The David Knight Show - Fri Episode #2206: Palantir: Building the Architecture of Total Control
Episode Date: February 20, 2026──────────────────────────────────────── 00:00:42:27 — Cybersecurity as Power, Not ProtectionCybersecurity is framed a...s a tool for centralized control and regime continuity rather than public safety, with Palantir cited as emblematic of surveillance-state architecture. ──────────────────────────────────────── 00:02:06:22 — Pam Bondi’s Epstein Record ReexaminedQuestions resurface about Bondi’s inaction on Epstein cases despite a public reputation for aggressively prosecuting trafficking crimes. ──────────────────────────────────────── 00:08:38:07 — Trump–Epstein Social Ties RevisitedPrior associations and evasive statements are revisited amid renewed scrutiny of elite political networks. ──────────────────────────────────────── 00:16:02:29 — From Ministry to Cold-Turkey Heroin RecoveryA missionary outreach in 1980s Madrid evolves into an international addiction recovery model emphasizing discipline, structure, and community over substitution therapy. ──────────────────────────────────────── 00:29:23:23 — Heroin, Shared Needles, and Spain’s AIDS ExplosionIntravenous drug culture and prison conditions accelerate HIV transmission during one of Europe’s worst heroin crises. ──────────────────────────────────────── 00:31:56:02 — Addiction as Spiritual and Social BreakdownRecovery is framed as rooted in restored relationships, accountability, and moral transformation rather than purely medical intervention. ──────────────────────────────────────── 00:58:25:07 — Palantir Hack and the “Backdoor State”Alleged breaches raise fears of embedded surveillance backdoors across government and corporate systems. ──────────────────────────────────────── 01:07:07:00 — Internet of Things as National Security LiabilityExpanding military and infrastructure interconnectivity is portrayed as multiplying systemic vulnerabilities rather than strengthening defense. ──────────────────────────────────────── 01:12:03:04 — Pentagon AI Expansion Despite Repeated BreachesVault 7, NSA hacks, and other incidents are cited as evidence that automation and AI integration are outpacing competence and safeguards. ──────────────────────────────────────── 01:17:22:01 — Offline Nuclear Systems vs. Cloud DefenseCold War air-gapped missile systems are contrasted with today’s cloud-dependent defense architecture. ──────────────────────────────────────── 01:36:10:00 — Low-Tech Tools Defeat High-Tech DronesSimple heat shielding and optical tricks demonstrate asymmetric weaknesses in advanced surveillance and warfare technology. ──────────────────────────────────────── 01:44:29:12 — Autonomous Vehicle Ethics and Control HierarchiesAI-driven transportation raises unresolved questions about programmed value judgments, liability, and loss of human override authority. ──────────────────────────────────────── Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHT Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If 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: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
It's the David Knight Show.
As the clock strikes 13, it's Friday the 20th of February,
your Lord, 2006.
Well, today we have a couple of interesting interviews for you.
We have Goetree is going to be joining us later in the program.
We're going to talk about cybersecurity, especially in light of what Kim.com
said this week about Palantir being hacked.
We need to understand that as technology has evolved,
it's no longer really about our safety and our security,
just as we talk about national security.
That's not about our safety.
It's not about our peace.
It's not about our privacy.
And when we talk about cybersecurity,
that is no longer really about any of those things for us either.
This is really about perpetrating their power,
their surveillance, their continuity of government.
And we're going to talk to an individual who grew up in a missionary family
in one of the heaviest drug use areas in the world during the AIDS crisis.
It's kind of like, I guess I'd describe it as a mixture of the Walton's meets Panic in Needle Park.
But it has a lot to say about the solution to drug addiction.
It's not about destroying boats in Venezuela.
well. It's not about destroying the Constitution and the rule of law. It's really about restoring the
rule of Christ in our lives. Well, yesterday I talked about the head fakes, the lies, the betrayals of
many different areas that Donald Trump has done. Of course, many people only think of what's going
on with the Epstein files. I didn't have enough time to get to, I think, one of the key things that
was a part of this. And that is Pam Bondi. There was a good article by Brian Schaulhavi on
Health Impact News. Pam Bondi has been denying justice for Epstein victims for almost two decades now.
And I played the other day her campaign victory where she was bragging about the fact how she was
going to get tough on sex offenders. Well, she actually didn't. Did you realize that she was, as all this
stuff was happening with Epstein in Florida, she was Attorney General there? And that's the gist of
Brian Schohovey's story. Pam Bondi was the Attorney General in Florida from 2011.
through 2019.
She had experience in covering up Epstein's crimes from his sweetheart deal in 2008 in the state of Florida.
So she was not Attorney General when he had his basically got away with all of it,
with Alex Acosta, the federal attorney and local law enforcement there.
And that was when his defense attorneys were Alan Dershowitz and Ken Starr.
However, there was a lot of information that came out.
after that, a lot of outrage and a lot of concern from the victims as to who these other people
are that are not getting punished. They wanted to limit this strictly to Jeffrey Epstein,
and there were victims that were crying out then to have the people that he was pimping for,
essentially, something to happen to them. She also refused to bring justice to the victims
when they went public in November 2018, as published by the Miami Herald. And so as you've
got Roger Stone and Benny Johnson now trying to deflect this over to Hillary Clinton, and
certainly the Clintons deserve to have consequences for this, of course. But that does not
inoculate Donald Trump, does not inoculate Pam Bondi from what she has done. As a matter of
fact, here's that commercial that she was running. She actually talked about, campaigned on
justice for sex offender victims. Florida ranks third nationally and calls for help for
human trafficking where young women and children are enslaved and abused. I knew we needed all hands
on deck. Businesses and hospitals to spot it are great law enforcement to stop it and tougher
penalties to punish it. We're taking on Medicaid fraud, pill mills, gangs and more, and all fight
to put human trafficking monsters where they belong behind bars.
And Bundy, our attorney general. Yeah, yeah. What a joke that woman is. I mean,
So you've got all these people that were involved with Epstein, and she's not going to do anything about them.
And the victims were asking for that in the wake of the 2008 case.
They were outraged at the special treatment that Jeffrey Epstein got and of the cover-up for all the victims even at that time.
She did nothing about it.
She built her brand on protecting the survivors.
But when it came to Florida's most notorious sex criminal, she looked the other way.
And actually, this was originally a Bloomberg article from July.
of last year talking about that. They said Bondi was elected after Epstein had served his sentence
in Palm Beach and quite rather quickly tried to establish her office as an advocate for victims
of sex trafficking, erecting billboards across the state to bring awareness to the issue,
creating the statewide counsel on human trafficking. In her last months in office, she announced
a criminal investigation and allegations of past sex abuse by Catholic priests in Florida.
But if you got a guy who's working for Mossad, she's not interested in past abuse by him.
Bondi kept her distance from the state's most prominent sex trafficking case, even as Epstein's victims,
pleaded with the courts to invalidate the provisions for his non-prosecution agreement,
and they filed lawsuits alleging that he abused them when he was on work release from jail.
Again, as I've talked about, he got this deal where they let him come back to the prison to sleep,
but he was out all day like the town drunk in Mayberry RFD,
you know, Otis, the town drunk.
He just had the keys and he would let himself back in and sleep it off at night.
I mean, it makes sense given that his job was sex trafficking from Assad
that his work release would involve sex crimes.
That's right.
Yeah, that's what I do for a living, right?
So, of course, if you're going to put me on work release,
I'm going to be doing some of the same stuff you just locked me up for.
In November 2018, the Miami Herald released its investigative series on Epstein.
It was called Proversion of Justice.
It exposed the details of the government's decision to allow Epstein to bypass federal charges.
Instead of suggesting the state get to the truth, however, Bondi remained conspicuously silent.
Perhaps that's why she was picked for the job, do you think?
When Bondi took the top job of the Justice Department under Trump, she got a second chance to rectify the damage.
She could have announced a sweeping internal probe, released the DOJ files, and a short,
of transparency and revamped the agency so this kind of miscarriage of justice wouldn't occur again.
However, she did not do that.
She did just the opposite of all that.
She again leaned into public relations rather than into substance.
She went on Fox News in February to boast that Epstein's client list was sitting on my desk.
That's what she was saying a year ago.
She had long capitalized on Mago World's obsession with the records telling Sean Hannity in January of 2020.
that the files, quote, should have come out a long time ago, unquote, and blaming it on a, quote,
two-tiered justice system.
Well, certainly she understands what the problem is.
And she is part of the problem, right?
She is part of that two-tiered justice system.
As a matter of fact, you know, we don't want to pay any attention to anybody other than just the Democrats.
We want to ignore what Trump did.
And yet, this is kind of interesting by Trump's own.
admission. You know, I'm just devastated over what's happening. He's been a friend for a long time.
A great guy. What's he at your wedding? He was at my wedding.
Have you ever had a personal relationship with Donald Trump?
What do you mean about personal relationships? Have you socialized with him?
Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Have you ever socialized with Donald Trump in the presence of
females under the age of 18?
Though I'd like to answer that question, at least today, I'm going to assert my fifth, sixth and fourteenth amendment, right, sir.
I don't know how the 14th Amendment applies that. What were you going to say, Lance?
Just this article from Bloomberg is doing the same thing in reverse. You know, they're talking about Maga's strange obsession with it back, you know, when Biden was in office. It was weird to have an obsession with it then, but now it's weird that they're covering it up. It's the same double think just on the
other side. That's right. Yeah, Bloomberg didn't care at all when it was Clinton, just like
the MAGA people try to point away from Trump when it's his turn to be looked at. She destroyed
every last ounce of independence her office might have had when she went to the White House in
May and warned Trump that his name was in the Epstein files. Of course his name is in there.
Did she even need to know that from her? Bondi is probably the number one most guilty person
in the U.S. for perverting justice and covering up Epstein's crimes and refusing to prosecute
the pedophiles and failing to protect Epstein's victims, says Brian Schobey, and I absolutely agree
with him. How does one prosecute, however, the Attorney General of the United States who
controls the Department of Justice? It was a brilliant move by Trump after he failed to get Matt
Gates, who was previously under investigation for child sex trafficking by the Department of
Justice. Trump tried to get him as the Attorney General, but that failed. Gates had resigned from
Congress when he was not approved, but just to prevent a congressional ethics report from being
published on his sexual activities with underage girls. When you look at the Trump
administration, how can anybody think that this guy is going to give you an honest assessment of this?
How could you think that he is not a part of this?
It absolutely does not make any sense.
Well, I don't want to take time away from our interviews that we've got here.
And we're going to go to the first one.
We're shooting up with Jonathan Tepper in just a moment.
But I want to say, before we stop, here we are.
This is the 20th of February.
We've got about one week left in February.
We're not quite halfway up the gas gauge right now.
So I just want to say we're not going to put this behind a paywall.
but I just want to speak to people who if you listen to the show for a while and you have never contributed to us, we would really appreciate it at this point in time.
If you just give us $5, I mean, that would, even just a few of the people that did that, that would put us way over our budget.
We had 28,000 people listened to the show just on Rumble last week.
And imagine if those people gave us $5 a piece.
be several months worth of our budget alone. But we would appreciate it at this time if you find
value in the show, if you could support us. And I want to thank some of the people who have
supported us in just the last day or so. We've received some donations from William G.,
Stephanie K., David and Deborah W., Scott C., Margaret and Mary T., and Margaret
Mary, I should say, not Margaret and Mary, but Margaret Mary T., and Mary, and Mary,
Thank you so much.
We're going to join our first interview here with Jonathan Tepper.
In just one moment.
We'll be right back.
You're listening to The David Night Show.
Joining us now is author Jonathan Tepper, and his book is Shooting Up.
Memoir of Heroin, AIDS, Love, and Loss.
He grew up as an American missionary kid in the epicenter of the epicenter of the
AIDS epidemic in Spain. He has an amazing story about what his family went through and as they
created a vast network to help people who are addicted to drugs and then wound up being in the center
of the AIDS epidemic. Thank you so much for joining us today. Well, thank you so much for having me.
It's a pleasure. Thank you, Jonathan. And one of the things I like about this,
looking at your story, of course, it's a much darker version of an almost sounds trivial to compare
to the Walton's. But what I like is when you got the memoirs of an adult going back and looking
at his childhood and reinterpreting it through the experience that he's had as an adult,
talking about what he saw as a child. I always liked that kind of a story. That's one of the
things that really drew me to your story. And of course, also the Christian involvement there,
your parents as missionaries. So they go to Spain as missionaries, and they kind of get drawn
into this situation of helping drug addicts. That wasn't their first priority, was it? What was their
original mission when they went to Spain? So my parents moved to Spain in 1983, and my father and
mother had worked in Mexico beforehand for about four years with university students, and they thought
they would go to Spain and do exactly the same thing. So start a church among university students
and be a university chaplain. But they settled in the neighborhood of San Blas in Madrid,
missionaries tend to be poor, and so I think they settled there because the rent was cheap,
not fully knowing what the neighborhood was like.
And the neighborhood had one of the highest rates of heroin use and juvenile crime in Europe at the time.
And they started helping young men and women and families trying to send their sons and daughters
off to drug rehab centers outside of Madrid, because there were almost no centers in Madrid at the time.
And it was through that
sort of helping people
day to day that led them
to feel that they had a calling from God
to change the mission or what they were
trying to do
and start a drug rehab center
working with heroin addicts.
And so that's what they did.
And the drug center started in 1985
two years later.
And how old were you at the time
when all this began?
I was seven when we arrived in Spain.
And so my parents were sending me
and my three brothers out to hand out little flyers with our home phone number and address.
And then they would have meetings in the house.
So the addicts were coming over.
And so I was like 7, 8, 9 interacting with the addicts often as they shoot up, handing them flyers.
And then the men and women in the program became like older brothers to my brothers and me.
Wow.
And of course, crime goes hand in hand with that because people having to support their habit.
and so you got to be friends with some people who were some serious criminals there as well.
But it kind of reminds me the way your parents got involved in this,
just one person basically coming in, I think, and then another and then another,
gradually building until it got to be fairly large.
It reminds me of George Mueller back in Victorian times,
at the time of Charles Dickens, where the real big issue then was not drug abuse,
but it was kids who were orphans on the streets.
and he brought in one, the another, the another.
Before you knew it, he had this vast orphanage that was there in Victorian England.
Your parents grew that ministry, and of course they grew it without the help of the original missionary society.
The people who sent them over and were supporting them wanted something else done rather than this.
This was what your parents saw.
They were drawn to that need and got involved in it and then had to find a way to support themselves.
And that mission grew quite a bit, didn't it?
Yes, so the drug rehab center when it started had one addict who came in off the street and he was sharing an apartment with Lindsay McKinsey. He was a young Australian missionary and then Raul invited eight of his friends in so they were all living in the apartment. The neighbors rightly complained about having, you know, a lot of recovering addicts living in a residential apartment. So then they moved out to a farm and then there were up 30 men living on the farm. And I think it was as you, you know, drew the parallel with George Miller. It was not some
grand plan to have an organization or to build something.
It's kind of naturally evolved, yeah.
Exactly, showing love to one person at a time trying to answer a need.
And I think the addicts themselves, one needed help, but two, responded to that love and
compassion.
And then they wanted to help their friends.
And that really was how the drug center grew from its beginning in 1985.
And then 40 years later, it's still running in 20 countries with over 2,000 addicts in the
program.
Wow.
How'd you feel about these guys?
I mean, these are some pretty hardened street guys, and you're pretty young.
Did it scare you?
Were you fascinated with their lifestyle?
What was your reaction?
In general, it was probably more fascination than fear, but there were a couple addicts
that I was afraid of.
One of them in particular was Manolo Mahada, and his nickname in Spanish meant crazy.
And he got that because a dealer had stuck a gun in his face.
And so he took the barrel of the gun and stuck in his mouth and dared the dealer to
shoot him.
And so people thought he was crazy, but he would grab my hand and just squeeze until it hurt.
And I would punch him and it wouldn't do anything to him.
I was always glad when Raoul, the first attic was around, he would protect me.
But overall, the addicts really looked after us.
My parents thought that they wouldn't do anything to us because we didn't have drugs and we didn't have money.
So, you know, we were more curiosity to them than anything.
You weren't attractive targets.
Exactly.
All they're looking at is money and drugs, money for money.
for the next hit that they're going to use for the next drugs that are there.
So your family is on your own, and they have to find money for this and money to support themselves.
So what do they do?
So a lot of the addicts had been manual laborers, you know, before they had gotten into a life of drugs.
And one of the ways that they were raising money was basically starting businesses.
So they started a secondhand furniture store where people would, you know, try to get,
rid of furniture, donate it, and the men would pick it up and restore the furniture and sell it.
There were also gardening teams or plumbing, brick masonry. So the men just did any odd jobs they
could to pay the bills. And so these were essentially businesses run by recovering and former
heroin addicts. And all that revenue provided for a free drug rehab for the addicts.
That's great. So what is the motivation of these guys coming out? I mean, are they just looking
for a place to live, a place to crash or something? Are they really trying to get off of drugs?
And were they looking for Christ, for example? So I think most of them did want to get off drugs.
So they saw that, you know, in the early stages, obviously, like people enjoy the first, you know,
time they shoot up or, you know, the first couple times. But then it becomes less pleasurable,
or you're trying to increase the high. And then it's the life of heroin that leads them to, you know,
lose their jobs to lose family and friends.
They end up, most of the kids or the young men and women stole much of their
families' belongings or money.
Not that they had that much to begin with because almost all of these were working class
families.
And so it ends up breaking their social bonds and they often end up kicked out of their house
living on the street.
And so for many of them, they did want to go for heroin and then also, you know,
wanted to simply get a roof over their head.
and the some of them obviously were aware certainly almost all them aware of the Christian ethos behind the program
but I don't know that they were specifically setting out to you know become Christians I think they
were attracted to the daily example of love that was shown to them and when they had seen the
friends that they used to shoot up with now clean and off drugs that was I think one of the things
that truly inspired them and so it was that love in action and so you have some interesting stories
about one of the guys who was doing furniture repair,
one of the businesses that you guys were at.
And you thought it was an interesting analogy
for this whole program.
Tell us a little bit about that.
Oh, yeah.
So at first when I started writing the book,
I hadn't explicitly set out some of these themes
in my own brain,
but I guess these come out subconsciously.
And I was writing about one of the main characters in the book,
his name is Chambi,
and he ran a secondhand furniture store.
And I was struck by the beauty of them taking these discarded pieces of furniture that often, you know, were in a terrible state, repairing them, restoring them, turning them into beautiful objects.
Often, you know, antiques that, you know, you didn't know that they were beautiful when they came in the store, but they were when they came out.
And I thought it was a beautiful metaphor for their lives, the way that, you know, people's lives can be restored and turned around.
and then it becomes a theme throughout the book
where in the early days
there was not much of a budget for the drug rehab center
so they would take over abandoned houses or farms
and that were in a state of disrepair
and rebuild them and redid them
and these houses too were a metaphor
for rebuilding and restoration
so it's a theme that runs through the book
and is a central part of sort of the history
and ethos of the program.
That's right.
And it really strikes me as something
that Christ does with us, you know, the carpenter.
He sees something that is there of value
and he takes us apart and he fixes us
and puts us back together again.
That's what was happening in those addicts' lives.
I think that's a really apt metaphor.
So how did your relationship with them?
Did they become Christians?
I'm sure not all of them did, but did a good number.
Yeah, no one was under any obligation
to believe anything so you know people could live in the program and um they did have to
participate in the morning devotional so i mean they had to sit there and and listen and then there
was a sunday morning church service um but and so obviously they were exposed to quite a lot of
preaching and you know bible verses but i think most of the addicts did end up converting because
they saw that you know they often explicitly said i want what he's got right so if probably the first addict in
and the program came in and turned his life around.
And they had known him as a violent criminal on the streets and an addict.
And then they saw that he turned into someone who would give up his own bed so that people could sleep while
he slept on the sofa or the floor.
That deeply touched people.
And so it was that lived example of love and compassion that motivated others to want to come in and then
transmit that to the next group of people who came in or the next generation.
Yes.
Yes.
That's another story that sort of reminds me of the cross and switchblade.
And that became gradually built into an entire program.
And I talked to a pastor a few weeks ago, Matt Trojala, who has a ministry.
And that's what got him.
He was from Broken Family.
And it was that program that eventually got to him and made a difference for him.
So it's not a situation where somebody, you don't go in there and you don't hand them a track
and tell him go read this or give them.
them, you know, try to scare them. But instead, they see the fruit of what Christ does in other
people's lives, starting with your parents and moving out like a ripple in a pond, you know,
gradually affecting more and more people. That's a great way to do it, I think.
Yes, one of the key lessons in writing is show, don't tell. You should set the scene rather
than tell the reader that they need to know something. And it creates for better writing and
better enjoyment from the reader. But I would say in life in general, it's actually a good rule
of show, don't tell. And one of the things that my parents quoted when the drug center was
starting was from St. Francis of Assisi who said, preach the gospel at all times, use words if necessary
in this idea, show, don't tell. Right. Yeah, that's great. You have an interesting title for one of these
chapters, an older brother and a missing eyeball. What is that about? So the visits out to the men's
residences in the farms were always humorous, odd, and memorable.
And so in that specific chapter, I was very young.
I had to be probably nine or so at the time.
But my brothers and I would go out and stay with it, but I would want to the farm.
And, you know, one of the addicts, he used to rob stores by taking an axe under his
trench coat and destroy things.
And another one, he had a pet ferret that he brought into the drug center.
he would swim around in the makeshift pool.
But one of them had an eyeball, Mano de Vasco, that would occasionally fall out when he was playing
soccer and football, and they'd have to stop the game and search for the eyeball.
And then when he'd get rid of his eyes, if he fell asleep, one of his eyes would close
and the other would just sort of stare at the people.
So these were very interesting characters who were larger than life in many ways.
And what I tried to do in that chapter is sort of give them a flavor for the different characters
in the drug center.
Yeah, yeah. And so you're living as children in this area that's a very poor, very rough area.
You'd play soccer in the streets, and it wasn't just the people who had come to your family for help,
but you point out that you would see syringes in the street and a lot of things like that, even with blood on them.
Talk a little bit about the environment there of that town.
Yeah, so Spain in the mid-80s was growing very, very quickly.
And in 1975, Franco had died, and so they turned.
transition from dictatorship to democracy.
So you had this sort of high rate of economic growth,
some, a lot of social housing projects being built at the outskirts of Madrid.
And then the way Spanish zoning and planning works, basically you have these sort of,
you know, either high rise housing and social housing and then like empty fields.
And in the empty fields you had, uh, behind our house, there was a dump where, you know,
brick masons and others would, would dump construction material.
There's quite a lot of garbage too.
And then further down, two blocks away, there was a gypsy village that had about 3,000 gypsies.
And, you know, they sold a lot of drugs.
They certainly weren't the only one.
Spaniard sold them, too.
But people came from all over Madrid to buy their drugs at this sort of camp called Los Focos.
And so we would see, you know, they used needles everywhere in the fields by the gypsy camp.
And generally it had blood that was drying or it dried.
and it was sort of through that that then, you know, comes about in the book where I talk about how most of the early addicts shared needles and became HIV positive.
And then in jail, one of the addicts, Humby, they had like, you know, I think two syringes for 200 inmates.
And so the AIDS, the HIV virus spread very, very quickly among the addicts in the mid to early 80s.
Wow.
Yeah, that's one of the things I've talked about in terms of our war on.
drugs. It has been so fruitless that we've done this over half a century now because it is a
spiritual problem at its root. It really is. And you're not going to stop it with an addiction.
I've talked about how they're sharing needles in a prison. They don't have enough needles,
but they've got plenty of drugs. They're doing fine with drugs. And we have people in the United States
that are dying from overdose in prisons all the time. So what kind of a society do we have to have if you've got to
try to interdict that by force.
There's something else there that is really the answer, I think.
And so all this is happening before the AIDS epidemic, but then your family winds up
at the very center of that, of course.
Now, you mentioned heroin over and over again.
Is that, are there other drugs that people are using?
Or is that kind of the king of it all?
Why is so much of a focus on heroin?
Yeah, so heroin really was sort of the end of the line where most people didn't start with
heroin they were generally starting you know with alcohol and cigarettes which
don't necessarily lead to harder drugs but then they would do you know
hashish and cocaine and they were generally doing multiple drugs before they got
to heroin they were rarely starting with it but heroin was was the big drug in
the neighborhood and in Madrid at the time and it's certainly the most
addictive and the one that has the most impact
terms of taking over people's lives where they need to, you know, constantly be getting
drugs to shoot up.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, that's interesting.
And I wonder what the situation is right now.
Have they moved on to fentanyl or something like that?
But you're out of that scene now, right?
Well, in the United States, a lot of the opioids and fentanyl have really taken over.
In Spain, I think it's starting to, I'm out of that, but obviously I speak to my father who
still runs at a rehab center.
But there are sort of newer drugs, and they're of the same family in terms of like
opioids, but heroin is still, at least in Madrid, is very, very big.
Now, what was it that got people off of the drugs? Because I know that you look at a lot of
the secular programs where they're just doing counseling, they'll offer them methadone or
something like that as an alternative, and then people become addicted to that. What was happening
with your family? What were they doing to get people off of drugs? What was the path?
So the drug center in Batel at the time, and still,
didn't use drug substitutes like methadone, and it was just cold turkey to get off.
So there was no alcohol, nicotine, or any other drugs in the program or methadone.
The Spanish government and private organizations didn't have any methadone treatments in the 80s
in Spain, and it really was basically, I think, in the early 90s that they started giving out
quite a lot more methadone. And then as they became aware of the AIDS virus, they started giving
out tons of little small bleach bottles where even if they were using the same needle, they could at
least clean the needles. And that came later. One of the issues with methadone is that while there
is some success with it, generally people are supplementing their methadone with other drugs,
so they're polydrug users. And at least from the research that I've seen, it's,
back in your point, it's not a purely physical addiction that causes the whole addiction problem.
There's generally other things that drive people to take drugs, whether it's, for example,
in the neighborhood at the time, very high youth unemployment rate, and drugs entering,
a lot of young people were not in school, they were not working, and plenty of time to experiment with drugs.
And so if you did get off heroin, but go back to hang out with the exact same frenzy,
were doing heroin before, you know, you're likely to get right back on it. And so the,
it's the change in the lifestyle, the change in the surroundings, you know, or dealing with underlying
problems is generally much more effective. And so a lot of the men and women in the program,
you know, didn't go back to their old friends. They stayed in the program and tried to bring in
the friends to the program or tried to go out and have different friends, you know, who were not
involved in the same habit.
talking about how your family was in your own little universe. What was your life for you?
I mean, your American kids are speaking English. I'm sure he spoke Spanish a lot as well,
but are you there immersed in the Spanish school system or are you homeschooled?
What did that look like on a daily basis?
Yeah, so we were briefly in the Spanish school system, but then there was a very small missionary
school that my parents sent us to. And there were many years where my parents didn't have enough money
to send us even to that missionary school.
Missionaries tend not to have very much money.
And some years, there were not a lot of tithes.
And in the late 1980s, the dollar lost about half its value
versus the Pesada after the Plaza Cords.
And so we were homeschooled for about two years by my mother.
And there's a chapter called Our Own Little Universe.
My parents were highly literate and used to have very long devotionals
in the morning and after dinner, which we hated at the time,
where they'd read things like St. Augustine's,
of God and T.S. Eliot and while I hated it at the time, I think it really did, you know,
provide us with a great education. And we had this sort of very strange life, a hyperliterate
life at home. And then, you know, going out and spending time on the forums with the recovering
addicts and playing soccer out the street. So, and that continued throughout our entire
educational life. That's kind of interesting. That's something that I did with our kids on
when we were homeschooling them.
I bored them to death, reading to them.
But actually, they got to where they liked it.
We tried to teach them to read at the very beginning, and they pushed back on it.
They were not interested in those books.
And so we kind of thought, well, let's regroup this and see how we can approach it and
decided that what we would do is try to build a love of literature with them.
So I was the one who was going to read all the books to them, and that's basically how it worked.
I guess it kind of worked that way with you as well.
You're talking about how there was a tremendous.
amount of books always around on the table and other things like that with your parents?
Yes, I think one of the most important things for teaching is not necessarily conveying
specific information, but rather cultivating that love of learning, that curiosity.
That's right.
And I think if parents or teachers do that, then the kids will end up teaching themselves.
They will have the desire to go pick up the books to read great works of literature.
We had encyclopedias, National Geographic, and so we spent a lot of our time just randomly pulling them off the shelves
and reading. I absolutely loved it. And then we ended up working our way through our parents'
library when we were homeschooled. And then when we were able to go back to school, that practice
and habit of sort of reading for ourselves continued. And then when I went off to college,
I realized that actually I was like fairly bored in a lot of my classes and ended up doing
quite a lot of advanced studies and research projects with professors because I realized that was
the way I enjoyed learning most.
And unfortunately, the professors
were kind enough to indulge me.
That's great.
You point out that you and your brothers
learned that you could teach yourselves
anything from books.
And that's the key thing.
I think having the tools of learning,
somebody expressed it as saying,
you know, when we're teaching,
and this is something people need to think about
when they're doing homeschooling.
It's not the filling of a bucket,
but it's a lighting of a fire
that you're trying to get, right?
That love of learning or that love of finding out
that information.
And that's the key thing.
Sounds like that's what your parents did with you as well.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think if you do that, then it comes from inside.
It's the students who want to, you know,
and I had different interests that my brothers had,
but each one of us then had the desire to go off
and follow our own passions.
You talk about how you went back to America
and you had a tragedy that happened in your family
in a car accident.
Tell us a bit about that.
Yes.
So missionaries, and it depends, varies by mission, but generally they'll go back for what's called a furlough,
and that might be every three years or four years.
We would go back every four years.
And so in 1991, we were visiting my mother's family, staying in Wilmington, North Carolina,
and my father wanted to go on a road trip to Kitty Hawk.
And so we were driving there, and my older brother, who was just about to turn 17, was driving.
and the car went off the road on a bend in the country road.
And my youngest brother Timothy, who I was closest to,
and I used to walk him to school every day and cared for him,
he died in that car accident.
And it completely changed my life.
It changed my entire family's life.
You know, there really is only before and after,
you know, when a family faces a tragedy like that.
And, you know, after he died,
we all grieved differently.
I think often there's research and statistics showing that obviously it leads to an increase in divorce rates and couples because the husbands and the wife grieved differently.
It affected my brothers and me and her personality.
But much more broadly, a lot of the men or families in Madrid in our neighborhood, they lost sons and daughters to overdoses and then to AIDS.
And I think it made us much more loving and empathetic to them and understanding their loss.
And I think they also realized my parents didn't leave the mission field or go back to the United States.
They continued working, trying to help others.
And so I think they realized that, you know, we were sort of just like them.
And, you know, no one in life is spared sickness or death.
And it really was the defining event of my life, certainly.
And I hope it has led us all to have more love and compassion and empathy.
How old was Timothy when he died?
It was a week before he turned 10.
Wow.
And you pointed out in your book that you and he, as you just said, were very close on issues.
You were five years older than him.
And you both shared love of jazz, you said.
And the two of you were talking about what you wanted to do in life.
Were you a musician?
Did you guys aspire to being musicians?
Because you were about 15 years old or something.
I used to play the trumpet.
And I think our dreams, of course, were always exceeded our abilities.
But we certainly...
For all of us, of course, yeah.
Yes, we loved listening to jazz.
And when we went back to the library
in Wilmington, North Carolina, which was down near the Cotton Exchange,
we know the public library, we could rent or try to check out
as many books or recordings as we wanted.
And we just absolutely loved listening to Miles Davis,
John Coltrane, and Louis Armstrong.
And so we loved Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker.
They were the great duo.
And so I was going to be Dizzy Gillespie on my trumpet.
And he had just gotten a saxophone for a month before he died.
And he was going to be like Charlie Parker.
And in the book, I touch on the fact that almost all of these guys were either heroin addicts
or drugs and alcoholism as well in cases like Stan Gets.
But it's interesting, John Coltrane got off heroin.
And he had a religious experience.
And he recorded an entire album called A Love Supreme.
which is about God.
And so it was very interesting, the parallels between the jazz musicians
and the addicts we were growing up around.
And so I have a few pages in there on that,
which was sort of a...
Yeah.
We were really into at the time.
I didn't know that about John Coltrane.
I didn't know that he got off of it
and had a religious experience.
A Christian experience that he had?
Yeah.
Wow. Interesting.
Yeah, it's kind of, you know,
I actually played once with Dizzy Gillespie in college.
We paid him to play with us.
He came for a concert series.
and so the jazz band we had in college is a dizzy lesbian boy he had a set of chops cheeks that went
to here it was very unusual and quite a trademark i think that helped his his popularity quite a bit it
certainly was an interesting way to look at we also had Maynard ferguson and don ellis at the thing and so
yeah i was very much involved in that but i was again as you point out my dreams were bigger than my
achievements in that area. But when you get into the music world like that, you do see a lot of
drugs, especially if you're playing as a musician and they still had live music back in those days.
And what was it? Did you ever have a situation where you looked at people as you got older,
if you looked at people and you saw them doing drugs and other things and you were tempted in that
or you thought about doing that? Do you ever have a situation like that being immersed in that environment?
So there's always a lot of curiosity in terms of, you know, what's the physical sensation like?
And I do deal with that a little bit in the book.
And, you know, I was curious as to how much did it cost to get a gram of heroin and how did you prepare it and all these kinds of things.
But I never ever did drugs.
I knew people who had died of overdoses.
I had seen people being tended to being taken in ambulances who would overdose by the gypsy camp.
And it was just not something that I ever wanted to do because, you know, there's always the possibility of overdosing, too.
And so it was something that I never even experimented with.
And that's a key thing, I think.
You know, when we look at this and people that we are around that when we see alcoholism,
when we see drug addiction or some of these other things, and we see how it has been so destructive on these people's lives,
I think that's a real deterrent.
It certainly was for me, you know, being around that in some regards,
but also, you know, growing up in a family like yours where that was not done.
And so you see these two different worlds contrasted and it's like, yeah, I really don't want that.
I think it's a valuable lesson.
Yes.
And I think that unfortunately some people, you know, are exposed to it and still do it.
But it certainly can be a very good antidote.
It even put me off of dancing, I've got to say.
He said, well, it's a running joke with my wife and I.
He's like, I'm sorry, I'm not going to dance.
I've watched too many drunk people out there dancing.
Put me off of that in just a small way.
That's just a small part of it.
But in the bigger picture, you see that as well.
Now, you talk about your calling and something that you saw on an inscription on a wall.
Tell us a little bit about that.
Yeah, so the early addicts and shared needles become HIV positive.
And then the average incubation period is about five years.
And for some, it's much shorter, for some, it's longer.
But most of the early generation of addicts were spending quite a lot of time in the hospital
in the late 80s, early 90s.
And many died there.
But I used to go visit them in junior high and high school evenings and weekends.
And the main hospital in Madrid, where they would take the addicts for AIDS was Ramonica Khal.
And it was named after the first Spaniard to win a Nobel Prize.
eyes in medicine and in science.
And at the entrance to the hospital, there's a quote from him, and it said,
To do Ombre Poulets de Scriber de Sotomayor of His Own, which is every man can become
the sculptor of his own mind if he sets himself the task.
And that quote was deeply inspiring to me, and particularly after my brother died, where
I found solos or escape in books.
the idea that I could be the sculptor of my own mind.
I could develop my mind was something that inspired me and it still does to this day.
And that was one of the great experiences of my life seeing that quote and then trying to apply it.
And how did you apply that in your life?
You say you went to a university in the United States and what did you study and what did you wind up doing?
How did that affect you?
So when I got to, I went to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and I wasn't very good socially.
I didn't have that many friends. I went in 94. That was the 94, 95 was the peak of death from AIDS.
And so a lot of my friends were still in Madrid, and I didn't know if I'd be able to get back and see them again.
And so I really withdrew and poured all my energies into my studies. But I studied,
economics and history at Chapel Hill and I ended up graduating with highest honors in history and honors and economics and
I'm partly at a financial need trying to
get a lot of scholarships and fellowships but also I think you know I was trying to make my brother and
Timothy proud you know of me was trying to live a life for two and then in my my senior year
you know I applied and was enormously fortunate that I was able to become a road scholar and
and go off to Oxford.
Wow.
What was that like?
That's a very...
From the slums of Spain
where there's heroin on the streets,
anything to Oxford.
What kind of a culture shock was that for you?
You know, it was pretty big.
But it felt like an immense relief.
My parents had sacrificed an enormous amount
over the years.
And whenever they did have money,
they would give it to the Derb Rehab Center.
but I felt that what they had done is give us the gift of learning and reading.
And so the Rhodes application and interview itself, it's very, very difficult things statistically to get.
And I think my year, there was something like 990 nominations and 32 scholarships.
And so it totally changed my life.
I don't know where I would be or what I'd be doing otherwise.
but it allowed me go to Oxford and I met an enormous amount of very interesting people
that I'm still most, many of them I'm still friends with today and absolutely love.
But it was, and even there again, it was a bit schizophrenic.
I'd leave Oxford and go back to Madrid or go visit friends in Marseille or Naples
and work in the drug rehabs like in my Oxford breaks, you know.
Wow.
Talking about the extremes of life.
Again, we're talking to Jonathan Tepper.
The book is Shooting Up a Memoir of Heroin, AIDS, Love, and Loss.
And you had so many people that you loved and lost because of AIDS.
And as this all began, I remember in the United States, everybody was uncertain of how it was being passed along.
And there were concerns about even, you know, well, if this is going to be passed in the blood, can we, is this something that we can get from mosquitoes or something like that?
What was the fear of that like there in the area and epicenterally of that?
I still remember vividly when my parents told us about the virus because we had been out playing soccer and came in too late for dinner.
And I thought they were going to punish us.
They called us into the living room and if they're going to punish us for staying out too late.
And instead they told us about the virus and they told us about how it was transmitted.
And in 1985, they did know how it was transmitted.
knew that it came from either bodily fluids.
So whether it's sex, which obviously we were too young for at the time, or sharing needles,
which we didn't do, but they told us to, you know, not touch the dirty needles, which we took
as obvious.
So I almost wondered why they were telling us that.
But even so, in society at large, there was still this enormous irrational fear of people
with AIDS, you know, where you couldn't get it by shaking their hand or hugging them or giving
them a kiss on the cheek is one does in Spain to, you know, both cheeks to, you know,
men and women to say hi. And some of my early memories of, I didn't go to the hospital because my
parents thought I was too young, but my father went and told the stories. And then when I went,
you could see it. Sometimes even family members were afraid to go and hug their own children.
Sure. You know, we're HIV positive. And I think the level of ignorance was very high for many,
many years, even after it was well established, how it was spread or not. And the people with
AIDS in the 1980s, whether it was gays in the United States, which is where it started and was
the Maine, or Spain, which is near venous drug use, really were sort of the lepers and
outcasts in the 1980s. And my parents' view was that if you read the New Testament,
Jesus spent time with the lepers, healing them, with the outcasts. And so we never treated
anyone any differently. And my parents, you know, thought it was the essence of Christian love and
compassion to try to show love to them.
I remember, yeah, I remember watching a Ben-Hur with my kids, and Travis was, we were watching
it.
And at one point, you know, leprosy is at the center of it when the characters gets leprosy.
And at one point, the main character reaches over and touches.
And he jumped like it was some kind of a slasher film or something.
So it is that you see these horrible wasting diseases that people are concerned they're going
to get.
And it is understandable how people feel that way.
But now, all the people that you were involved in, especially the early people that you became very close to, some of the first addicts that came into the program, they all wound up getting AIDS, right?
Was it fatal for all of them?
Yes.
Yes, for almost all of them.
There's one or two from the very early days who were still alive.
But like that early generation that I met on the streets, they died in 94, well, even before, but the peak was 94-95.
and the Chhombi, another main character in the book,
it was like an older brother, 96.
So it was an entire generation of addicts, you know,
who ended up dying.
And so it wasn't just one loss.
It really was like, you know,
being in a war zone where there were dozens and dozens of deaths.
And it really did mark me in the Drug Rehab Center.
And even at the time, you know, my parents organized a conference about AIDS.
so that people could ask questions and talk to each other about it.
And then we knew about it.
But I think everyone just sort of got on with their lives
and tried to help other people.
It was only the 20th year anniversary of the Drug Rehab Center
when they were doing a video and slideshow
of the history of the center.
And they had the friends that we've lost
and they had photos of a lot of the early people.
And this was at the time I started writing the books.
I wrote this about 20 years ago and just put it aside.
And I was just struck by the number of people,
you know, one after the other in that slideshow.
And then that's, I think, when the magnitude of the loss and what we had actually lived through
really hit me.
Truly is an amazing life that you had there.
And your parents lived it to the fullest.
Your mother has passed away.
But your dad is still at this work, isn't he?
Yes.
He's 79.
He had a minor stroke last year, which fortunately he's recovered from very well.
And he wants to work helping others until the day he dies.
And I think he would.
I hope he will. He's an old lion and his work. He doesn't want to retire. He just wants to help other people.
Yeah, you talked about as he's reading at the dinner table, he calls it as pontifications as he's teaching you on that.
What about your brothers? Did any of them get involved in that? What do they wind up doing in their lives?
So my older brother, David, did work quite a few years running the drug rehab center in New York City. So he'd been an accountant.
And so his background in training was in business and accounting.
But he worked with my parents for a while.
He had an autistic son and ended up for family reasons leaving the Drug Rehab Center,
ran his own accounting and investment practice.
Now he works with me running Pramette Capital.
And then my younger brother, Peter, well, he and David actually both went and got Oxford degrees
after I did and they studied theology.
But Peter ended up staying on and became a student chaplain at St. Aldeates, Oxford,
which is an Anglican Church.
and then he moved to Florida
and now pastors an Anglican church
or an Episcopalian church in Florida.
So he stayed, you know, further,
closer to what my parents were doing
in terms of ministry,
but my brother David and I, you know, work and investing.
Where is he in Florida?
I grew up in Florida.
Yes, he is, I think he lives in DeLand
and I think his church is in,
my mind's going blank right now.
It's right outside, it's near the coast.
It's one of these.
I grew up in Tampa is reason to ask.
I was just thinking about how our paths probably crossed one time or the other
because we were there near Chapel Hill,
was where we lived right about the time that you were there.
So probably ships that passed in the night.
Who knows?
Definitely.
So it is a fascinating book.
Your parents and your family had a fascinating life,
and it is a life of love and accomplishment that I think you can all be proud of.
And I think it's really important.
for us to go back and look at these true life stories. I prefer, you know, truth is always
stranger than fiction, and it is always much more important, of course. And so I think we can
all learn a lot from these true stories. And like I said before, at the very beginning of this,
I really like these stories of people talking about their childhood as an adult and the
perspective that they have on it as they get further along in life and as they're adults.
So thank you so much for joining us.
Jonathan Tepper, and the book is Shooting Up, a Memoir of Heroine, AIDS, Love, and Loss.
And people can pre-book this now, right?
When is this coming out?
It'll be out next week.
And so I don't know when the podcast will be released, but it'll be out, I think, February 17th,
and they can buy it wherever they buy books, so Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or their local bookstore.
Again, the title is Shooting Up, A Memoir of Heroin, AIDS, Love, and Lost.
The author is Jonathan.
Temper. Thank you so much, Jonathan. Thank you for sharing your life and your story and
look forward to reading the full thing. I've got the synopsis here that, but looking
forward to reading the whole thing. Thank you so much. Thank you so much. Thank you. It's been an
absolute pleasure. Thank you. Have a good day. Thanks you too.
Making sense. Common again. You're listening to the David Knight Show.
All right. Joining us now is a guess that we've had on many times. Very interesting and he knows
a lot of interesting things. I want to get them on to talk about what Kim.com was saying in terms
of Palantir of all people being hacked. This is something to see happening over and over again,
whether it's the Pentagon or whether it's Palantir or whether it's the NSA, these people
that you think would have the sophistication and not have a problem or constantly getting hacked.
And so I want to talk to him about the increased vulnerability as we become more and more
of an internet connected, AI-connected system.
But Goetree has something to say about this Nancy Guthrie kidnapping as well that goes back to
something that he was working on more than a decade ago.
Thank you for joining us, Goetree.
My pleasure, David.
It's always great to be back with you.
Yeah, yeah.
Tell us a little bit about your comments about this Nancy Guthrie thing.
One of the first things I noticed about it was the fact that she had, you know,
they eventually showed this picture of the perp at her door.
They said she was not using their online storage system.
She didn't pay for that.
She was just using it for real-time monitoring.
And so they said at first, well, we only store stuff if it's the paid accounts and stuff like that.
But then it turns out that they were storing it anyway.
That's why it showed up a few days later.
But you have other things that you noticed in it.
Talk to us a little bit about that.
well to me i hate to go off sounding like a conspiracy theorist
well this is the right show for that
yeah
well i know that's what i'm saying the scary part about it is when we turn into
conspiracy theorists that comes true
yeah that's right
but uh
this thing is striking me is made for
tv i mean
you turn the news on everybody's
He's breathlessly hanging on to some special analyst giving his special analyst opinion.
And I'm looking at this, and this stuff that they're doing is so amateurish.
I don't know.
Both sides, the criminal and the FBI.
I'm saying, I mean, I can't watch it.
I mean, I'll throw stuff at the TV and start ranting.
I just, I don't need to get my blood pressure up over this.
What's some of the amateur stuff that the FBI is doing?
Well, you know, it goes back then for war days.
I sent you that bill that we were doing for the alphabet soup.
Yeah.
And it was a, we called it war driving.
I don't know what sophisticated term they got right now.
But you go run through and you're picking up every device.
every network, every team that's being sent out.
And these things, you could deploy them.
It was a car.
I mean, if you want to show the picture of it.
Yeah, it was an interceptor dodge.
So it's one of these souped up dodges that they give to the police, police interceptor.
It was a dodge.
In 2015, they got the first hellcat that came out.
We didn't even know what else that was at the time.
Yeah.
Oh, man, I love that car.
Anyhow.
I remember you said, you can have the Batmobile.
I want this thing.
That's right.
But it was a mobile, complete, it performed several,
six or seven different things at the time.
And one of them was sniffing for cell phones,
cell phone pings
it was
very versatile and what we had done
is we had went through and actually
built a
into the grill
an amplified
sniffer which
as they were
saying with this helicopter
okay first off you've got to start
the
pacemaker only has a range
50 feet
if you amplify the signal
or your sniffer,
we had it up to about a football field.
But we were on a time constraint
and weren't able to really advance it out further than that.
They won't throw more money and gave us more time.
We probably could have expanded it exponentially.
And this was a decade ago,
and I've really not kept up that much with a Nancy Guthrie's story,
but you said they've got a helicopter that's out.
They're trying to find the pacemaker
signal, right?
Yeah, and this is what's blowing my mind,
this is just one of a dozen things that I'm like,
I'm asking, what are they doing?
They are buzzing these houses at apparently 50 feet or less,
since that's as far as the pacemaker will reach out.
And they're searching for that signal.
Yeah.
I'm sitting there, you know, thinking, what are they doing?
I mean, can you imagine the rota wash that's hitting the houses and the yards?
Yeah, probably got a lot of...
Got a lot of small dogs that have gone missing, man.
Yeah, garden gnomes, pink flamingos, raining down in Mexico someplace.
I don't know.
Yeah.
I'm looking at it.
Here's this guy sitting in the door of the helicopter.
with a box.
I'm like, what are they doing?
I mean, they're probably roof shingles, roof tiles, everything else being ripped off
these houses, not to mention the vibration.
Lance says, you know, why does a pacemaker need to announce this location in the first place?
And, of course, going back to one of the things we talked about over a decade ago,
these Black Hat conferences and DefCon conferences that have a regular basis in Vegas.
And there was a friend of yours who was showing how.
they could be hacked. That was one of the first devices that he's looking at, how you could
kill somebody by hacking into these devices. And what happened to him? Barnaby.
Yes.
Barnaby went, I had a, man, this is one of the first, I'll say it.
People can argue with me. I knew him personally. He was assassinated the night before
he was going to, to, uh,
the Black Cat Convention and show this.
And the way we click the work is we did not show this for malicious intent.
We showed the vulnerability so that people could correct it.
Right, right.
If we showed them how simple it was to hack in the pacemakers, insulin pumps, all this,
it's on them.
It is their responsibility to patch this so that they're,
secure and they will not do it unless they're drug out into the public yeah that's right that night
before barnaby was supposed to give his demonstration he died of heroin a heroin
a heroin overdose in the hotel that would be like someone saying david died of a heroin overdose
Barney didn't do that kind of stuff.
Yeah.
So that was a big one.
And apparently, I mean, I hate to say it because it really, it hurts me to say this.
But after that, I dropped it.
But I have my doubts that they have patched any of this.
And I don't want to scare people.
Right.
But.
Well, we know that they tolerate a lot of this.
That's what happened.
Yeah.
We know they tolerate a lot of this.
I mean, just take a look at it wasn't that long ago that they had the power issue and look at,
in San Francisco or what happened to Waymo, right?
All of the self-driving cars lost it.
They blocked everything.
And that goes back to a novel that was written back in 2011, Robopocalypse.
And it posited how, in that story, the villain was a,
a rogue AI that brought all this stuff on.
But what it was showing was a vulnerability of society once it becomes an internet of things
and an internet of people.
You have all these, and that's what's really happening.
I think what's happening with our military.
I mean, they are pushing in a really hard way to try to get everything online and interconnected,
which means that it's just a lot more vulnerable, isn't it?
This is a prime example, David, of the incompetence of both the criminal.
the criminal must have like a sixth grade understanding of technology.
And then the FBI with all these toys that have been built and given to them,
and they don't know how to use it.
I'm just picturing, I'm just picturing Cash Patel's expression if you try to explain some of this stuff.
I'm sure he'd be, I don't know, bug-eyed.
He can call me if he wants to, I'll be happy to talk to him.
He's bug-eyed about everything.
Yeah, get your checkbook out, Cash.
We can fix some stuff.
Yeah, that's amazing.
Well, you know, when we look at this, one of the things that Kim.com said was,
and you've talked about this many times, the backdoors.
You know, when you look at the technological side of this,
the really dangerous thing is that there's backdoors in everything.
And they demand to have it there.
That's correct.
They demand to have it there for the developers.
They demand to have it there for, let's say, the CEOs or whatever.
And once you've got those backdoors, you get into everything.
That's one of the things that Kim.com said in terms of what was revealed with his hack into Palantir.
He said, I'll quote his tweet here that he put out.
He said, they have backdoored devices, cars, jets of world leaders.
They've accumulated the biggest archive of blackmail material anybody's got.
So basically what he's saying is Palantir is the new Jeffrey Epstein.
Yeah.
And, you know, remember Colonial Pipeline?
Oh, yeah.
That fell off, that fell off the map in a hurry because, oh, no, the CEO did it.
It wasn't no big technology spoof or CFO.
I better be careful here.
One of the insiders did it.
I don't know who.
Yeah, yeah.
But back doors, back doors and all that.
Then the railroad hacks, you know, it's like back doors.
And there's one reason I left, I finally said,
enough. You cannot help the people that's unwilling to help themselves because they will say we've
patched it, but nothing's been patched. You give them top shelf, well, they may patch it. That's like
saying the wind is broken. And you take a hammer and knock more out and then put a piece of
plywood over it. You know, it's like, what? I remember you're talking about the banking industry,
the ATMs and stuff like that, you know, finding the bowl.
vulnerabilities in that and you told the
the companies and they didn't want to go out and fix it.
No.
It laid the whole thing out where they had tears where if you stole over a million
dollars in cash, it was cost of operations, raise rates on your users.
Yeah, we'll just spread it out.
Yeah.
And then after you got to a certain level, which back in the old days, about $5 million,
I mean, it was like the Bangladesh's did.
They went in there and they stole like, I don't know, $100 million.
They had ever red team in town and every cyberdog they could find turned loose on them.
They got them like it within a week.
Which if, you know, that was back in the days when people were taking care of business.
There's stuff going on right now.
I'm like, man, what has happened?
but I think this whole thing's orchestrated.
It's like built for the 24-7 new cycle,
and you have all these specialists that aren't very special.
Yeah, I look at this, and when I look at this full speed ahead,
let's incorporate AI into everything in the Pentagon,
they've convinced themselves there in an AI race with the Chinese,
and they've got to get their first.
It doesn't matter if this stuff works or not.
It doesn't matter if we can control it once we let it loose.
That's the key to it all.
Well, all this technology that we've built and handed to these people,
they don't know what to do it.
They're going to plug it into AI.
Make it simple.
Let's keep it, you know, the kiss method.
Keep it simple, stupid.
We can put a trained orangutangangang thing on it.
And sure, it worked great.
Yeah, it's going to be, you know, when you look at the fact that they are constantly getting hacked, as I said before, you know, you've had the NSA get hacked.
The CIA is on Vault 7 tools, the tools that they used to hack other people and disguise their identity.
That got stolen from them.
So it's this spy versus spy countermeasures and counter-counter measures that keep going and going.
And yet, in spite of that and the vulnerabilities that all this heavy automation introduces,
into every system, they're escalating this at a very rapid rate, and I think much, much faster
than they can actually keep track of it or test it.
Exactly.
And the thing is, if you're not competent enough in person or have a person that can manage it,
you plug it into a mainframe, which is what they'll be running.
Who's going to be running the AI?
the same idiot that can't manage what he's already got.
What do you think about these AI agents?
Because occasionally we get stories when things go really,
really wrong, like it deletes an entire company's database and says,
oh, I just deleted a database.
I'm sorry about that.
I know you told me not to do that, but I did it anyway,
and you can't get it back.
We've actually covered stories like that.
What do you think about this and this race to put AI agents out
and give them control over real world assets.
What do you think?
Well, once again, this is one reason.
I finally just threw the towel in on information security and pen testing and the whole thing.
You've got to go back once again through history, which we've been screaming about for 30 or 40 years.
Everything's on the cloud.
What is the cloud?
Well, it's a new term, but it's a old what we used to call FTP.
server file transfer protocol well that's in so old school let's name it the cloud it's setting on
someone else's uh uh server someone else is managing it you simply use it and now you're going to
turn AI loose on it it's like the fox in the hen house all the chickens in the hen house
they've got a real problem and what the fox eats is what the fox wants to eat yeah
Yeah, and of course, the Pentagon, I remember when they were talking about the contract,
there's this big competition between Amazon and Microsoft as who was going to provide the Jedi system.
And that was basically putting all the Pentagon stuff on the cloud.
It's like, why would anybody do that?
It gives everybody in the world essentially an opportunity to take a,
have their shot at cracking it, right?
Once you do that.
Yeah, one-stop shopping.
And, you know, if you know who's on the cloud, pick the account and start cracking.
Yeah, that's right.
But, you know, if you put the AI control.
You give them physical access and then they just need to figure out how to get past the electronic obstacles that are there.
But, you know, they've basically gotten them a great deal the way there.
I mean, if you really wanted to keep something that was vitally important and secure,
I would think you would remove it off of the ability for people to be able to even get to it
unless they went into some facility that physically got into some facility,
then they would have to still go through the process of breaking in through the electronic stuff.
But they don't take those kind of precautions,
not even with the stuff that is at the very essence of what these agencies are doing.
You know, I have had calls at three in the morning where a hack was in process.
They're downloading a company server.
And my suggestion to them was, kill the power.
power.
Duh.
You can't do that to these clouds.
Yeah, that's right.
You know, I hate to keep going back.
I didn't intend to do this,
but I keep going back to the past tech.
We got it right the first time.
They keep tinkering with it and don't know how to use it.
They've over-perfected things to the point where it's unusable.
Yeah.
I'm going to tell you this.
Cory Dr. Rowe.
I can because of
Corey Doctor of science fiction writers
got a term for that he calls it inshittification
Sounds good to me
Yeah it looks like what we're saying all the time doesn't it
You know
When I came out of compact
In 1986
We
This is my first expedition
Into the military
They wanted to secure the nuclear
ballistic missiles
I'll tell you how we did it and they were never hacked.
The computer system was totally offline.
There was no way to reach it from the outside.
And, you know, you see the movies.
The codes were on five-inch floppy disk.
That was what was in the safe.
If the signals came through, they had a series of releases,
finally they would get around to cracking open the safe with the ploppy.
The floppies were updated every day.
They were delivered with the mill, I guess.
So then if you got to a certain level,
the operators would put the floppies into the PC and the countdown to start.
Once you got to that zero, you would turn a key like your car key,
and then you could push the button.
and all hell would break loose.
They were never hacked,
but people don't understand
that allowing outside access,
your material is your own doings.
You cannot help the stupid.
And that's the key.
Like you and I say,
in terms of putting stuff on the cloud,
we see this happening over and over again.
How did they break into the NSA?
How did they steal the CIA's tools?
How did they get into the Pentagon files?
It's because they allow,
people to have access to the database, and then it becomes a much, much, much simpler problem.
Still, there's some things that you have to get past, but if you don't keep that offline,
then if it's online, then they've got an opportunity.
Well, I would probably, I've not kept up with Palantier.
I've been off on some other stuff.
But I'm going to venture a guess that is it a government,
or Palantir, probably since Trump's been doing away with a lot of government employees,
probably have a government employee that was assigned to Palantir or vice versa that was terminated.
And human resources, for whatever reason, dropped the ball and did not take their credentials
to that cloud back.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Well, on the open market, something like,
like that's very valuable. If you're unemployed and you've got the opportunity to sell something as
simple as your credentials, boom, done. Yeah. That's right. Now, they're probably going to
try to invoke something like, oh, it was so complicated you can't understand it. Well, fine,
whatever. I look at what they're doing. They're going to this. They're displaying. They don't
have very much skills.
But this is how the real world works in cybersecurity.
And stuff that is going on.
They were talking about her ransom in Bitcoin.
I'm like, this guy don't know what he's doing.
Don't you understand that Bitcoin's recorded forever on the blockchain?
That's right.
Yeah.
So I have to go back to John McAfee.
Remember you interviewed him and he was talking about the Minero coin?
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah, and now there's a couple of them.
There's also Zano.
Yeah, that's been around for a long time.
Now they've got several others that are out there.
And it's never been breached.
It's never been breached.
Yeah.
When that goes into the system, it's gone.
And there's no way to tracing it.
So that tells me that the
dude don't know how to cover himself in a,
you know,
and then the camera doesn't understand what he's doing.
Secondly, if I was going to take a ring camera or whatever,
pop it out of there, I'm going to use some real serious low tech,
and it's called the hill of a boot and crush it.
That's right.
Yeah, you know, when you look at this stuff,
it's like Bitcoin, for example, which you said, you know,
it's going to be traceable.
And that's why I look at this,
and we've had situations where people have had their accounts hacked.
One of them was a guy who was a billionaire,
and it was nearly a million dollars.
And, you know, people are saying they're watching these transactions,
these large transactions they call from whales, right?
And so some guys watching these transactions go by,
and he sees nearly a million dollars go through there.
And he goes, hmm, who is that?
And he's able to track the guy down.
There's quite a few.
Yeah, he tracks a guy down.
He calls them up.
or billion.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's a millions and billions of dollars.
But he found out who this guy was, Goetree.
He finds out he not only sees a transaction there, but he's able to trace that down and
figure out who it is and sends him a text or an email and says,
you know, why are you doing this?
Or ask him something about it.
And the guy didn't know that he had been ripped off.
It was a stranger who saw the transaction, tracked it down to him and contact him.
So when I look at Bitcoin to me, you know, we talk about putting these things out there where they're available.
It's almost like you have a safe with all your money in it and you decide that where you're going to keep that safe is going to be on the town square.
That may be a very secure safe, but it's at the town square.
Anybody's got a crack at it that wants to take it, right?
You've got a $10,000 safe and a $2 lot.
That's right.
But, you know, I've got to go back and I can explain some of this to you.
I was working with ARPA on the MEMEX project.
Now, there's something that's going to be really scary when you plug it in, the AI.
It's called MEX.
And they had a parallel, I'm trying to recall the code name for it.
They had a naval labs.
My memory is what it used to be.
But they were running in 2014, 2015, they were running a simultaneous blockchain that mimicked Bitcoin.
So I don't know whatever happened to that project, but I don't know whatever happened to that project,
but I did download some of the source data, which I don't know where it got off to.
But you could set up accounts that mimic each other.
Same number, same everything, but they're on a different blockchain.
And they would jump from blockchain to blockchain.
So if someone got a hold of that, I mean, literally got a hold of that,
and we're able to use that technology.
and convince someone to jump or not even even unknowingly jump from the blockchain to that other blockchain,
you got them, but you've got control level.
And all these work off notes anyhow.
So if you build a clone node, you can build these wallets any way you want.
I mean, at one time I was running nodes.
I think I had like 300 Bitcoin wallets.
just I don't know.
It's time I was just experimenting and just keep clicking formal wallet.
Now, you know, anyhow, I lost a bunch of Bitcoin doing that, you know, trying to transfer
and all that.
But, yeah, all this comes, everything we're talking about, you throw out of subject, it all comes
to what it was done right the first time.
And you keep tweaking, keep, it gets to the point where it's done work.
people are unable to use it.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah, that's the sort of thing.
We see in engineering.
Usually there's a guy who's got a vision for this thing.
And, you know, you have a very small, you know, one or a couple of people who put together
a system.
That's what I've seen.
And people say, oh, that's pretty good.
They buy it.
And then the corporation takes it in.
And then you get a team of people who didn't have anything to do with the development
of it.
Don't really know what's going on with it.
And the thing gets ruined as they maintain.
at quote unquote or add features to it or this or that.
And that's kind of what's going to be happening with the AI stuff, I think.
They're using it for programming.
And where I've seen from a lot of people say, well, because I didn't put this thing together,
it's really hard for me to maintain it.
I don't really understand what it did or why it did what it did.
And it's kind of opaque, even though I've been in this for decades doing this.
Of course.
I mean, you could do anything on AI.
You can write books.
You can compose music.
you know, I hate to go
way off into the weeds,
but one of my,
I thought was the funniest thing
I'd ever seen on YouTube,
there is a music video called
That's One Ugly Baby.
I'd suggest you users like that to watch it.
It's AI.
And they took an old Motown song
and modited it
to where they're singing about ugly babies.
you know
I was like
man this is getting just too crazy
yeah
yeah
but with AI
you know
you have got
people don't understand
what they're doing
using it
and they're going to
once again
let's simplify
let's
put everything on AI
let it control it
it'll give us
warning beeps
if something's wrong
no it won't
yeah as a matter of fact
you go back to Gaza and a lot of people were saying, well, I think this was set up because this
is in an area where the Israeli government had automated guard towers and things like that,
very high-tech, very sophisticated.
And you see things like that.
And everybody believes that because it's high-tech, sophisticated, expensive, that it's going to be working correctly.
So therefore, they had to have had a false flag.
Now, that may have happened.
However, when you look at some of the things, you sent me a video of a guy that was, what was it,
as eight years old, and he was talking about how to become invisible to surveillance cameras.
And it was a really simple idea.
Really simple ideas.
As a matter of fact, we got a, where is that clip?
Do you have, yeah, here it is right here.
I'm going to pull this up and show the audience here.
What he did was he, look at his head, is just this glowing ball and you can't see anything.
And his insight was that since they put these cameras, these surveillance cameras around,
and they want them to be somewhat hidden from view in terms of people understanding that they're being surveilled,
they will put night vision on them.
And so he said, if you get something that has the same frequency that this is using in terms of light stuff,
that you could put that on your glasses and put out a very bright,
spectrum of light that it's only sensitive to, but the people can't see. It's not in the visible
spectrum, but it's going to basically create a massive lens flare for that night vision camera,
and it can't see who you are. Yeah. Well, you know, when we were pen testing, we would take these
RF diodes that were tiny, and we'd build a hat band out of them. And then for the nine, a little old,
I forget what size battery it was.
And we walk around there just in plain sight,
and the cameras couldn't read us.
If we really wanted to get stealthy,
we would either,
well, I think we sewed them into, like, jackets and stuff.
And you couldn't make heads or tails out of body shape, face, anything.
It's just one big glowing orb.
That's right.
And we were hacking the, well, hacking ATM machines,
and they were like, how are you doing this?
Well, we were admitted at their permission.
Right, right.
You know, pen testing.
Hey, your ATM is vulnerable.
But I walk through facilities and they're like, oh, it's a ghost.
Well, that's the thing.
You know, when you look at this, when it's being used for something like the defense industry or something like that, you know, you think that you've got some really sophisticated system.
And yet it might have a very, very simple.
vulnerability like you were just talking about. And, you know, that's the thing I see happening with
the rapid introduction of this technology. You know, it used to be back in the day when I was in
engineering. That was a long time ago, about 40 years ago. I remember one of the reasons that I didn't
want to get. Of course, I didn't want to develop stuff for the military because of what the military
was doing with it. But I had friends who got into that. And they were complaining. They said,
the stuff we're using is so old. We're not allowed to use anything unless it's
been around and tested for years unless they've taken it to the north pole unless they've taken
it to the desert and all the rest of the stuff they've got to you know have this stuff um it's got to be
tested in all these different environments and have a very long history behind it that's not really
what's happening now they're rushing to get stuff out and i think that's creating a whole new class
of vulnerability yeah well yes it's like the technicians and the people that you teach
stuff too. They're retiring.
They're on the way
out. It's like William Benny. Man, you ought to be
I know he's deep in his age, but you should try to book
William Benny and let him tell some
stories. Yeah. She's trying to get him.
My son, Lange just said,
while they looked at the footage and said, we've been hacked by
a lens flare.
It's been hacked by the human torch.
Yeah.
It's like, we've been hacked by aliens.
billions.
Where's his spaceship?
Maybe it's Lucifer, being of white.
Yeah.
But that's what I'm saying.
Back in the day, you did not put it out until it was perfected.
Now, you've got these.
Another problem that we have with the tech industry is,
who wants to go to work for the government and sit in a cubicle for 100,000 a year?
When you can go out there, take some existing technology, tweak it a little bit and go and have a $100 million IPO.
Or work for someone, and they pay half a mill or a mill a year for what you know and know how to make work.
So the government's behind the eight ball on this one, big.
And I was watching that with that Ms. Guthrie.
And I'm like, what did they do?
Turn loose.
The village idiots.
to solve this.
I mean,
you've got the village idiot
doing the crime.
Now you've got the village
idiots running it.
Oh,
yeah,
you really do literally
have the village idiots running by FBI.
That's,
that's for sure.
Cash were telling crew.
That's amazing.
Call me,
Cache.
Yeah,
call me,
get your trade book out.
We'll fix some stuff.
Yeah.
Anyhow.
This kind of stuff,
and now you're talking about
The people that really know AI, they're out there doing stuff that actually makes money for themselves.
The people that, the $100,000 crew, which I don't mean to be slamming anybody, they really don't know what they're doing.
They're going by the manual.
And you only know what the manual tells you.
Yeah.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's one reason I just threw up my hands and said, you know, I've got better things to stay.
keep doing this because you tell these people this while I was showing you these old
links and stuff we've already solved it where is it at use it so where do you see this going
where do you see this going as we have our as technology gets more and more advanced as a rate of
change increases more and more as there's less and less rugged ruggedness in the system
more vulnerabilities what do you see this all happening as you know it seems to me like it's
getting shakier as it is getting more advanced and it's happening at such a rapid rate that
nobody's keeping up with where does this all crash you see that happening soon what do you think's
going to happen that's what i look at it well they built the house cards up this high yeah so how
how can they continue building that house of cards i really don't know i think you know i think if people
had a reality check, but they're all disbelieving.
They're all not understanding the obvious.
It will continue until something really bad happens.
And I don't know what you define as bad.
You know, where is bad anymore?
Yeah, yeah.
A million people dead, 10 million dead.
So, and then when you work for the government, it's that old saying.
politicians and government people, I'm not responsible for the things I do.
Yeah, that's right.
They've got community.
So how can you stop it?
Yeah, how do you stop it?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, you have so many different systems that are involved in it.
You've got medical systems, infrastructure, transportation.
You have defense systems with weapons.
I mean, now there's going to be a major push for autonomous killer weapons,
autonomous killer robots as well as drones and things.
like that. By the way, you know, there was also another interesting video. Do you have that? Yeah, we've got it. I'll show the audience this. This is protecting yourself from an aerial drone using an umbrella. Thermal drones versus umbrellas. Yeah. Go ahead and open the umbrella. It's a split screen here.
It looks like it's go to IR. I can see anything. They can see what he's doing. They puts the umbrella on and he disappears now completely. I'm looking at a steeper angle. And it's still quite difficult to be honest.
I think he's slightly hearing the drone and pointing his umbrella towards that.
Now, can you close it?
Yeah.
Do it un-open it again?
That's too good, man.
That's too good.
Yeah, it's kind of interesting because that's where Eric Schmidt is hanging out now.
You know, he left Google, and he has been a big man on campus at the Pentagon for quite some time,
setting up very advanced systems and AI-based systems and that type of thing.
And yet, you know, they could go out and spend billions of dollars on some kind of autonomous killer drone thing.
They're talking about creating a no man's land, which is pretty much what they've done in the area between Ukraine and Russia now with all the improvised drones.
And that's changing the nature of warfare very, very rapidly.
And so you put all that stuff together and then, you know, maybe somebody finds a way to,
a vulnerability that's as simple as opening up an umbrella so that it can't see you with the
advanced targeting that it's got.
Well, even worse is they are perfecting the drone swarms.
Yeah.
I mean, at New Year, you remember, I forget, it was one city that was doing a, uh, uh, demonstrations
of art in the sky with the drone swarm.
Mm-hmm.
Everybody's like, ooh, uh, these.
I'm not even going to tell you how to do it.
It's one simple modification,
where you can put a bomb on it,
and it will release it.
So if you've got $550 drones in a swarm loaded with whatever,
Molotov cocktails, whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
You've got a force to be reckoned with.
Oh, yeah.
As a matter of fact, all this.
Yeah.
I was going to say Goat Tree.
All this.
Just want to be working.
Go ahead.
Go ahead.
I'm sorry.
All this push about trying to stop ghost guns and the licensing, not licensing, but the requirements
that are being talked about in terms of a Washington state, isn't it, Lance?
Yeah, Washington State.
There's another bill in New York.
And now there's, I think, five states that are putting out similar stuff.
It's a push.
Yeah, they're trying to stop 3D printers.
And as Lance has taken on all this, and I think it's the right one,
he doesn't think there's worried about ghost guns and creating ghost guns
as much as they are worried about stopping people printing their own drones.
Right.
Hey, you could, I'll tell you what.
I have a 200 drones for them full of all kinds of nasty stuff I can drop on you.
And you've got a ghost gun.
Who you most worried about?
That's exactly right.
Yeah.
That's the asymmetric warfare.
future right there.
Yeah, you got low-tech people playing with high-tech stuff.
Yeah, and they're desperate to stop that down, shut that down right now.
So, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's interesting as we see these things changing very rapidly.
But it is an odd mixture, and that's kind of where you operated as cybersecurity, this
odd mixture of technology and human nature.
and always when I talk to you about the different cases that you're on,
it was always almost kind of like a Colombo thing.
You know, the Occam's razor was, well, who is it that's got a gripe of the company
or who is it that could really profit from this because they know where the back door is?
So really more often than not, it was really about human nature in terms of finding the culprits in these things.
Well, now here's something.
I've got all mine shut off.
But if you're on automatic updates on your computer or PC, whatever they call them now, your phone, any device that has automatic update, you've got a back door open.
Now, if I wanted to, say if I wanted to, let's stir up Microsoft.
I hack in there and get that code, I can put anything I want on your device.
under their name.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You aren't sure what they're sending to you, but you're totally got you.
You've been the door open and they can come in that way.
They do do a lot of sharing with the government.
So, I mean, who knows who they shared with?
Yeah.
And the reasons why.
A lot of this software, I mean, this is so old school that they allow you to create backdoors.
if you know how.
So you can have your own personal back door into anything.
And while I'm on my rent,
people really ought to shut off their, their vendor.
Go download what you're sure your download.
Oh, man, my temper got up,
and I forgot what I was going to say.
So go ahead.
So turn off your automatic updates,
any other things that you would tell?
I mean, I do that just because I don't want
I'm constantly messing with my machine.
You know, if they put in an update,
they may break something, even if
it's a legit update.
So, yeah, I always turn that off.
Any other things like that that you tell people?
You know, I hate to sound as neelistic as I do,
but it's to the point where
if you could use
1960s technology,
that's the only safe place I can
think of going. I'm talking about putting in landline. I'm talking about finding 1960,
1970s version TVs. Yeah, TVs that don't watch you back. Yeah. You know, don't, don't,
don't record when you're what you're doing on TV or what you're watching or anything else.
You know, it's like we have created such a society that's so.
reliant on tech that we're letting it get away from us. Yeah, it really has, yeah. And I think
that's the government's involvement in it. When you look at what they have funded, it's what Eisenhower
warned us about the military industrial complex, and he said also the academic aspect of it as well.
And it's because the government is funding all this stuff, that the government is funding things
that can be used for centralized control and manipulation of people. And that's why when we talk about
this, we talk about this all the time with Eric Peters.
when he comes on, you know, get yourself a car that doesn't have all the electronics,
especially not a car that is constantly online because of the types of vulnerabilities
that you've pointed out with the Black Act conferences and things like that.
They've illustrated just how dangerous these things can be.
It could be somebody hacking it, or it could just be that the device itself is not working properly.
You remember when we went back to those automated cars where you just turn it on, you sit there behind steering wheel and you're not in control of anything?
That's right.
I explained it then that this is all on a sliding scale of basically, I forget what they even called it.
But it's on a, AT&T just texted me,
I doubt shall not talk about them.
It's on a sliding scale, basically a probability.
So let's say the president on that scale 1 to 10,
president gets 10.
It's programmed in your car.
You're going to avoid running into him at all cost.
And it becomes, of course, the program,
they're going to give themselves a 10 too.
It becomes,
who's the decider here?
Let's say you give a school bus load,
yeah, the short bus loaded with kids,
a eight.
But you have a rare species
of squirrel that is in danger
and you give it a nine. So you're driving alone
and that squirrel runs out at you.
you've got the short bus coming at you,
the computer's going to say hit the short bus
because it's lower rated than the squirrel.
Yeah, right.
So, you know, who gets to decide these things?
Who gets to decide of who's a zero?
You know, that means everything runs into you.
Well, and of course, it's not even just that kind of hierarchy
that could be imposed on us of values,
but it's also if the device is going to work properly.
I mean, we just had a situation where, you know, car was passing another car.
And because the auto lane change thing misread it, they're trying to get out of the way of the oncoming traffic.
And it pushed them back in at the last minute.
And they had a head-on collision and killed everybody in the car.
So you have these types of situations.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, you know, people are like, oh, this is great.
I can read them.
Well, nobody reads papers anymore.
I can text crazy stuff on X and drink coffee while on my commute.
You know, no clue what your car is programmed to do.
That's right.
You have no input on it.
And actually, I'm sitting, you know, I've got a pristine 1998 car.
They don't even have a CD player.
I'm sitting in it right now.
It's like I don't want to, I can go buy whatever.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, yeah, that's exactly right.
I'm going to hack this one.
You have a lot of the cars like Tesla's and things like that.
Even the door locks are under kind of software control.
So if there's an accident, you can't get out of your car.
It's difficult for them to open the car doors.
I had a friend of mine with a Tesla.
He got stuck in the car for quite some time.
He had to get, fortunately, he had his phone with him,
and he contacted tech support to get them to open his door.
And it wasn't the heat of summer.
So, you know, he didn't die of the heat in the meantime.
But, you know, once you.
overly complicate things.
You take away the ability for people to just even crank down their window, for example,
since now all the cars have got electric windows.
Now you've got issues of people when they drive into a body of water.
They can't get out of the car like they used to be able to.
So those are just simple examples of what's happening as we needlessly complicate everything.
I think we are turning into a Rube Goldberg society, even if it's not malicious.
Yeah, but it's even worse.
It's just out of complacency.
I don't know if complacency is the right word.
Laziness, it has been so simplified that we go with it without thinking about what we got.
Yeah.
You know, oh, okay, my coffee, and we went over this with IOT years ago.
I've got a IOT coffee pot and you don't really.
realize how open iot is to everything i don't even know if they call it that anymore yeah the internet
of things exactly yeah well my pet peeve is our black hat and i root go ahead sorry well if i'm a black
hat and i really hate you i can hack into your iot coffee pot and i don't know do something
set it on fire and it burn your house down yeah that's right yeah it's to the point where we have a
going to say we've got a television in our living room that is, you know, of course, they don't give you a
knob on the front where you can just turn the thing on or off or even a button, nothing that you can see.
And they put it on the back and it's black on black.
And it's like, I'm trying to reach around.
It's almost you can't see anything and you can't really even feel anything.
They don't even give you some kind of a tactile feedback to turn the thing on or off manually.
And it's like, and now we're struggling to find the remote control because we've got a two-year-old that is roaming the house.
and moving everything around.
But it's like, why complicate this?
Why can't we just have a button that turns it on or off or a knob that turns it off?
Everything is, you know, the geeks are out there thinking, oh, wouldn't it be cool if we hid
this and we did that and we put that under software control?
And they've made everything very, very difficult.
But anything that you would tell people in terms of precautions like, you know, make sure
that you don't have automatic update on, of course.
But other things like that, that'd be of any practical value to people.
When you're not using it and everybody's going to say I've lost my mind, but if you're on a router, turn it off when you're not using it.
Of course, you're always using it.
So I would go hardwired into computers and things that are online.
I would plug directly in.
I would not be using Wi-Fi any more than necessary, which I'm doing right now.
But it's a necessity, but it's a necessity, but it's an unneeded necessity because it opens you up to all sorts of things.
Whereas if you plug directly into the wall, you have knocked off a lot of this, well, like I was saying, war driving.
could drive around.
And if I can find a router open, that's what we call it war driving.
I can get in your router and do all kinds of cool stuff.
Yeah, that's right.
And of course, they can even use the Wi-Fi signals.
They can even use the Wi-Fi signals to see you inside of your house now.
You know, they can kind of reverse engineer those, the signals that are there.
But you'd have the bonus of a health issue as well.
Hmm?
What's that?
Oh, yeah.
What you did?
on your television,
you don't even realize it.
I'm going to take a shot in the dark and say it's a Sanio.
No,
I don't know who actually makes it as some off-label thing that we got for cheap
sale on.
Okay.
What is it?
Fizo or something like that.
So maybe it is made by Sanio.
I don't know.
But yeah, go ahead.
Well, what you found is when you turned it off
and that black screen was there,
was without,
without even realizing it,
these things now have gotten to where they're using subliminal programming.
Let's say you sit down and watch the news.
I don't know which news.
It don't matter.
First off, you've got several billion pixels.
You cannot use several billion pixels for one image.
So, and I can prove it.
If people want to, I mean, if they care enough, put the TV on the news right now.
Look at the newscaster in the eyes and walk up to the TV until you can see the two white dots in their eyes.
Those white dots there are meant to hold your attention.
So naturally, you're looking at the face.
And in the background, they will have some other pixels dedicated to basically ghost programming.
That is for the advertisers.
So you're fixated on watching that broadcaster.
And on your peripheral vision, you're catching whatever they're advertising.
let's say of
hamburgers
when you sit there long enough
it's going to get into your subconscious
the next thing you know you're craving hamburgers
that's why all those pixels
are there it's like they live right
yeah
behind your lines we deterred something
that's right behind the news
is saying obey
and comply yeah
and I'll tell you the funniest thing
in the world to do
it's so simple.
Just mute the broadcaster
or you can't hear them and watch them.
They look like the most ridiculous thing on the earth.
I'm serious.
Without that layered sound,
you've got to be going,
what in the world?
But when you combine it all together,
it works as addictive.
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
Yeah, there's a lot of...
I haven't gone back to the old, I haven't gone back to old Xena TVs yet, but I wish I could.
Yeah, I mean, my big thing is, you know, just the on-off button, you know,
sometimes it's difficult to turn it on.
Sometimes it turns itself like on when you don't want it on, you know.
So ours does that as well.
Some ghosts in the machine for sure.
Well, maybe it knows best.
It's like David's getting addicted to this.
Let's turn it off.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, you know, that's one of the things.
things, Jack Lawson, for example, he's been putting together the Civil Defense Manual for quite some time.
And he always deliberately put it out as a two-volume paper.
Because, again, you know, when it hits the fan, you're going to need to have that book that's there.
And other people that I've talked to that are about prepping and other things that, they have computers that they have stored things on.
And they've got it on, let's say, CDs or something like that.
If it's really important and they want to have it.
and it's on an air-gapped computer that's not connected to the internet ever.
And so there's certain things like that that are important for people to do, I think.
That's the smartest things, people.
I mean, I'm not saying preppers, but, you know, what if we have a, it could be any incident,
a hurricane, well, you don't have very many hurricanes in Tennessee,
but you did have a flood.
And you're isolated for, I don't know, for several days.
And you need knowledge that you've already downloaded.
I don't know, maybe medical knowledge, survival knowledge, whatever.
It's there on hand where you can't access it because it's set on YouTube or something, which is down.
Yeah, yeah.
But if you got it in a book, you got it.
Well, our video, some people got to where they can't read anymore.
It's like, give a little video.
That's right.
Whatever it takes.
But, you know, that collection of knowledge is probably one of the smartest things a person can do.
Yes. Yes, absolutely.
Well, there's some helpful hints for people.
And it's always great talking to you.
Always interesting talking to you.
And you're not doing cybersecurity anymore, right?
You want to, are you still doing any writing?
Yeah, I am.
I've redirected my focus to something that's.
called uh oh lord it's called quantum uh levitation quantum levitation it's going to it yep and it is in its
infancy and if we can ever crack some codes on some some materials is going to change the world
once again here i am talking about changing the world and reverting back to old school stuff so go
figure.
Yeah.
If you can imagine,
if you can imagine freight trains being powered by,
like, leaf blowers,
that's the energy it would take.
You have a thin line where it doesn't touch anything.
It applies to cars.
It applies to everything.
The technology is here,
but a lot of the components aren't,
and it's still in its infancy.
But when that does hit, you're going to get more industry pushback, probably outlawed.
I mean, you've got, you know, the tire industry is probably a trillion dollar a year business.
Or they are not going to like going the way of the horse and buggy and things like that.
And I'm not talking George Jets and stuff.
But I'm talking where your car is traveling maybe an inch off the ground.
and it also is encapsulated where nothing can run into you.
It's magnetism.
It pushes back.
Native pushes back from positive and that sort of thing.
That is interesting.
And also, I was just looking at, go ahead.
Go ahead.
Well, go ahead.
I was just looking.
If you're going to do deep space.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Oh, okay, go ahead.
No, you go ahead.
If you're doing deep space, if you're doing deep space,
If you're doing deep space of travel, you're going to have to have an artificial gravity.
You can't just let people float around and stuff float around in the vehicle for years.
Because if they're unable to, I mean, they get the muscular or not.
They have muscular deterioration, stuff like that.
What if they shoot for a planet that has time 10 gravitation?
They aren't even going to be able to walk.
Yeah, that's right.
So, you know, it applies to everything.
You could put knee pads and elbow pads and I guess a helmet on people that are prone to fall.
And they can fall all they want.
They'll never hit the floor.
And it's just, you know, it's just it will rewrite the rules of the world.
And here I am saying, well, you know, I want to go back to 1960s.
We had it right first, yet I'm doing this.
So go figure.
That's right.
Yeah, you know, it's kind of interesting.
I just saw an article about how they're, you know,
between Musk and Bezos and they got their different ideas about what they want to do with space exploration.
But they're also talking about the same kind of approach that Gerard K. O'Neill was talking about
in his book, High Frontiers at the end of the 1970s.
And they're talking about doing maglev launching of materials off the moons.
surface. So, yeah, there's a lot of things like that that are going to change things very, very
rapidly. And again, as we look at it, it's not just us going back and hanging on to the things
that are familiar. There is a lot of wisdom in terms of pulling back against some of these
technological things. Just because it's something new and just because it's some kind of a
gee whiz technology thing doesn't necessarily mean that you want to do that, you know? And I guess that's
one of things as engineers we look at and we always get caught up in a new way of doing things,
but sometimes there's wisdom in some of the older things if you are thinking about the
consequence of it. It's always great talking to you, GoTree. Thank you so much for coming on.
Oh, that's my pleasure, David, and I hope you're feeling better. Yeah, a little bit, a little bit better.
Thank you so much. And, you know, probably you need one of those helmets and knee pads that you're
talking about before too much longer.
Well, if we could ever get past this liquid,
if we could get past this liquid nitrogen problem,
you'll be the first on my list to get one.
Okay.
All right.
Thanks a lot.
Have a good day.
Thank you again for talking to us, GoTree.
Always great talking to you.
My pleasure.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
Well, that's it for our show today.
Just want to remind you, as I said, at the beginning of the program,
we've only got about a week left in the month,
and we're not quite at the halfway mark.
You know, we hear them both,
Deuteronomy as well as in the New Testament, the phrase I'm sure you've heard, don't muzzle the ox as he's treading out the grain.
Well, if I'm the ox, I guess what I'm trying to tread on and try to keep from being tread on us is the grain, the acronym of genetics, robotics, artificial intelligence, and nanotech.
We have to keep an eye out for what these people are trying to do to us.
And if you would like to help us sound the alarm, we really would appreciate your support if you find the show to be valuable.
Thank you. Have a good weekend.
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.
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