continued to shrink.
And so we've seen at the most leading edge now, it's now just two companies, really, TSMC and Samsung.
On the equipment side, there are some companies that have a sole monopoly.
So for the equipment that's used to make the most advanced chips, there's one company in the world, a Dutch company, ASML,
that makes the equipment needed to make those
chips. And these concentrations of the supply chain give the US and allies unique elements
of control over who gets access to this critical resource, the computing hardware that's needed
for the most advanced AI capabilities. And of course, this complicated, complex
distribution of the supply chain is something that is very worrying as we move towards the future.
The lifestyle that we have and the things that are just strung out all over the planet.
And it is truly amazing to think about how that has happened with globalization.
You know, you got one company in this country that, um, and another one in
another country with a different aspect of it.
Talk about, uh, talent.
We were just about out of time, uh, talent and institutions, but let's talk a little
bit about talent because China had the thousand talents program.
And we saw this manifest itself and a Harvard professor during the concerns about bio weapons
and other things like that.
Talk a little bit about the U.S. versus China in terms of talent.
Yeah, so the last two battlegrounds are human talent and institutions,
the organizations needed to import AI technology and to use it effectively.
And the U.S. has a tremendous advantage over China in human talent
because the best AI scientists and researchers from around the world want to come to the United States, including the best scientists in China.
So over half of the top undergraduates in China studying AI come to the U.S. for their graduate work.
And for those Chinese undergraduates who come to the U.S. for graduate school, who study computer science, do a PhD, 90% of them stay in the U.S. for graduate school who study computer science to do a Ph.D.
Ninety percent of them stay in the U.S. after graduation.
So the best and brightest from China actually come into the U.S. and they're staying here.
And that draw of top American universities and companies as a magnet for global talent is a huge advantage that China cannot compete with.
You've got an anecdote about China and their chat program.
Talk about that, the China dream.
Oh, yeah.
So, you know,
one of the chatbots in China,
Microsoft chatbot called Chow Ice,
said on a Chinese social media platform,
someone said, well, what's your Chinese dream?
It's a phrase used by Xi Jinping to talk
about sort of their version of like the
American dream.
And this chatbot says, well, my Chinese dream is to go to America.
And they're not like that.
They probably censored that chatbot.
Yeah.
See, I think that's why, you know, when you look at soft power, I think that, you know, having a climate of liberty and freedom and prosperity, if we can maintain those things, that really, I think, is upstream, our overall system.
And that's really what concerns me when I look at talent, when I look at what is happening in universities and other things like that, because we're starting to lose that kind of freedom.
But talk real quickly, before we run out of time, a little bit about institutions.
So institutions are the last key battleground. and it's institutions that are able to take all of these raw inputs of data, computing hardware, and human talent, and turn them into useful applications.
So if you think about airplane technology, airplanes were invented here in the United States. By the time you got to World War II, they gave the U.S. no meaningful advantage in military air power. All of the great powers had access to aircraft technology. What mattered more
was figuring out what do you do with an airplane? How do you use it effectively? The U.S. Navy and
the Japanese Navy innovated with aircraft carriers, putting aircraft on carriers, using them in naval
battles. Great Britain, on the other hand, had access to aircraft technology, but they squandered
that advantage and they fell behind in carriers, not because they didn't have the technology, but because of bureaucratic and cultural reasons.
And so finding ways to cut through government red tape, move faster, innovate, be agile are really essential if the U.S. is going to stay in the lead and maintain an advantage in artificial intelligence.
It's been fascinating talking to you.
We could go on a long time about this. but again, the book is Four Battlegrounds. The author, as you've been hearing, is Paul
Charest, also the author of Army of None, and I don't know what that was.
But thank you so much, Mr. Charest. Thank you. Appreciate you coming in.
Thank you. Thanks for having me. Thank you very much. And thank you,
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Joining us now is Noah Sanders.
And he has, I think, something that all of you are going to be very interested in. His site is redeemingthedirt.regfox.com.
He's talking about farming, and he's also talking about pulling community together,
and even talking about sharing God's gift of the early spring,
showing God and the growing of this food.
But he's got a lot of details.
There's going to be some seminars that are going to be coming up.
He's got April training, May training, and we'll talk about that, where you can go there
and get hands-on experience in doing a lot of these things.
It is something I think is incredibly valuable,
something that I look at with jealousy of the people
who are able to do this type of thing.
I come from a different background where this is all new to me,
and so we're trying to get our family up into the Foundations for Farming.
But that is the name of his training, his Foundations for Farming.
So joining us now is noah sanders thank
you for joining us noah thank you i appreciate you having me on the show today let's talk a
little bit about uh some of the things that you cover talking about scaling up for homestead level
food security what do people need to do because that's what a lot of people are looking at home
you know food security people very concerned about that. A lot of
uncertainty, but it's better to be able to grow your own than to stash it, I think, and get better
quality stuff as well. Talk a little bit about what people need to think about for food security.
Yeah. So in the U.S., we have, you know, kind of a generational disconnect now from a lot of that
connection with the land historically god's
provided you know an amazing way that you can put seeds in this in the ground and they'll produce
food uh without any huge complex industrial you know economic system and throughout history
uh that tends to be what people always revert to whether it's in world war ii at the victory
gardens uh you had that in the civil war in the South here. You had people have to go back and
learn how to grow flax and make their own linen all the way back in the Revolutionary War. It's
the only way that we were able to separate from Great Britain. So food has always been
linked to freedom. And I think it's encouraging to realize that this is something that has been,
when times are good, people tend to move to other disciplines from agriculture, tend to get
disconnected from the soil, and then have to rediscover that. It's not unique to our generation.
It may be we have unique circumstances because of our technological situation, but it's something
that's had to be done over and over again. And I think the biggest key for all of us in trying to get back to improving some of
the food security in our own areas is to be willing to do what God loves to see, which is to be faithful
with little first before we try to do everything. And a lot of people get burned out trying to do
that. So that's what we really focus on with Foundations for Farming is teaching people
the basics of success so that they don't burn
themselves out trying to do too much too fast to underestimate how much skill it takes to grow food.
Yeah, and I've talked to people in the past, they said that's the rookie mistake, is that you go out
and you try to grow all your food simultaneously at the same time. You got to pick something and
you got to start with that.
Pick something as simple. So what is simple?
What do you tell people to start with?
Yeah. So we kind of break it down to three different levels of agriculture.
One is, you know, growing some of your own food successfully.
That's like your first thing.
And normally that's a garden is the best place to start with that.
The next level up is what we would call a homestead where you're trying to actually grow a lot of your own food, maybe a larger percentage.
And that is more of a lifestyle commitment. You're really going to have to make some sacrifices to do
that in terms of maybe where you live and how free you are to travel. And then the third is where
you're actually getting other people to pay you to grow food for them. And that's when it's actually
like a business venture. A lot of people, we try to, you know,
we get right into farming when we start a business
and anybody can learn to farm,
but it's kind of like,
I love to play the fiddle or the violin
and anybody can learn to play one,
but you don't quit your job tomorrow and buy a violin
and a how to play violin book
and expect to make a living, right?
It's, there is a learning curve.
Yeah. How do you get to Carnegie Hall?
Practice, right?
Right.
And a lot of mistakes.
And that's where starting small is nice because it's a whole lot easier to make a mistake where you lose half your chickens if you have only 10 than if you have 100.
Yeah. Yeah, that's right.
And as you talked about that, you know, lifestyle choices, you've got a lot of farm animals.
If you go real big with a homestead, that's going to tie you down on that homestead, taking care of those chickens, taking care of, uh, cows. We we've done, um, our first, uh,
dip into this was chickens and we've lost, you know, a couple dozen, two different times,
uh, to predators that were there. And that, that does our biggest concern. Other than that,
we were doing great. We liked the chicken, they liked us, and they gave us lots of eggs, but we had
some predators in Texas who loved the chickens even more than we did.
So that was our big issue, but we're getting ready to try to do
some gardening. But when you talk about
starting to get into it with a garden, what type
of things would you recommend that people do to
start out in a garden? Yeah, so we really take the approach of trying to understand that a lot
of us, when we get started in this day and age of information, some of our biggest challenges
is an overwhelm of information. You know, you go on YouTube and you try to be like,
what's the best way to grow a tomato plant? And you get inundated with all these conflicting ideas of what's the
best way to do that. And I faced that same situation when I started farming was it wasn't
as simple as, you know, when I used to do some blacksmithing and there wasn't a whole lot of
controversy on how to make a knife or how to make a nail, but you ask people how to grow a tomato plant or raise a chicken, and there's some real, you know, different battling
perspectives, which really boils down to worldview, whether you view that nature has all the answers
or you view that science and man has all the answers, and those impact the way that you view
life and the way that you make decisions about how life should or shouldn't be treated. And so as Christians, I think it's important for us as we come to the land,
not only just to say, well, practically, how can we make a success of this, but we've always really
said it starts with the heart of us recognizing that to become the greatest farmer requires the
greatest humility. And the farmer that I learned from the most is a guy from Zimbabwe, Africa named Brian Oldreave, who founded Foundations for Farming. And he actually
was a failing farmer who was losing money in Rhodesia in the early 1980s on their farm.
And so he finally got to a point that he just went to the woods where everything was growing
perfectly fine without all the plowing and the fertilizer and everything that he was trying to do in his field. And he just asked God because he saw in Romans
120, where it says that God's eternal attributes are clearly displayed through what has been made.
And he said, show me how to farm God. And he just felt like God showed him two simple principles
that were different than what he had been doing. And one was that there was no regular deep
inversion plowing in natural creation. And secondly, that there was always
this beautiful blanket of mulch covering the ground that protects the soil. So he just applied
those two simple principles to his farm on a small scale first, and then they implemented over the
entire thing. And they were so profitable and successful that at their height, he was managing
the second largest privately owned farm in Africa.
And then as if you know the story of Zimbabwe, the farmers, you know, lost the white farmers, lost all the land. And so the foundations for farming kind of was born out of some of these white farmers who love Jesus saying, if a man takes away your tunic, you let him have your cloak as well.
So how do we apply that?
If a man steals our farm, let's teach him how to farm. So they took the principles they had learned on a large scale and brought it down and began teaching
it to the last least and the lost. And that's really had a huge impact in the poor. And so for
us, when we teach people about approaching gardening, we build it on three
heart attributes of Christ. The foundation of foundations for farming is Jesus Christ.
And it's his humility,
his faithfulness and his unselfishness that he displayed when he came.
So we display the humility by saying,
like Jesus said,
I only do what I see my father doing.
So when we face any problem,
we look at creation,
we say,
well,
what does my father do?
What kind of way,
how did he design it to work?
You know?
And then when faithfulness recognizing that we've got to reflect who God is in the way that we do things, and we do that by doing things on time to a high standard
with minimal waste, and then with joy, because that faithfulness is what God adds to to produce
a profit. And then the unselfishness comes into play when we realize that the land God's given us
is not just ours to do it for our own, you know, um, selves and our own benefit,
but we want to be able to use that to bless others and to teach others and to pass along
what we've learned so that the skill of growing food can be a community thing, not just an
individual thing.
Boy, that's fascinating.
And, you know, that is an example we've seen over and over again, uh, people copying what
God has done in creation you
know you take a look at velcro for example right they'd look at stickers and things like that and
and copying his design his aerodynamic design uh in terms of um airplanes or in terms of even
submarines uh looking at how he's done the contours uh that is uh that is really interesting a very interesting
uh there and what you began with saying you know you can go to youtube and you can get all these
different uh perspectives and stuff part of that you know you can the old phrase for that is
analysis paralysis you can do so much analysis that you actually paralyze yourself from actually
getting anything done.
And so I think that's an important thing as well, to have somebody who has a system that they know works
and just follow that system without trying to pull this stuff together ad hoc.
But talk a little bit about what happened when they had their land taken away.
So what did they do to the people there in the local areas where white farmers had their land taken away. So what did they do to the people there in the local areas
of white farmers had their land taken away?
What did they do?
How did they engage the people there in Zimbabwe?
Yeah, so it actually started a little bit before he had his land taken away.
He felt like God was like, I gave you this simple system of, you know,
minimal tillage and using a mulch, not just so
that you could be a successful farmer, but so that you could share with the, you know, the village
across the river here. And so they began to go in and share, they would take a farmer and they
would plant a field for them and show, you know, hey, just take care of this. And you can compare
it with your plowed plot and see how much better it is. When they came back at the end of the
season, they began to realize that every year they would have neglected the field and not taking care of it.
And what they found eventually is that because they were selecting one person,
they were creating jealousy and the neighbors would have the witch doctor come and curse the
field and then the family would be too scared to come and work in it so they realized it wasn't just a technology issue there was also a spiritual element that
you've got to address when you come you know to to looking at some of these broken situations and
there's also we want to share with everybody and invest in people who are faithful with it so
that's kind of what they began doing is just having, right now,
they have a model farm there in Zimbabwe, where they apply these principles, and then they bring
in the kind of the forgotten communities, the last, the least, the lost, which is where God
loves to start, you know, in rebuilding a nation. And they invest in those people, not only in
farming, but in stewardship in general.
Foundations for Farming,
we're ministry partners
with Crown Financial Ministries,
which focuses on stewardship of money
because we're teaching stewardship of the land.
So when we bring these communities in
and they're discipled in faith,
farming, family, and finance,
then they're sent back as a community,
they really have a huge impact. A lot of times when they've seen the trainers and the love they
have for them, and they hear the gospel, many of them, you know, will, you know, put their faith
in Christ and start a church when they go back. And so recently, they've developed a very simple model of growing food called Fumvudza.
But it's basically a small plot that's about one sixth of an acre where you can grow where they grow corn,
which is the primary staple crop that they have there in Zimbabwe and much of sub-Saharan Africa.
And it allows a family for $50 worth of inputs to grow enough food to feed themselves for a year.
Wow.
And most people are trying to grow five acres of corn over there and they can't feed themselves.
But when they're done, they do it what we call God's way by looking at God's creation and copying his nature and the way we manage it.
It's amazing to see that.
And the government actually came and asked them to teach into the the the you know all the
agritechs and they taught it down into the communities and they they had achieved a food
security for the first time since their collapse in 2008 two years ago by applying this with a hoe
just this simple principle and simple technique.
But it started by Brian Oldrig originally went to the top, the president, the minister of
agriculture and tried to sell them on the idea. They wouldn't listen. But then he said, well,
God's upside down kingdom. Let's go to the poorest of the poor first. And it was actually those
people when the poorest of the poor were the only people in the nation feeding themselves with enough extra to sell, that's what got the
government's attention. And then they, you know, then Pharaoh came calling and asked them to teach,
you know, it into the public sector. And I think that's an important thing for us as the church
to remember is that when Jesus came, he didn't go to the rich, the powerful, the educated.
He went to simple, ordinary people, and he turned the world upside down that way.
And that means that all of us, in whatever sphere of influence we're in,
can have an impact in our nation.
That's wonderful.
That is a real grassroots movement.
It is.
Putting the stuff in the agricultural.
But you really are, you're building the society from the ground up.
And when you look at, you know, what has happened in Zimbabwe, you know,
kicking the farmers out, facing starvation.
And so, you know, they're helping themselves by helping others.
In the long term, they're helping themselves.
They would be starving and people would be fighting over food.
And so they're showing people how to grow, not just their own food, but to grow their
independence and to grow their community and to grow their dependence on God.
I mean, that, that's just the perfect way to do this.
That's wonderful to hear about that.
So they have, um, how, how do they, um, since they lost their farm, uh, how did they, um,
how did they survive financially, other people to do it?
Did they take a share of what the other people were doing?
Is that how they financially made it through?
It has been different for every person.
You know, a lot of what the farmers told me there is that when the, you know, there were about 5,000 white farmers white farmers i think that employed about a million people in zimbabwe and when they got their land taken away uh you
know you have three choices you can either fight and those who did died or you can flee which is
what most of them did or you can stay and forgive and only a few of them chose to do that wow and
so that's what some of my friends did and And there's been times that these, the team,
which right now, the teams there that are training are mostly black African Zimbabweans who are
really taking this on because it's the foundations for farming. We have really a discipleship
multiplication kind of model of ministry. It's not a organizational, you you know top down kind of thing and uh and so they're really
the ones rolling it out and uh and so there have been seasons where they've continued to come to
work even though there was no money you know just because they were willing to serve because over
there when you have a debauched currency and and and they keep having high inflation and stuff you
know they're famous for that.
Right, they're going through it again,
and yet they just said, you know what?
It really helps you to invest your treasure in heaven.
That's right.
Because there was one of my good friends over there,
and he said that he and his wife invested in several retirement funds,
really worked hard their whole life to do that,
and when they went to cash those in, it took them out to lunch barely without any drinks, you know, and, uh, but it
really, the freedom then that they have to just serve and the heart change that they said that
for them as being very prideful culture that they were before self-made farmers, they, this one
farmer friend of mine said said he kind of got it
backwards. He said he thought he loved his workers and his people. He took a good care of them and
all that, the people that worked for him in his business. But he said, God told us to rule the
land and love the people. And he said he actually realized later that he loved the land and ruled
the people. And it took losing his farm to get that heart change that he said he was worth
losing his farm over. Wow. That's amazing. But that's the way God works, right? He takes the
stuff away from us so that it opens our eyes, resets our priorities. And I love the fact that
this, you know, what they're doing and what you're doing here, you're doing the, trying to do the
same thing here. And, uh, and we certainly do need it and uh it'd be
good for people to start preparing before something really catastrophic happens here but uh the thing
that i think is is really key is the fact that you're not just trying to come in and help them
materially uh you you're looking at the whole picture as you talked about you know family uh
creating a you know strong family, your faith,
your finances, as well as the farm. That is the key thing. You're dressing all of this together
instead of just focusing on one little aspect of it. And I think that is so important.
Yeah, it is. And I think that's, you know, as the church, what people are looking for in the world is hope. And the hope is
not just in some nugget of information, you know, that we can share with them, but it's in a life,
a personal life that is experiencing transformation in the same struggles that
everybody else is dealing with. and that we are then just passing
it along to others and unfortunately um for me i'm most i'm really passionate about agriculture
uh because i feel like it's a agriculture and creation stewardship is an element of um of god's
of what we've been given stewardship of as the church that we've kind of neglected
and we haven't addressed.
And when we, if we fail to recognize the battleground that it is, the spiritual, like either Jesus
is going to have, you know, rule and reign over it or the enemy is.
And when the enemy comes to kill, steal and destroy, we shouldn't be surprised when we've
abdicated and we've failed to bring the principles
of scripture to bear on how should we view this as Christians? How should we not just say, well,
what's permissible? A lot of us, a lot of Christians, a lot of the farmers in the US are
Christians, but I've realized that many of us are not reflecting our own fate in the way that we farm not on purpose but
just because we haven't evaluated it and there's a lot of problems that we don't want necessarily
whether it's poor health or unsustainability or lack of profitability but it all kind of boils
back to if we aren't experiencing um increase or profit or or like abundance in an area of our life and not in a prosperity gospel sense, but there's this principle of if you're faithful with little God will add to you.
Right. And as you measure, you'll be he'll measure to you.
So if we're losing money, if we're losing health, if we're losing our kids, if we're losing all these things, maybe we're saying, maybe God's telling me I'm not being faithful because he keeps taking away from me.
And maybe I need to reevaluate, you know, whether what is like I was reading the other
day, if we want to shine his lights in Ephesians, it says we need to find out what pleases the
Lord.
And as farmers, we're never going to do everything perfect because we live in a fallen world
and we all have different starting points.
But are we asking the question, when I go out to take care of my lettuce plants, when I go to raise a chicken, when I go to do whatever I'm going to do, am I trying to find out what pleases the Lord so that I can grow in that?
And then not only do I get vegetables from my garden, but I also get to experience more of him in the
process, which is the real reward, you know, at the end of the day.
That's right.
Yeah.
I think we can apply that lesson, whatever we do for a living, you know,
we, we we've seen with technology and, um, everything that's there, we're
constantly being, uh, moved in a direction where we're more obsessed with the, uh,
the technology that we're using,
and we don't see the bigger picture of things. And I think that, you know, that can happen even
to farmers, how much more so to people who are not farmers who are working on, um, uh, you know,
outside of, uh, you know, God's direct creation, you know, we're working at many different levels
away from it. And I really do think that that is a key part of, um, of what we're, I certainly know that the people that I
know that have started homesteading and working on, on farms are some of the happiest people
I have seen, uh, especially because they're, they're doing it themselves or working with
their hands or seeing God's creation and what they're doing. And so I think that is,
and tell us a little bit about this training sessions that you've got.
What do these things look like?
You've got one a month that is happening.
How long does it last?
And give us a little bit of detail about what that looks like.
Yeah.
So our family,
we spent 13 years running a small scale market farm where we sold kind of organic vegetables and meat and eggs.
And then a couple of years ago, after some of the things that we've learned, we really felt like God had kind of here in the United States is we're trying to develop some very simple tools, very simple kind of recipes
for people to be able to get started on a good foundation if they're going to get, you know,
start growing some of their own food. So our tool for that with gardening is what we call the
Wellwater Garden Project. And that's a very simple 20 foot by 20 foot garden
that teaches all the principles of observing God's creation,
of good management, of sharing genuinely your faith
in the way that you do it intentionally.
And it's a kind of a paint by the numbers thing.
Here's how you space your crops.
Here's how you put in your bed.
Here's how you take care of them because not everybody needs to be an expert in every area
you know god's called each of us to different domains i'm not a you know self-defense expert
but i love learning from somebody who is so that i can be adequately prepared for whatever
responsibilities i have in that so i kind of feel the same thing with agriculture.
You don't have to be a chef to cook lasagna.
You just need to have a good lasagna recipe and how to follow it.
Doesn't mean it's the only lasagna recipe or the best lasagna in the world, but it does
help more people to be able to share around their community the joy of making and eating
lasagna.
So that's what the Wellwater Garden Project is. And we've got some free PDF at thewellwatergardenproject.org that people can
download to be able to walk through and plant their own. And then our trainings in particular,
we are focused on helping impact as many people as possible to grow some of their own food by
training trainers. So we really are
encouraging every family who grows a garden to pray that God would bring two people a year
for you to teach how to grow their own garden using yours and your experience so far.
And at that rate of multiplication, you would have a million gardens starting from one in 10 years.
So when we look at how many millions of people around the world are on the verge of
real food insecurity, it's really normal everyday people being faithful to do what Jesus said,
not just do good works, do what Jesus said, but it says, blessed are everyone who practices and
teaches these commands. And I think the commands of do we take how we grow food in our own backyard and that's that's what the training that we do in april and may is a training for trainers
so it is equipping people to plant a garden to to follow you know to to learn that the whole
process that we teach of like you said a simple system and then also how to go back and teach
people in their own community and to do it even
if they have no agricultural experience. And of course, that's one of the, you know, you,
one of the best ways to learn something is to teach it to others as well. So it really drives
at home to you if you, if you know it well enough to teach it to somebody else. And if you're,
if you're watching them try to do it, you talk about how, let's give a couple of samples of the type of
things that you're talking about. Eight simple questions to create an easy but effective garden
plant. What type of questions? Yeah, so planning, we always tell people, is, you know, daunting to
some people, and it's like what everybody else sometimes lean on too heavily, but planning is
just a part of faithfulness because it's trying to answer ahead of time the questions that you're
going to have to ask anyways. Right. There's a lot of questions when you plant a garden,
where are you going to plant stuff? What are you going to plant? When are you going to plant it?
So planning is trying to answer those questions ahead of time so that when you're actually
in the moment, you don't have as many decisions to make. So we've kind of boiled it down to four
questions about the garden itself and to four questions about the garden itself
and then four questions about the crops
that you're going to grow.
So the four questions about your garden is
why are you planting it?
Because the motive behind it is really important.
Is this, who is this for?
Why is this?
Is this food security?
Is this just nutrition?
Is this for beauty?
Is this to teach somebody else?
That's going to determine how you design your garden.
The second is who's going to take care of the garden?
A garden is just a reflection of the gardener.
So you can't have a garden without a gardener.
And you need to make sure you match the garden with the labor and the skill level that you have at your disposal to take care of it.
Then the fourth, the third is where will you put it?
And then what are your
space, you know, space limitations and those kinds of things. And what's your site and then how big
will it be based on, you know, some of the previous questions. Then the last four questions,
once you got your garden in and you've got a good site and you've got a good foundation for that is
who are you growing the food for? When I was growing for market, a big part of our success was knowing
how to identify what our customers value because you can be a really good farmer and gardener.
And if you grow something that at the end of the day was 100% successful crop and yielded a huge
harvest, but nobody wants it, you haven't added value to anybody's life, right? So overproduction
is the worst form of waste. So identify who it is you're growing for and make sure that you're not growing something that you're going to drop off or they're going
to harvest and be like, I don't care about this. I had a friend of mine who was trying to serve a
community with a garden and he realized nobody cared about the food at this point in time, right?
And he grew flowers again the next year. And it was one of the biggest, most popular things in
the community because everybody wanted flowers because he was able to identify better, like what it is that this, that garden was for.
And then, you know, based on what, who it's for, what are you going to plant? That's the second,
you know, the second of the four questions. Um, and then where will you plant each of your crops?
And that has to do with rotations and, you know, organization of the garden. We give tools and
help people understand how to lay that out simply.
And then there's just the scheduling.
When are you going to plant it?
And for me, like I'll have a calendar you can see in my back wall here.
And I just write down once I get all this plan, I'll just write down this week I'm planting spinach.
And I can look at the way I have all the questions I've answered.
I know I know the spinach goes here and this is how much I'm planting because this is how much we need. And here's the spacing is going to be,
and I just go do it. And it's a whole lot of fun because there's not a whole lot of stressful
questions to answer once I actually get out into the garden. That's great. You mentioned, um,
the thing that, uh, was a fundamental insight was that he could do, uh, the planting without any
plowing, without any tilling. So how does that work?
What do you do instead of that?
How do you get the seeds in the ground?
Yes, well, it's amazing.
All the plants that we see growing out here that's not part of my garden in Alabama,
they grew without any plowing or any fertilizer or any chemical sprays or any of that,
and they look a whole lot better than most of my stuff.
So God already has in place an amazing natural fertility system and uh the plowing and tilling that we tend to see today is different than what uh like when the bible talks about
plowing their plows were more like a pointed you know you talk about you beat your plows into
um you know your your your plows into, you know, your plows into
sorts and you're, you know, it's just, it wasn't like this huge thing. Yeah. I can't remember.
There's one verse where it goes one way and one way or the other. And so it was just, it opens
up the ground and scratches it where it's a minimally disturbing it, just like the birds do,
or, you know, when an animal goes and roots up in the forest, a seed that's laying on top of the
leaves will get in touch with the dirt and that seed to soil contact all that's all it needs to
grow and what we often share with people as we go out and we just show we look in depth in natural
creation and the soil and look that natural soil has life in it It has an amazing system of microbes that are continuously fertilizing the
plants. It has strata. It functions in layers. It has a continuous application of organic matter on
the top and all these amazing things that, yeah, it's not sin necessarily if you plow it, but what
we're doing is we're destroying that natural fertilizer factory that's in place. And we have to come in with a lot of
synthetic fertilizers and kind of over, you know, overcome that. So when the simple method is all we
do is when we're putting in our garden is we say, how can we remove the weeds initially without
disturbing the soil as much as possible? So we'll do that by either just cutting them off right at
the surface and like you'd remove sod or we'll smother
it you ever left something out in the lawn too long yeah coming the grass is dead right um and
then uh we'll add compost on top of that and mulch on top of that and then the worms and the bugs
come in and they make the structure of the soil kind of like a loaf of bread or a slice of bread
it's got air it feels firm? It doesn't feel fine,
but it's got up to 70% air in it. It will wick moisture up and keep it near the roots of the
plants. It's stable. So it doesn't wash away. It's got plenty of channels for the microbes to do
their things in. What we tend to do is plant in flour, just straight flour, you know, this
pulverized and it seems loose and nice, but it actually
is more, ends up being more of a growing medium that we have to inject fertilizer into
and becomes more and more dead over time. So it's, it's a very simple system that is
incredibly effective, even here in our Alabama red clay soil, that seems like you would have
to break it up and plow it to be able to grow things
and you don't it's amazing it really is counterintuitive every time i do it i'm like
this should not work but it does that's really interesting how do you uh how do you keep the
birds from eating the seed that you put out or do you just put out more seed knowing that they're
going to what do you do about that well we do cover the seed up and we teach people that you know from a understanding a
biblical worldview a biblical worldview is just knowing the story that we live in right of history
we live in a world that was intended to be one way god had intended we we turned away from that
way and decided to do it our own way so that broke stuff and so then now we live in this broken world that jesus came and he provided a way for our hearts to be restored to god and then for some
of those that heart to then apply a degree of redemption to creation currently but we're still
in the midst of this broken world looking forward to the ultimate like restoration of anything so
we're not going to have the garden of eden right now we're still
going to deal with death decay disease disorder all that kind of stuff but we will there is a
beautiful picture of that redemption when we come and apply that so part of our job as gardeners
once we plant the garden is we've got i always teach you there's three p's that you've got to
do once you plant your garden you've got to provide for it so that means you know maybe
it's support maybe it's water like a trellis to grow up or you have to water it you got to maybe
add some extra fertility through some more compost or a chicken manure tea or something you give it
and then the second p is you got to protect it there's all sorts of things that want to you know
threaten your garden and so i've got a fence around mine i've got some frost cover on it right
now i've got to watch for the bugs i've got to watch for all sorts of things because the reality is a
lot of us are growing vegetables that are not native to the climates we live in so they require
a little extra babying because they're from the mediterranean or somewhere um and then the third
p is you got to pick it you got to make sure you get out there and and take care of it but as far
as the birds go um we're all we cover the seed up so that we make
sure that they can't actually see that. But we also expect when I was doing my market garden,
if I can get 70% of what I plant to harvest, then that's a good, you know, I'm always factoring in
that 30% margin of just some things aren't going to make it and that's okay and that's part of the the process of humility that's great uh you you have uh wellwateredgarden.org is that is that correct
that's a website where you talk about yeah that's the uh the resource um the free resource where
people can download that and then redeemingthedirt.com is where people can go to learn more
about the trainings if they want to get equipped in that resource more in depth and actually learn to teach people in their own communities.
Because we really need an army of biblically Christians with a biblical perspective on creation stewardship where we can teach people to use what they have at their disposal in their own communities to feed themselves. Because once you get to the point in our nation where food shortages affect people's meal today,
there's going to be so much demand
for people wanting to know how to grow their own food
that it's going to be unmeetable.
That's right.
And so I really want to focus
in this season of time that we have
of equipping as many people to be in these communities
to say, I can serve you.
I'm not in the same boat you are.
Like I'm, I can, I've started with my family and I'm here with what I have to serve you.
It's so easy to fall into this mentality of protect ourselves from the poor and the people
who might not have anything in those kinds of situations.
But in Psalms 41, it actually says, if you make a plan for the poor, or if you consider the poor,
God will protect you from your enemies, provide for you in the land in times of trouble,
deliver you from your sickbed. All the things that we as preppers sometimes are trying to attain,
God says, I'll take care of those if you have a heart for the poor, if you use what I've given you
to share with the same people who were in the boat
you were just a little while ago before Jesus started helping you in these areas. And I think
that's the DNA that I want to equip the church with so that we are in a position to really
have an army of harvesters for the harvest, both of people that want to return to
stewarding the land well and rebuilding our local economies, but also that then are hungry for hope spiritually
when what they've normally been hoping in has failed them.
It's so true.
And if you look at what the plan is, the plan is to isolate us.
The plan is to shut us down and to have us all in our fed,
whatever they want to feed us, in our own little cubicle,
small micro apartment
or something like that.
They don't want us meeting together.
They don't want us going to church.
I think this is the perfect counterexample to that.
Teaching people how to understand how to provide food for themselves, building a community,
building faith in each other.
I think it is the perfect counterbalance to everything they've been trying to push and
are going to try to push against us.
That is one of the ways that you've got to push back in terms of building a community,
building things up from the grassroots level.
And it ultimately is going to be the food.
I mean, we can talk about people storing uh, storing all types of things to protect themselves
and to be able to barter with, and all that is important, but you've got to have that
food.
And at the same time, you're building a community.
I think it's a great plan.
Tell us a little bit about, um, uh, why the well-watered garden.org.
Is there something specific about the way that you're saying, setting that up?
Or is that just the title that you came up with in terms
of taking care of the garden? No, I love that question. The well-watered garden comes, that
term is not really referring to the way we irrigate the garden or anything. It really refers to the
heart behind the garden, which comes from Isaiah 58, which that whole part of Isaiah 58 is where the nation of Israel is saying,
you know, God, we're having all these problems and you're not blessing us.
It's like you're not hearing us and we're rending our clothes and fasting
and doing all these religious things.
You know, why don't you hear us and heal our land?
And he basically comes back and says, the fast that I'm looking for
is that you clothe the naked fast that I'm looking for is that
you clothe the naked, that you feed the hungry, that you have a heart for the poor. You have the
same heart that I have for others that you to show that you belong to me and that you care about me.
And he says, if you do that, then one of the things that he promises is that we'll be like
a well-watered garden in like an arid place, like this beautiful,
vibrant example of life, of light in the midst of darkness.
And that's the heart we really want to have behind the Well Water Garden Project is where
it's really an others-centered motive for planting a garden.
This is not a fear-based self-preservation idea, but it's an idea that if I'm faithful and if I share with
others, God will then be the one that provides for me. And at the end of the day, that's our only hope,
right? In all these kinds of things, because everything's out of our control much more than
we think. And we want to be in a position where God says, I will add to you if you're faithful,
I will add to you if you're generous. I will add to you if you're generous.
And if you prioritize what I prioritize, which is the last, the least, and the lost,
because that's really recognizing that's all of us without Jesus.
And as we experience in that hope and change, if we're really experiencing it,
then we'll want to pass that on to other people. And so the idea of that well-watered garden is really referring back to that heart based in Isaiah 58.
I really love that.
And of course, we saw that with the farmers that began all this stuff in Zimbabwe.
What a different approach than you would expect, right?
Rather than fighting it or running from it.
Okay, you're going to take a land.
Let me show you how to grow food on it so we can all eat.
That's just amazing to me.
But it is really the heart of Christ and the heart of God.
And I love what they did.
I love what you're doing with this stuff.
I'm anxious to see your wellwateredgarden.org website.
I really do appreciate what you're doing, Noah.
Thank you so much.
And people can find out about, and I'll just'll just give you, uh, give people a couple
of bullet, uh, uh, points that are here because I think it's very important.
We didn't talk a lot about a lot of the specifics here, but you did mention the eight simple
questions about creating an effective garden plan.
And of course, there'd be a lot more detail in that with the seminars, uh, clear a spot
for your garden without plowing or tilling, make thermal compost and natural organic fertilizers.
Cause that's a key thing uh that's one of the things that everybody is uh you know you when they're trying to put the farmers out of business in uh the netherlands uh they're actually turning
fertilizer into contraband it's like you know just trying to smuggle drugs across here we don't want
your fertilizer in here that's the way they shut the farmers down. And so, you know, making your own. Lay out garden beds
with a simple system. Allows for an ease
of management, space for a variety
of crops, plant seeds or transplants
with simple spacing system. Easy to follow,
easy to remember. Care faithfully
for your garden with three simple tasks.
Train others what you've learned. All this stuff.
As well as alternative off-grid
energy and backyard
chickens. Give us agrid energy and backyard chickens.
Give us a tip for protecting our chickens.
Well, I have, yeah, I could probably write a book on how chickens can die because there's a lot of different ways that they can do that.
But no, just a really good fence, a really good shelter, a really good dog.
There's a lot of different ways that you can, you know, provide physical or, you know, biological ways to protect those chickens.
But a lot of this just has to do with go out. And when you have a problem, God sometimes gets
our attention through these things because he wants us to come back and ask him. There were
some one more story. Some guys in Africa were in in a village situation they had been trained by my
friend brian oldreave on uh how to put in a garden and some plots and and one of the questions he had
taught them is you know to ask god when they faced a challenge you know to say what does my father do
and they had the problem of elephants getting into their gardens that would be hard yeah like you
can't even build a fence for that kind of thing, right? And so they just said, all right, well, we'll just, Brian taught us to praise and ask God.
So we'll just ask God.
Well, God showed them that elephants don't go near their own manure.
So they went and collected some elephant manure, put it around their field, and they had no more problems with elephants.
Wow.
So sometimes, you know, it's just, that's why I say to become the greatest farmer requires the greatest humility.
Because, you know, Joel Salatin is one of the greatest uh recent modern day livestock innovators and he is always like how does god design things
brian oldreave went back he kept to a point of i don't know how to do it how do you do it lord
and like you said in so many other areas but most of the time you know how it is i'd rather go to my
phone then stop and pray there's just a spiritual block because it requires
a humiliation of degrees for us to say i don't know it and ask god but if we can learn to do
that god is just waiting he's the master farmer he has the solution to every problem and he is ready
to share that with us and if we knew personally the best farmer in the entire world and he said
you can call me up anytime why Why wouldn't we do so?
Right.
And we do, we do have that.
And that's those kinds of testimonies is then what gives us the opportunity when we share
with other people about our own garden, that we can point back to that experience where
it's not just a, oh, by the way, let me tell you about Jesus.
But it's like, I was at my wits end. And then I asked and the Lord showed me this and then it's not just a, oh, by the way, let me tell you about Jesus. But it's like, I was at my wits end.
And then I asked, and the Lord showed me this.
And then it's genuine.
Yeah, that's amazing.
I've seen pictures of elephants just for fun pushing down trees.
I mean, there's not anything that you're going to do to stop an elephant.
But they don't like their own excrement.
That's interesting.
That's great.
I love that story and the other stories.
And I love what you're doing Noah
and again people can find this
at redeemingthedirt.com
that's where you can find out about the
training sessions they have
them coming up on a regular basis
if you want to start building your
community think of a better way
to do it than to help
other people to grow food and
to all the other aspects of this.
And, of course, you have the free site at wellwateredgarden.org.
Thank you so much, Noah.
Great talking to you.
Yeah.
Can I share with you one more resource for your students is
redeemingthedirtacademy.com is a free online training platform
where it has a community and training videos and all that.
If people want to get a sneak peek and go ahead and get started in some of the material, uh, we have hundreds and
hundreds of farmers and gardeners and homesteaders from all over the world that love Jesus and love
farming and gardening on there, sharing resources, learning together. And if anybody wants to really
get plugged in that community, they can go to redeem their academy.com and sign up for free.
That'd be great. Okay. Super. Yeah. We'll definitely check that out in our family.
Thank you so much. No, I really do appreciate what you're doing. It is a real blessing
to see something that is positive like this. We talk about all the different problems. We
talk about the threats that are coming here is a solution folks, an amazing solution.
The common man.
They created Common Core to dumb down our children.
They created Common Past to track and control us.
Their Commons Project to make sure the commoners own nothing. And the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find at thedavidknightshow.com.
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