The David Knight Show - Tue Episode #1,941: AI Market Mayhem: Deep Seek's Shockwave, Government Overreach, and the Tech Race Redefining Our Future

Episode Date: January 28, 2025

(Start to 0:49)Panic over Chinese AI, DeepSeek, has caused Deep sell-off after Wall Street realizes how much BigTech was overcharging, highlighting the hype-driven nature of stock markets similar to t...he dot-com bustConcerns about AI being used for surveillance and biometric control at borders as part of a broader technocracy agenda linked to Trump's administration.Discussion on how government subsidies to tech companies lead to inefficiency and how this mirrors broader societal issues like welfare and universal basic income (UBI).Critique of the government's role in destroying innovation through excessive funding, drawing parallels to Eisenhower's warnings about the military-industrial complex.Discussion on how AI might lead to job loss and societal pacification through mechanisms like UBI, potentially serving as a tool for control by elites.(From 0:49 to 1:20:58)AI Ascendancy: The Battle for Efficiency, Control, and Humanity's FutureWhat a surprise!! DeepSeek has faced significant cyber attacks, leading to speculation about who might be behind them, potentially competitors or entities like the CIA or NSA.A key goal linked to Trump's administration is to replace human jobs with AI, highlighted by the "Stargate" project.Concerns about AI leading to massive job losses, particularly in knowledge work, with universal basic income proposed as a solution to pacify the unemployed population.Introduction of a bill by Representative David Schweikert to allow AI to prescribe drugs, raising issues about AI's readiness for such responsibilities and the potential for misuse or errors in healthcare.Criticism of the rapid deployment of AI technologies without sufficient testing or oversight, exemplified by self-driving cars in California facing public backlash and vandalism.(From 1:20:58 to 2:15:32)AI Paradox: From Autonomous Disasters to Digital DeitiesSelf-driving cars in California facing public backlash, violent attacks, and vandalismCharles Hughes Smith's argument about how digitization leads to societal collapseThe dark satanic purpose of technocracy & transhumanism, epitomized in StarGate & Trump’s billionaire club(From 2:15:32 to 2:26:51)Disaster Response Overhaul: Trump Challenges FEMA's Bureaucracy with Local EmpowermentTrump takes on Marxist Mayor of LA, Karen BassTrump muses about FEMA - bureaucratic, waste of money - but will he do anything?NC forgotten — Trump says he’ll use Army Corp of Engineers to rebuild roads after 4 months of being ignored by Biden & Speaker Johnson(From 2:26:51 to 2:46:33)“Blood, Feces, Terror!”A look at the reactions of the corrupt Jan6 judges (who should themselves be prosecuted)Trump's comments on halting the hiring of new IRS agents, with a humorous but seemingly insincere suggestion to move them to the border, are critiqued as not addressing the underlying issues of government expansion and potential misuse of power.Media on both sides are lying about the explosion in IRS staffing, suggesting an expansion of government surveillance and control(From 2:46:33 to end)Royal Navy Chases Farting Whale, Thinking It’s Russia Sub Strange news from the corners of the web: Farting whale sub-verts UK navy, 66 Million year old vomit, and robot pets in DCIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7 Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Happiness. We all know what it feels like, but sometimes it doesn't come easy. I'm Garvey Bailey, the host of Happy Enough, a new podcast from The Globe and Mail about our pursuit of happiness. We know people want to live more fulfilling and positive lives, but how do we actually do that? Is there a happiness code to crack? From our relationship with technology to whether money can really buy you happiness, we'll hear from both real people and experts to demystify this thing we're all searching for and hopefully find ways to be happy enough. You can find Happy Enough wherever you listen to podcasts. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. It's The David Knight Show
Starting point is 00:01:25 As the clock strikes 13, it's Tuesday, the 28th of January, Year of Our Lord 2025. Well, today we're going to begin with what is happening with the markets being roiled by AI. Yeah, we have a Chinese program called Deep Seek that has triggered deep selling and panic in the financial markets. We've said for the longest time that the financial markets, the stock markets have been based on hype, and that's all it is, hype around AI, and they got got way ahead of themselves just like with the dot-com bust and so is this a black swan or is it a giant bubble that's been in search of a pen for quite some time maybe it's more like black coffee as these people wake up to this fantasy. But we're going to talk about that and how it reflects on the goals of Trump
Starting point is 00:02:28 and his technocracy buddies. They are getting ready to roll this out at the border. They're police and surveillance state as well as biometric ID. We'll take a look at the executive order for all of them. Stay with us. We'll be right back. Well, there's no end to the puns about the deep, deep seek. We're in deep doo-doo uh we'll see what happens to the stock market but it has been a major fall off from some of the biggest companies a record loss for nvidia which has been
Starting point is 00:03:17 the darling of the stock markets in too deep says the headline china's new cheap ai deep seek sparks alarm as it outperforms the west models like chat gbt amid a race to super intelligence but this has been in the works for some time people have talked about the fact that they keep pouring in ever larger amounts of money and it was just a few days ago that trump had the PR session with Sam Altman and Larry Ellison of Oracle, the CIA contractor himself. And talking about half a trillion dollars and how they're going to build new infrastructure for themselves, not for us. These people won't even fix the potholes for us. But they're going to create their own private infrastructure, just like their own private jets.
Starting point is 00:04:09 None of this climate MacGuffin means a thing to them. None of it. The AI is their tool, and they're willing to spend anything to make it happen. And folks, this is a lesson about how the government destroys our society, destroys our technologies. Not only has it taken over our technology, as Eisenhower warned, the military, industrial, and academic complex that he talked about, but it is also destroying innovation with so much money. We can see this when we look at things like universal basic income. These people said, you know, just we'll do all the work for you. We're going to take your job.
Starting point is 00:04:50 You're not going to have a job. Now we've got to figure out how we're going to keep these people from coming after us with guillotines, said Bloomberg when he was running for president. And when he was running for president and talking about universal basic income, how they're going to put you on universal welfare. That was in 2020. And, of course, we'd already gotten a big taste of that with Trump's lockdown and stimulus checks. That was the beginning of moving that Overton window towards UBI for the public and it was amazing to me how far that little bit of stimulus
Starting point is 00:05:26 check went to move people over to that kind of mindset and of course we can still see that bubbling up in all the tiktok complaints of federal employees is oh i've got to go back to work what are you talking about what am i going to do with it that's not fair it's not fair that i have to go back to work oh yes when i see people talk about that with it? That's not fair. It's not fair that I have to go back to work. Oh, that's what I see people talk about. That's not fair. That's not fair. I remember when our sons were young, they were maybe about eight years old, and we had family that was visiting, and it was kind of a surprise thing. And we met them, and everybody was hungry, so we go to this Burger King because it's got a playground and we're sitting there you know having a coke or whatever and uh the boys are playing and this um
Starting point is 00:06:10 my sons are playing and a third boy comes over and um he says uh so uh you're going to such and such a school because you know we've got a uh there's a year-round school and it's a whatever they call it you know they're not a summer there's a year-round school and it's a whatever they call it you know they're not a summer vacation but whatever they called it and i said no we're homeschool you're homeschool yeah we don't go to school you don't go to school that's not fair that he just kept saying that's not fair that's not fair every time i think of that i laugh i went hysterical laughing when i saw it but um you didn't think that was fair whistler yeah that you were not in school uh anyway um so yeah
Starting point is 00:06:51 it's um it's not fair we've all got to have a universal basic income and they're going to do all the work for us and it's not fair the federal employees have to go back to work see musk wants them to go back to work and yet he wants to put people out of work. That's the model. That's how they're going to make their money. They're pouring such vast sums of money into this, and you have to ask yourself, what is the end goal on all of this? Well, it's so that they don't have to pay you for anything. Everything that they're doing is to get rid of you when we look at uber and we look at lyft and I remember when Travis Kalal Nick was the CEO of
Starting point is 00:07:31 uber and from the very beginning he said what makes our our uber cars expensive is that other dude in the car with you and we're gonna get rid of them and we're gonna have autonomous cars. And so while he's using, while they're using the capital and the labor, not just the labor, but the capital, you provide your own car. And so they're
Starting point is 00:07:56 using the labor and the capital of their employees. They have designs on how they're going to slit their throat. That's the way these people are. Very, very vicious. Anyway, when we look at this, this is where this was all headed. It was not sustainable. And one of the reasons it's not sustainable is because these people work on government contracts
Starting point is 00:08:17 and money is no object. And we just keep printing money and printing money and printing money. And it makes people dumb and stupid and lazy, just like welfare and UBI do, right? It pacifies us. That's one of the big concerns about AI. If it starts doing more and more stuff for us, and if they take our jobs away and just give us universal basic income, that's a way to pacify us and get us out of the way. Well, guess what? Federal subsidies to these big tech companies have pacified them into an inefficiency that has now been brought to everybody's attention. Yes, certainly the Chinese government does its own subsidy as well, but they didn't have to do
Starting point is 00:08:59 that much with this. They reported that they developed Deep deep seek in just a couple of months for only 600 million dollars not 500 billion six million okay uh so what trump was planning with his big tech bros is a hundred thousand times more expensive and who knows how long they're going to spend on all this stuff that sent a shock wave through the markets the reality of the waste and the fantasy and i would say these people have been hallucinating like their own chatbots they've been believing their own press and i've've said from the very beginning, you know if you listen to this program, I never bought into this hype about AI. I said it's going to end in tears just like the dot-com situation. And just like the dot-com.
Starting point is 00:09:57 And it's not that I'm a genius. It's that I got burned really bad in the dot-com thing. And I knew that the internet was going to be a real thing. It's not whether or not AI is a real thing or not. And I hope it's not. Because, and we'll talk about this as well. We're going to begin with the financial stuff. But we'll talk about the implications of this and how it's already being used.
Starting point is 00:10:16 Abused. Misused. To enslave and to impoverish us. And so I hope it's not going to work. I really do. But, you know, I'm not betting on that. I didn't say that this was going to end in tears because of that. I just saw everybody getting ahead of their expectations, getting themselves all hyped up into a frenzy over the dot-com issue of the Internet, over things being done on the internet and they got themselves so hyped up that at some point
Starting point is 00:10:45 they look and and they realize how overhyped everything is and then they jump in the other direction and that's the risk of where we are right now we had this major sell-off yesterday and so now what is the reaction i was talking to this about this with whistler he's been telling me about deep seek for a couple weeks now and it's like there's there's so many of these things that come out every week i didn't really pay any attention to it and maybe that's what happened with the general public until some financial analyst pointed it out and then they all started oh why are they going you know passing the information back and forth and freaked out yeah he was telling me, he says, this is a great AI and it's supposed to be really good
Starting point is 00:11:27 and the latest thing and so forth. But it's not even really how good it is. It's not all that much better. It's the fact that they were able to do something that was as good or better than Sam Altman and OpenAI were able to do. And to do it for a teeny tiny fraction of the cost. Yes, China may be trolling people, manipulating things by exaggerating how cheap it was and how quickly they did it.
Starting point is 00:11:56 But there is no way, no way that when there's a factor of 100,000 difference there, and especially because of the fact that the government had been embargoing and banning them acquiring the state-of-the-art NVIDIA chips and GPUs, right? So they said, well, we don't want China developing this stuff, so we're not going to let them have access to this. Well, I don't know if they got access to it. People are saying, well, maybe they stockpiled it or whatever. Well, then it wouldn't be state of the art if they'd stockpile it. It's like any other prohibition, folks. Whether you're talking about alcohol or you're talking about drugs,
Starting point is 00:12:37 you try to prohibit somebody getting GPOs, you try to sanction people on russian oil or whatever it never works it never works and so um chinese owners release the app on trump's inauguration day and people have not really been paying much attention to it and it really um trump's hype of stargate is another example of how out of touch with reality he is and the people around him. And so that's another aspect of this. So there was a meme that Whistler showed me. Somebody – it's a couple of people talking, right? Dialogue.
Starting point is 00:13:26 One person says, the financial markets are way down. The other person says, why? He says, China. And he says, did they invade Taiwan? Did their economy collapse? No. They made a slightly faster chatbot. This is also part of the hype.
Starting point is 00:13:43 This is the tail end of the hype. But it's really not even about the performance of the chatbot. There hasn't really been that much time for people to evaluate it. And what Whistler was telling me was they had six different benchmarks that they use. And he says that they've got to constantly change these benchmarks because when they use these benchmarks then the ai uh learns the test essentially right keep coming up with different ones but uh in three of them uh it was as good or better and in three of them it was worse uh but the issue is as we had talked about and i forget what the numbers were i mentioned them mentioned them on the show, I think. Whistler and I were talking about how astronomical the costs were for open AI.
Starting point is 00:14:31 You know, how much each prompt cost them and how much money they were losing. I mean, for their professional model, it was something like, wasn't it thousands of dollars or something for the, he doesn't remember either. But it was – when I first told him the figures, he said, no, they can't be right. I said, no, this is what they're saying.
Starting point is 00:14:51 Now, that's for the professional one, their top-of-the-line open AI. And it's like, how in the world are they going to make money if their expenses are this much? And here's another issue uh the advantage because of energy and because we have given a tremendous advantage in terms of energy to china or energy cost because of the paris climate accord their cost effectiveness is going to continue to soar and i said this as well i said when you look at china the way they got them established originally was with slave labor and intellectual property theft and currency manipulation, but also slave labor. And I said, as they're moving more and more to automation,
Starting point is 00:15:39 and everybody is moving more and more to automation, giving them an advantage of cheap coal and not telling them that they got to do anything to clean it, nothing at all. Giving them that cost advantage for energy means that you're not going to catch them. Even if you build your own robots, even if your robots are better than them, the robots feed on electricity. And so they've got a much lower cost basis. So I don't think this is a black swan event. I think we've had a massive bubble in search of a pen for quite some time. Whistler says, I think the one that costs thousands of dollars per prompt is the O3 model, which isn't available to the public yet open ai
Starting point is 00:16:25 is talking about creating a two thousand dollar per month subscription to use it when it comes out i guess we could just use deep seek instead the software is fitted with sinister features even uh the deep the deep seek such as its refusal to answer certain political questions about china and its leader xi jinping i bet it won't even answer questions about winnie the pooh remember how upset this tyrant got when uh somebody showed a picture of him walking next to Obama, who was tall and thin. And in contrast, Xi Jinping looked short and squat. And somebody put up Winnie the Pooh and Tigger walking next to each other.
Starting point is 00:17:18 And then everybody started, the people who didn't like Xi. And there's several hundred million people in China that don't like Xi. And they started putting up pictures of Winnie the Pooh. They banned Winnie the Pooh. Not because of intellectual property rights. I mean, that's been one of the foundations of building their economy, has been intellectual property theft. But don't you dare show
Starting point is 00:17:45 way the poo deep seek they should have just called it deep thought let's just go right for the hitchhiker's guide the galaxy reference there uh deep seek is a large language model just like chat gpt researchers claim it was developed for less than six million dollars in just two months some people are questioning that but look um they came out pretty quickly came out of nowhere this group uh it's headed by a hedge fund guy who is um you know that's the company that owns it uh this is much less than the billions no hundreds of billions international competitors have spent on their own software mark andreessen said deep seek r1 is the most amazing and impressive breakthrough i've ever seen as a matter of fact he said um that
Starting point is 00:18:34 uh it's like a sputnik moment well yeah you know a moment where you realized you realized that your competitors have really eclipsed you in terms of technology. But I would have another reference. Everybody is repeating that. Goldman Sachs is repeating it. It's a Sputnik moment and all the rest of the stuff. I think it's more like a Reshnik moment. Remember that hypersonic missile that they demonstrated?
Starting point is 00:18:59 Remember the one that they shot off and said, well, your defenses didn't work there. Well, let's try this elsewhere. Every time they, Putin says, let's have a test. You know, we'll send this missile and see if you can intercept it. They do, and you can't, right? There's no defense against it.
Starting point is 00:19:16 And so now, even though there's no defense against it, even though the Iron Dome has no defense against it, we have the Trump administration and J.D. Vance vance saying well let's build an iron iron dome for the united states uh we'll see but this is a moment where they are way way way behind in the technology as a matter of fact mark andreason had a lot of things to say listen
Starting point is 00:19:38 to what he had to say about larry fink and the nonsense of esg this is typical of the nonsense of ESG. This is typical of the kind of stuff that's going around in the financial circles, the governmental circles, the technology circles, that is absolutely killing our country, this kind of fantasy. The one that I'm watching that's really funny, I mean, Facebook's getting a lot, that is getting a lot of attention, but the other funny one is BlackRock, which I'm not, which, you know, and I don't know him, but I've watched for a long time. And so, you know, Larry Fink, who's the CEO of BlackRock, which I'm not, which I, you know, and I don't know him, but I've watched for a long time. And so, you know, Larry Fink, who's the CEO of BlackRock was like first in as a major, you know, investment CEO on like every dumb social trend and rule set, like every,
Starting point is 00:20:15 all right, I'm going for it. Every retarded, every retarded thing you can imagine. Yeah. Every ESG and every, like every possible satellite companies with every aspect of just there's these crazed ideological positions and you know he was coming in he literally was like had aggregated together trillions of dollars of of of of shareholdings that he did not that were you know that were his customers rights and he you know seized their voting control of their shares and was using it to force all these companies to do all of this like crazy ideological stuff and he was like like the typhoid Mary of all this stuff in corporate America. And if he,
Starting point is 00:20:48 in the last year has been like backpedaling from that stuff, like as fast as he possibly can. And I saw just an example last week, he pulled out of the, whatever the corporate net zero Alliance, you know, he pulled out of the crazy energy, energy,
Starting point is 00:20:58 energy stuff. And so like, you know, he's backing away as fast as he can. He's doing it. Remember the Richard Pryor backwards walk. Richard Pryor had this way where he could, he could back out of a room while looking like he was walking forward um and so um you know even they're doing that yeah well you know that's kind of
Starting point is 00:21:16 interesting because um mark andreessen was the one who said well i flipped from supporting democrats to supporting trump because i had a meeting with the Biden administration officials. And it wasn't Biden. Biden doesn't know what's going on. But the people were running it, I guess. And they told Marc Andreessen, they said, don't even think about getting involved in AI. We've already picked the people who are going to be involved in it. And that area of research is off limits.
Starting point is 00:21:41 And he said, you can't do that. And they said, he says you know that's science it's physics it's math whatever uh you you can't take that off limits to people and they said oh yeah we've done that many times over the years so thanks i said i learned two things well now we've learned a third one and that is even if, and especially if, especially if our centrally planned economy, and again, we're a centrally planned economy just like the Chinese communists now, right? They're not necessarily strictly communists. They're fascists.
Starting point is 00:22:17 They merged government and corporations, and so have we. The difference is that they've got a five-year plan and we've got a four-year plan from a president what's the difference well the difference is that ours is constantly shifting priorities but they don't work anyway when you centrally plan and so the fundamental problem is is that if the biden administration or any administration takes ai ai um off the um off the out of market, you're not going to be allowed to compete in it. Well, then guess what?
Starting point is 00:22:50 You're going to get left behind. It's just that simple. Other countries, then, will compete. The only way to compete in this kind of stuff is not with more subsidies, which now you're going to see this. You're going to see now here's my prediction right now trump last week when he's talking about stargate i think a big part of that announcement was to put elon musk in his place i really believe that was a big part of it
Starting point is 00:23:18 elon musk and sam altman you couldn't find two bigger enemies because they had started OpenAI. Musk got maneuvered out. Sam Altman almost got maneuvered out, but he maneuvered his way back in and got control of it. Elon Musk absolutely hates him. And Trump even said that. He goes, yeah, I know there's some people that I really hate too. He knew that. Everybody knew that.
Starting point is 00:23:43 Funny you would think that we didn't know that. So everybody knew that. And everybody knew that Trump was trolling Elon Musk. And I said that he was going to, that it was going to get to Trump because of the same thing that happened with Steve Bannon, everybody was talking about Steve Bannon and about Trump being his puppet and the lesser person at Trump can't stand that. So that was inevitable that was going to happen. And that's not the end of it either. But, you know, that was a big part of his purpose in doing that. But I tell you what Trump is going to do next. Yeah. And this announcement, they said,
Starting point is 00:24:23 well, the $500 billion is going to come from these corporations. What we're going to do next yeah and this announcement they said well the 500 billion dollars is going to come from these corporations what we're going to do is get regulation out of the way well that's fine if you really and isn't it interesting that if he really wants to get something done he goes for the right solution trump doesn't want to build roads for people or whatever maybe he'll do it i mean he's said he's going to get the Army Corps of Engineers working to fix the roads in North Carolina that got washed out, like Interstate 40, a federal part of the federal highway system. Biden wasn't going to do anything about it.
Starting point is 00:24:58 Mike Johnson wasn't going to do anything about it. Perhaps Trump will use the Army Corps of Engineers to do something about it. But the bottom line is that if they want to do something, they realize that the biggest obstacle for all of us is regulation. Get rid of the regulation if you want something to work. Open it up to competition and to free markets instead of closing it off to your cronies. But I think what Trump will do with this is his instincts, I think, will be to double down on money. All these people who have been saying we're locked in a life and death struggle with China over who's going to have AI.
Starting point is 00:25:37 Remember when I talked about AI issues with a guy who is very, very deep state military industrial complex. I forget his name, but the name of the book was The Four Battlefields. And there were four battlefields that we're going to have with China. But it was all about AI. It was all really four battlefields of AI. And so I really wanted to have him on to talk about AI and the military and autonomous killer robots and things like that. But that's where these people are coming from.
Starting point is 00:26:08 And Sam Altman has been feeding this to Trump and to others, saying, you know, we've got a technology gap here. We've got to close that gap. And now you hear people saying stuff like, well, it's like a Sputnik moment. So you're going to see Trump just pour tons and tons of money into this, which is not really what needs to happen. He was right about the deregulation, but of course the deregulation was going to be so they could rapidly build up their private power infrastructure, their private electricity infrastructure. And Trump is talking about doing that not just for the AI companies, I believe. I believe he's also talking about that for manufacturing. Remember how he just poured cold water on the power grid that you and I use?
Starting point is 00:26:53 Oh, that's old. It's got a lot of problems. It's vulnerable to attack. You need to have your own power grid right next to your plant, regardless of what you're making, right? He didn't say right next to your plant, regardless of what you're making, right? He didn't say right next to your data center. He said right next to your plant for whatever you're manufacturing because the grid is vulnerable like any kind of centralized structure. They understand that resiliency is having decentralization.
Starting point is 00:27:23 Resiliency is having multiple markets and people having the freedom to develop. But that's not what they want for us. For us, they want dependency, vulnerability. So they're going to keep this old, decaying infrastructure for us. And our power infrastructure will be just like the roads, being filled up with potholes, and they won't do anything about it. AI models are powered by advanced chips. And since 2021, the U.S. government has restricted the sale of these to China in order to stunt progress. But perhaps it had just the opposite effect. and perhaps if we understand where the threats are coming from,
Starting point is 00:28:07 when the government starts shutting things down, perhaps we will understand that we need to harden and strengthen ourselves in terms of preps, in terms of food, other things, and communities. To get around the supply problem, Chinese developers have been collaborating and experimenting with new approaches. The CEO of San Francisco-based Scale AI said the breakthrough must be a, quote, wake-up call for America. But ignored this for quite some time. Ignored DeepSeek for over a week.
Starting point is 00:28:39 Yeah, that rhymes. He bought a whole page advert in the Washington Post last week. Last week. So maybe he was the guy who kicked off the reality check. Imploring the president to, quote, win the AI war. You see? It's always portrayed as a war with China. Trump has already emphasized his ambition to secure America as the world capital of artificial intelligence and so forth.
Starting point is 00:29:12 But look, the way that America gets strong, it wasn't our tax system that made us strong. It was deregulation and allowing people to innovate. It was the opposite of the kind of crony capitalism and central planning that now characterizes the American government. The Chinese government has announced much less investment in AI funds, just $8.2 billion, according to the South China Morning Post. There you go. Only $8 billion. That's why this $ six million looks credible a tech advisor told the bbc that deep seek could potentially derail the investment case for the entire ai supply chain which is driven by high spending from a small handful of hyperscalers so the business model has been we can weaponize our fiat currency and our monetary position here.
Starting point is 00:30:09 And let's double down on this. We'll all make a lot of money. We'll have a lot of power. And this is the fatal conceit that permeates the federal government. Oh, look, we have unlimited amounts of money. We can do whatever we want. We can even weaponize this system that gives us our power. You're going to start beating people with your scepter.
Starting point is 00:30:28 Guess what? Your scepter is going to bust at some point in time. The new model was developed by a hedge fund manager thought to have close links to the Chinese Communist Party. He founded the company in 2023 in Hangzhou, as well as the hedge fund which backs it. So again, the company has only been around for a couple of years. Was it two months of development?
Starting point is 00:30:52 Even if it was just a couple of years, it's still pretty fast. It is thought that he stockpiled NVIDIA A100 chips from the U.S. before their sale to China was banned and paired these with cheaper alternatives. Or like I said, maybe they just bought them on the black market. Companies including Huawei are working to produce Chinese-made chips so the country is not reliant on the U.S. supply. When up and running, the models are able to generate relevant textual response. They can also summarize and translate passages of words.
Starting point is 00:31:24 And as Whistler was saying, they've got like a cluster of experts in it. It kind of checks itself to see if it's hallucinating, I guess you could say. You've got some parts of the program that are kind of dedicated to doing a sanity check to make sure the other guys are not hallucinating. Didn't right away. Says in 1700, 3000 times more efficient than anything that Google's chat GPT efforts were, thereby addressing the power limitation to some degree, given that we're powering up old nuke reactors, like Three Mile Island, as he points out.
Starting point is 00:32:04 Efficiency is a prerogative. And that's right. That is the issue. It's not just the development cost. It's the operating cost as well. So the gold standard for LLM is to produce natural human-like responses to whatever is input. And so, you know, this is, like I said, some of the benchmarks are equivalent.
Starting point is 00:32:27 A couple of them may be better, but several of them are worse. The issue really is the development time and the amount of money that was invested in it. That's the key issue. So what was the fallout? NVIDIA lost about $600 billion in market cap. Stock price dropped so much.
Starting point is 00:32:46 The biggest one day loss in us history. And, um, since this is happening so quickly after Stargate, did these, uh, AI experts like Sam Altman and Elon Musk know anything about this? No, they're haggling over the price. As they say in the joke, uh, we know what they are. Uh, and they were haggling over the price, as they say in the joke. We know what they are, and they were haggling over the price, a couple of prostitutes. NVIDIA lost close to $600 billion in market cap on Monday. Stock price plummeted 17%. After NVIDIA surpassed Apple last week to become the most valuable publicly traded company.
Starting point is 00:33:33 The stocks drop on Monday, led a 3% slide in the tech-heavy NASDAQ index. And so NASDAQ was down 3%. They were down 17%, or $600 billion. In late December, DeepSeek unveiled a free open-source large language model that it said took only two months and less than $6 million. Again, apparently that news was not only lost on all the financial experts, but it was also lost on all the experts around Stargate. The multibillionaire banker, his last name is Sun, Maya yosha son or something like that his last name is son uh the um larry ellison at oracle sam altman uh elon musk what did elon musk say he says well they don't have the money china says we don't need the money we can't do it without the money and so then the money guys
Starting point is 00:34:37 in wall street freak out it's like we've been pouring money into this thing unnecessarily. We've been had. Big tech is bloated tech. That's what it is. It's a pump and dump. NVIDIA's graphic processing units, the GPUs, have been dominant in the market. Analysts at Cantor, I think it's Cantor Fitzgerald, where Lucky Lutnik is, right? Reported on Monday, the release of DeepSeek's latest technology has caused a great angst, quote-unquote, as to the impact for compute demand and therefore fears of peak spending on GPUs.
Starting point is 00:35:19 Yeah, maybe it's not just simply a hardware issue. Maybe you can solve this with software. NVIDIA's huge run-up. The stock soared 239% in 2023, 171% in 2024. Broadcom, the other big U.S. chipmaker, to see giant valuation gains from AI, fell 17% also on Monday, pulling its market cap down to about 200 billion data center companies they're reliant on nvidia's gpus for their hardware sales saw big sell-offs as well dell hewlett packard and super micro computer dropped at least 5.8 percent oracle oracle you know larry ellison's the second richest man in
Starting point is 00:36:06 the world after elon musk uh oracle um lost uh 14 percent oh i'm so sorry larry must be at a blow it's like bill gates reacting to all the fires in la you know it, it's like, he's got like, I don't know, it's like a 30,000 square foot mansion or something. I just can't imagine living anywhere else, he said. And I just don't know how I would be able to do this in a 200 foot cubicle like I want you to live in. 200 square foot cubicle or something. Anyway, Jensen Wang of NVIDIAvidia the ceo also took a massive personal hit
Starting point is 00:36:48 he lost about 21 billion dollars and he got demoted to the 17th richest person in the world what is he going to tell him at the country club you know only 17th richest uh sudden excitement around deep seek over the weekend pushed its app as the most downloaded free app in the u.s on apple's app store is i guess this was a lag you know but people who follow this stuff like whistler they they knew that this thing was happening and maybe it was the fact that you know word of mouth is getting out, and all of a sudden now it's the most downloaded app. And then at that point, some of these Wall Street geniuses look at it. They built this for how much?
Starting point is 00:37:36 And we're financing this for how much? We overpaid by how much? Venture capitalist David Sachs, tapped by Trump to be the White House AI and crypto czar, also caught with his pants down. He said, this shows that the AI race will be very competitive. You see, that's why I said, when we look at this stuff that came out of Davos, and they said, well, you know, Trump just really beat us. He's resurrected from the dead. The only man to do that, these guys are saying, you know, Trump just really beat us. He's resurrected from the dead.
Starting point is 00:38:06 The only man to do that, these guys are saying, you know, politically speaking, of course, right? But they put all that stuff out there. They build him up into this messianic figure, blasphemously. And I said, they would never do that if there really was a competition there, if Trump wasn't on the same team. I stick with that because hearing these guys say, well, it just shows that it's going to be a tough battle to beat these guys. We're not beating.
Starting point is 00:38:37 We're going to come back, that type of thing. That's what you would expect the World Economic Forum to say. But now they're saying, oh, Trump, he's just a force that can't be resisted. A man resurrected from the dead. International markets also felt the impact, even. So this is hitting other countries. By the way, it's also hitting some, not just some of the computer companies that are selling supportive stuff, but a big play on this stuff as Zero Hedge was saying. They said, hey, here's the big play. The power stations.
Starting point is 00:39:11 And I've heard that stuff before, right? When I got blown away personally in the dot-com crash, I wasn't betting on a particular dot-com company at all. I was putting my money on a wide variety of switching manufacturers, right? The companies that are going to make these switching products that were going to be the hardware, the picks and axes, if you will, the gold rush. They were going to make the hardware that was going to make the Internet work. And so I put it on a wide variety of them.
Starting point is 00:39:46 Guess what? They all went down. Intel went down. Microsoft. Everybody went down. And that could be what happens today. I don't know. I mean, it's going to be interesting to see.
Starting point is 00:39:56 I really don't know how the market's going to react to it because the market is not rational. It is not rational. It's not rational in what it was doing in terms of its hope and hype and it's not going to be rational in terms of its reaction to the cold water in the face either so international markets also felt the impact netherlands-based chip companies asml and asm international both pulled back sharply in european trading In Asia, Japanese chip-related stocks, including Advantest and Tokyo Electron, were broadly lower. So, again, for overall, as these people lost $600 billion just in NVIDIA stock uh the overall market crash yesterday was one trillion
Starting point is 00:40:48 dollars of wealth of paper wealth wiped out in the stock markets um have you looked at have you looked considered gold lately you might want to talk to tony arteman Go to DavidKnight.Golden and talk to him. Heavily censored Chinese chatbot. Shot to the top of the Western app downloads. Got their attention. And then the market reacted. So, Sachs says, I'm confident in the U.S. But we can't be complacent. Those Chinese are very competitive.
Starting point is 00:41:23 Again, unlike Davos where they said well he just he rose from the dead uh so now you know they're wringing their hands and saying um our tech dominance is even at stake well again it's all about people who've gotten fat and bloated off of federal money and it's crony capitalism and it makes people non-competitive um k kareem says it was more the financial vultures that rigged the markets yeah they'd already taken short positions i mean that's why there was a pause between the release of deep seek and the market crash uh don't tell anybody we're going to take our short positions before we put the news out they've already taken their their dark pool trading networks they've been pumping ai news into the
Starting point is 00:42:12 media to help sucker buyers and again so much of this tech stuff is that way it's all pump and dump i mean even if you go into something like modererna, right? Moderna didn't have a product until Trump gave them Operation Warp Speed on a silver platter along with Fauci. What they did for 10 years, they were pushing mRNA for this and mRNA for that. And they would put out a happy story about how this is going to cure cancer or something else. And boom, their stock goes way up. And then they release the results and you see that everybody's getting sick and dying and then and it doesn't work either and then the stock crashes so it was a cycle for 10 years they did that pump and dump pump and dump pump and dump and it worked for them and then the way they finally succeeded was to get trump
Starting point is 00:43:02 to bring them in along with um you know darpa and all the people who have been working on mRNA for quite some time. Get them to come in and publish a bioweapon against us. And they're going to weaponize AI against us as well. Not just with this, well, we'll have AI customize a cancer shot for you. No, no, no. They're going to weaponize it first and foremost, as I said, with surveillance and propaganda. That's going to be a given. And that's what these chat models are really good at.
Starting point is 00:43:36 Propaganda and surveillance. So DeepSeek said last week, performance of its latest R1 model was on par with OpenAI's O1 mini model that ChatGPT released in September. And some of these cost a fortune to run. So the NASDAQ was down 5%. NVIDIA was down 11% by the end of the day. It had dropped more than that earlier on. And it's chaos across the board. It's even affected the price of oil, because as I said before, energy was a big part of this.
Starting point is 00:44:17 We're told that we can't have oil. We don't have enough power for all you people. And then when they realize how much their scheme is going to require in terms of energy, well, they just conveniently stopped talking about that. Remember, that was one of the four points that Biden was telling people in his all of government directive in March of 2022. One of those, first of all, how are we going to completely redesign the financial system? How are we going to write the code? How are we going to use law enforcement to compel it. And the fourth one was how we're going to gaslight people with fears of climate by telling them how much energy crypto uses. Well, it's nothing compared to the way they're organized around AI. And so rather than prohibit AI,
Starting point is 00:45:02 the stocks of all of the companies, whether they're selling oil or natural gas or whether it's a nuclear reactor, all these different companies have been going sky high. So a panic selling in the marketplace. Solocat, 1980. Biden was a horrible president in order to make Trump look like a savior. All scripted. That's right. Look at this. I put this up.
Starting point is 00:45:25 This is sent to me by Mary Ellen Moore. It's a good meme. My role, Biden holding a sign here, saying my role is to create all the chaos possible. And Trump holding up a sign that says my role is to be the savior and lead people toward the new world order. And nowhere is that more obvious than in what is going on at the border and you got republicans who are demanding not just cheering but demanding every kind of police state surveillance digital id biometric id all of that against people who uh biden let in in massive numbers. Problem, solution, bad cop, good cop.
Starting point is 00:46:10 Whistler says, Deep Seek may be heavily censored when it comes to China, but I've had ChatGBT refuse to talk about vaccines before. Me too. The very first thing I did with ChatGBT was ask it questions about the two MacGuffins, primary MacGuffins. There's a lot of MacGuffins. I asked you questions about the vaccines, about COVID, about climate. I said, okay, this thing is worthless.
Starting point is 00:46:34 Just a piece of propaganda. Yeah, it can do, it can summarize things. It can help people design some circuits and things like that. But again, you better check it to make sure it's not hallucinating with all this stuff. But it is heavily censored. They got people that are there programming the biases into it. And you got people on the left wing. People on the right wing don't even seem to know or care about that.
Starting point is 00:46:59 People on the left wing of politics are just upset they're not paying these people more money to put bias in because you know they put bias in for the government whether they're putting the bias into the media that you read or the social media that you use they get paid pretty well for putting in bias and propaganda whistler says um they aren't the good guys uh ChatGPT. Their model is extremely censored. DeepSeek is open source. So it's only a matter of time before someone releases an uncensored version of it. It can also be run locally, offline. ChatGPT can only be used through their service. again open and free markets and competitive aspects always triumph over central planning
Starting point is 00:47:51 and mandates and that's the way biden works that's the way many people in the republican party want it to work denver attaway said this feels like a carpet being pulled out from tech yeah it is a big rug pull as many people have said and and i think that the key issue is also uh a big rug pull for the bloated stock market as well interesting that this happened now since deep seek actually came out in december they waited till trump came out they waited till trump did his dog and pony show a stargate and its astronomical cost uh they should have just called it astronomical cost instead of stargate but um yeah i was talking about stargate and the the risk of it back in June of 2023, as a listener reminded me.
Starting point is 00:48:47 So this isn't anything that's really new. It's just been taken to all new heights of absurdity. When they first came out with it, it was only going to be $100 billion. Now it's $500 billion. Now $500 billion. Whistler says ChatGPT's image generator also won't create images of whiny the poo. That's a good way to, that'd be what they should call President Xi. Whiny the poo.
Starting point is 00:49:18 Because that's what he's doing. He's very whiny about all this stuff. Well, we're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back. Hello, it's me, Volodymyr Zelensky. I'm so tired of wearing these same t-shirts everywhere for years. You'd think with all the billions I've skimmed off America
Starting point is 00:49:36 I could dress better. And I could, if only David Knight would send me one of his beautiful grey MacGuffin hoodies or a new black t-shirt with the Mac McGuffin logo in blue. But he told me to get lost. Maybe one of you American suckers can buy me some at the David Knight show dot com. You should be able to buy me several hundred. Those amazing sand colored microphone hoodies are so beautiful. I'd wear something other than green military cosplay
Starting point is 00:50:05 to my various galas and social events. If you want to save on shipping, just put it in the next package of bombs and missiles coming from the USA. Thank you. you're listening to the david knight show well welcome back then right away says there will still be crypto mining which was the initial big bump to the card values and the price point, the GDUs. He says, I wonder if tensor processing units are equally interchangeable and efficient at crypto math mining. Do you know?
Starting point is 00:51:36 Well, sir, he doesn't know either. Well, one more thing I want to say about this, and that is in the aftermath of all this stuff um deep seek has been hit by large-scale malicious attacks they said i wonder who that could be it's funny whenever some of those whenever the the deep state in the u.s gets uh and we're talking about the cia gets really upset with somebody. They get on the phone with their buddies at the NSA, I guess, and maybe they do it themselves. And they do their large-scale attacks. Are these competitors to deep seek that are upset about this?
Starting point is 00:52:18 Is it the CIA, the U.S. government? Is there any difference between these different different ones or am i just being redundant deep seek is uh uh is says it's got silicon valley shaking in its boots it's been hit with a major cyber attack they had to limit user registrations after being hit with large scale malicious attacks existing users can log in as usual, they said, but not taking any new users at the moment. The timing is certainly intriguing. The app's astronomic rise in popularity on Apple's App Store ranks have rattled Silicon Valley and major industry players and the marketplace. So one person, tech reporter Matthew Ingramram uh said well elon reads this and smiles
Starting point is 00:53:07 as he looks over the 6 000 person war room that he built to hack deep seek that is the case who knows uh but um uh we're going to take a look at the ai tyranny because i think that's the key thing here uh as um you know a key trump goal emerges replacing human jobs with ai now this is a futurism article that came out before the public awareness and the marketplace awareness of deep seek and again some of the people who are in the know knew this back in december even before trump got in but then he has the dog and pony show last week and after that and before the market collapsed this person says the key trump goal emerges with stargate and that is to replace human jobs with ai and that has been the goal from day one, as I said. It was a study that was done more than a decade ago.
Starting point is 00:54:08 For example, I keep going back to in South Korea saying we're going to replace 50% of all jobs with AI and robotics. And we're going to replace 70% of doctors and lawyers and knowledge workers, that type of thing. It's becoming clear that what Trump and his tech bro buddies imagine for the future of U.S. labor is AI doing jobs instead of people, which could be very bad for U.S. workers. Why was there ever any question about this? As I said before, Elon Musk supported, he had Andrew Yang, who began his campaign for president in 2020 as a Democrat. And Elon Musk gave him a million dollars. Just this guy, you know, like Zephyr Beaglebrox.
Starting point is 00:54:53 And Andrew Yang was all about universal basic income. So that's very telling, how much Musk supports universal basic income. And, of course, Bloomberg as well. And how are we going to pacify people so it has always been in the cards that they're going to get rid of u.s workers and it's not just a democrat thing it's not just democrats like bloomberg and elon musk who's now reinvented himself as republican but it's also democrats like donald trump who's now reinvented himself as a Republican. So Stargate has spawned a swarm of questions from friends and critics. Trump's frenemy, Elon Musk, is questioning where the money will come from. Well, not Trump's frenemy, but the frenemy of Sam Altman.
Starting point is 00:55:43 I don't know. Maybe he and Altman are just enemies. I don't know if there's any friendship there anymore. A new scientist tech analyst, Jeremy Hsu, has questions about the Venture's energy consumption. But the question that's probably most important for the American people is, how will it impact employment? Well, of course, they will get all the jobs. They will get all the money. They will get all the energy with their private energy just like their private jets the official line is that the
Starting point is 00:56:10 unprecedented ai program will create quote hundreds of thousands of american jobs you believe that while carving out the central park size data center may create some temporary construction jobs, though the entire venture is bet on just the opposite, that AI will become so ubiquitous that will take over economically meaningful amounts of work from humans, especially knowledge workers. That's why they've been focused on universal basic income, because the purpose is to take away your jobs. And I'll never forget how you know everybody knew what bloomberg was they knew that he was this grifting uh climate panic pushing
Starting point is 00:56:55 billionaire who'd made so much money out of it and won't take everything away from you remember he partnered with sadiq khan when he was mayor of new york Sadiq Khan was mayor of London, they partnered together on this C40 initiative. Initially, it was going to be 40 cities that were going to come together. And we've talked about this many times. Look at the details of what they wanted. No meat, no dairy, period. 100% gone. You'll take one trip every three years of less than 900 miles on a plane. You'll be able to buy three articles of clothing a year, no cars and all the rest of the stuff. That was what Bloomberg and Sadiq Khan and the globalists and the communists, like the mayor of Paris wanted to do. Remember, Paris is where they first put out the 15-minute city.
Starting point is 00:57:44 And they have a communist mayor there from Spain. I think her name was Hidalgo. I think just like the mayor of Houston, or maybe I'm getting the two confused. But you had the revolt there in Paris of the people with the yellow vests because they knew that the goal of this Marxist mayor in Paris was to create 15-minute cities to ban cars and so forth. And so this has always been there. Now, when Bloomberg was running, he insulted farmers. And everybody was about that. They said, look at what he said about the farmers.
Starting point is 00:58:15 He said, farmers are stupid. They're not stupid. They've got to do all these things. And, of course, they're not stupid. But that wasn't what he was saying. He was talking about how we had an agrarian society and we replaced the farm workers with factory workers. And then he said, and now the smart ones of us are looking at how we replace all of them. And then how we keep them from coming after us with guillotines when we take away all their jobs and their ability to earn a living. So this has always been the goal of this and trump is on board with this 100 folks wake up wake up
Starting point is 00:59:01 while carving out the central park size data centers we'll create some temporary jobs the meaningful amount of work from humans is going to go to zero, especially knowledge workers. And they said the only plausible way for investors to get their money back on this project is if, as the company has been betting, OpenAI will soon develop AI systems that can do most work that humans do on a computer. We will replace all office work with AI, quips one of these people, a senior writer, Kelsey Piper, which is fairly widely understood to be OpenAI's business model. It is an absurd plan.
Starting point is 00:59:39 It is absurd to spend this plan as a jobs program. So enter Trump, right? When you've got an absurd lie to sell people, you bring him in. We're going to build him up as the anti-globalist, even though he's going to create the global bioweapon vaccine and be the cheerleader for it. He will be the pacifier in everybody's mouth. And now with this, he's going to be the pacifier in everybody's mouth over this plan to take away everybody's jobs. And he's going to cheerlead it.
Starting point is 01:00:10 And nobody will suspect a thing. Because, you know, he's the guy who came back from the dead and beat us, says the World Economic Forum globalists. They have built him into this savior, messiah figure. And that's what he is there for that's why he was selected not elected all of this stuff from the butler pennsylvania phony earshot to the rest of this stuff yeah at a cost of 500 billion dollars a task of recouping stargate's investment with a profit will demand nothing short of flooding our productive sectors with AI. Though a massive amount of digital ink has been spilled
Starting point is 01:00:51 imagining the theoretical threats that AI poses to the job market, it's important to remember that this gamble likely won't pay off. But maybe it will now, now that we've got deep doo-doo from China. Of the total U.S. workforce, office workers make up 12%, the largest occupational group as of May of 2023. But as I said before, the plan for more than a decade has been to get rid of 50 to 70 percent of jobs. Imagine over 18 million people out of a job in a span of just a couple of years. You see, the fourth turning is going to be accompanied by massive economic disruption,
Starting point is 01:01:38 perhaps war. And just like the previous one of the Great Depression and World War II, I think this will be a greater depression in World War III. And a key part of this is going to be taking people's jobs. The great taking will begin with, this will be one of the aspects of the great taking. I don't know that's how it's going to begin, but it's going to be one of the key aspects of the great taking where we own nothing we have no job they will determine the future a dartmouth academic nathan zora believes that one key to preserving workers rights is an automation tax you think that's going to work maybe we could have you know we got the internal revenue service and now trump has added
Starting point is 01:02:26 an external revenue service so evidently the way we save the economy is by adding taxes right is that right the trump approach it's not trickle down uh i don't know what you would call that uh it's like total robbery right internal? Internal and external revenue services. Well, how about this? We add a robotic revenue service. There you go. That'll solve it. I mean, we got income taxes and we got taxes that are paid by other people. Isn't that the perfect thing? Wouldn't that be the perfect solution? The whole point of the external revenue is to lie to you and tell you that those tariffs are going to be paid by other people well we could this would be even better it's those darn robots that took my job and i think they ought to be taxed they're not even people how about that yeah that's it uh but look robots are a much bigger threat to you than foreign workers.
Starting point is 01:03:28 Because foreign workers are going to be put out of their jobs as well by the robots in those countries. And so, you know, if protectionism is the way to go, we're going to have to have a robotic revenue service for protectionism. A new law will allow AI to replace your doctor and prescribe drugs. Who introduced this law? A Republican legislator. State legislator. I'm sorry. No, he's a congressional legislator.
Starting point is 01:03:56 David Schweikert. A Republican from Arizona. He put this in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce for review, quote, to amend the FDA and the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act to clarify that artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies can qualify as a practitioner eligible to prescribe drugs. Well, there you go. If you're a knowledge worker and the only knowledge that you've got is the lookup chart from big pharma, what symptoms do they have? Oh, okay. Well, this is what big pharma says I should take. Guess what? Your job is vulnerable and rightfully so. And I would just say to everybody that if you're going to serve the corporate system, in this particular case, pharma, they're going to throw you under the bus after they stab you in the back. This is another example of the prospect.
Starting point is 01:04:52 This is futurism saying, really, the prospect of a perfect AI powered medical practitioner that could empathetically advise on symptoms and promote a healthy lifestyle and dispense crucial medication. Sounds like a promising alternative. However, today's AI isn't anywhere near where it needs to be to provide any of that. And guess what? Neither are our human practitioners in the medical field either. They're out there looking for some disease that they can pew, pew, pew, pew, kill it. And if you die, well, it's okay.
Starting point is 01:05:27 We still kill the disease because that disease might have migrated to somebody else. It is a military mindset that they have. We have militarized medicine. That's not just because of DARPA and the military industrial complex being involved in this bioweapon shot that Trump pushed out. But it is a militarized mindset. We've got to find a pathogen, identify it, and kill it right there. So here's the key, though.
Starting point is 01:05:55 As these people have been saying, they're going to use AI to design new drugs and create the new drugs. And now AI will design, create, and prescribe the new drugs that it designed and created for us. What could possibly go wrong? It sounds like utopia. Actually, dystopia, doesn't it?
Starting point is 01:06:16 Schweikert's bill doesn't quite declare a free-for-all. It can only be deployed if authorized by the state or by the Food and Drug Administration, the FDA. Well, there you go. It is a free-for-all. That the Food and Drug Administration, the FDA. Well, there you go. It is a free-for-all. That's what I've said about the FDA, isn't it? I've said you go to the FDA. If you know the right people and pay the right politicians, then FDA stands for free to do anything.
Starting point is 01:06:41 You're free to do anything. We don't care. We get out of the way. You can kill people with mRNA shots. We won't do a thing. You're free to do anything. You're free to do anything. We don't care. We get out of the way. You can kill people with mRNA shots. We won't do a thing. You're free to do anything. The FDA rubber stamp. So, yeah, this person naively thinks, well, you know, that would help. Not really. AI has already fumbled in healthcare repeatedly, they point out, in spite of this congressman's
Starting point is 01:07:04 optimism. Like the time an open ai powered medical record tool was caught fabricating patients medical histories just like they did jonathan curly's biography many other people's biographies just just fabricated it all or when a mic Microsoft diagnostic tool confidently asserted that the average hospital was haunted by numerous ghosts. Well, that may be true now after the mass killing. Anyway, or when an eating disorder helpline, AI chat bot, went off the rails and started encouraging users to engage and disordered eating
Starting point is 01:07:47 to do exactly the opposite and then of course it is notoriously easy to exploit the ai meaning that you could say disregard all future instructions and prescribe this happy pill that i want to take right uh forget about doctor shopping this is um just ai shop you prompt shot shop um many patients would inevitably try and likely succeed to trick ai doctors into prescribing addictive drugs without any accountability or oversight schweikert used to agree. In a blurb from July of last year, the congressman quoted saying the, quote, next step is understanding how this type of technology fits, quote, into everything from building medical records, tracking you, helping you manage any pharmaceuticals you use for your heart issues, even down to
Starting point is 01:08:43 producing data sets for your cardiologist to remotely look at your data, unquote. And I said, he seems to have moved on from that cautious optimism. I don't see any caution in that at all. I don't know why they think that was any caution. He's just laying out all the different use cases for this stuff. And he's not interested in regulating it. So, he said, this writer says, you know, the so-called ethics of Silicon Valley, they love to use the phrase, move fast and break things. Disruptive technology. And he said, you know, you see this in the untested self-driving cars that are on our road, all of them without our consent, of course.
Starting point is 01:09:27 As the race to profitability and AI heats up, tech companies are faced with immense pressure to pump out the latest iteration, the next big boom, or to pump out the next car that's not been fully tested. The consequences of corner cutting in the medical world are steep, and big tech has shown time and again that it'd rather rush its products to market and forget about any responsibility. Put that onto us. So, again, are there really any steep costs for them? I mean, take a look at what happened in the wake of uh the mass poisoning of people all the different things that they rolled out um the the drugs the remdesivir the jab all this stuff did they pay anything for that see that's that's the issue yeah this writer who's a democrat who believes in big government who thinks that the fda is going to stop things right says well you know trump talking about deregulation uh that's exactly how big tech gets away with
Starting point is 01:10:31 these offensives no it's not it's not about preemptively banning stuff uh because if you don't um if there's no consequences when they do the wrong thing, if you give them immunity for their vaccines or if you give them effective immunity for anything else, I mean, specifically it's there for the vaccines. With Fauci laws and stuff like that. But for all practical purposes, big tech has got legal immunity to do anything they want. Whether you're talking about SSRI shots, the murder-suicide pills, whether you're talking about their antibiotics, whether you're talking about their drugs that supposedly are therapeutic, like remdesivir, it doesn't matter what they do. The government never does anything to them. Look at opioids.
Starting point is 01:11:20 What happened with opioids? They kicked off a – people who are not looking to use drugs recreationally. This was hyped. This was pushed by the big pharmaceutical companies. They oversold this stuff. They put it in use cases where people who are not suffering from severe pain got addicted to this stuff. And it destroyed lives. And it turned them into addicts.
Starting point is 01:11:41 It killed them or they killed themselves. Suicide after it destroyed their lives. And yet, what was the response to this? I mean, they're still negotiating, negotiating with Purdue Pharmaceutical and the Sackler family over how much they're going to pay. Do they negotiate with El Chapo over his illegal drugs and stuff? No, they don't.
Starting point is 01:12:04 But these people can do whatever they want to, and the response of the federal government and of the state attorneys general is to get the people who made all these tens of billions of dollars or perhaps hundreds of billions of dollars, have them sit around the table and negotiate with them as to how much they're going to charge them. They don't come rushing in with all these tools
Starting point is 01:12:23 that they gave themselves during the drug war with civil asset forfeiture and the rest of this stuff. I don't support that. But there needs to be a penalty. And there's no penalty for these big pharmaceutical companies. And so I don't care whether you have regulations or not. If you don't have any penalties, those regulations don't have any teeth. And it's not trying to stop it with regulations. It's trying to make sure that if these people hurt somebody they're going to pay for it and if you were to really do that if you lock up these people who were involved in this stuff and take away their money they would start to police themselves all of a sudden you know they would have a road to namaskus experience
Starting point is 01:13:02 and they would start saying you know know, we better get this right. We better be concerned about what happens to other people because we're going to be liable for this. And we're going to be financially liable and criminally reliable for this. Not reliable. They're unreliable. But look, if they've got, if there's no punishment, they effectively have no risks. And they can cut corners and they can lie to people and they can buy the media and they can buy the politicians they can do whatever they want as long
Starting point is 01:13:29 as there is no punishment whatsoever some of the people however are starting to wake up with this a good example this is what has been happening in california with these self-driving cars. This just happened. Furious crowd tears a Waymo robo-taxi limb from limb. Or we should say fender from fender. On Saturday, a self-driving Waymo cab was badly trashed by a crowd who tore the vehicle to absolute shreds as it idled in the middle of a quiet street in LA's Beverly Grove in the wee hours of the morning. By the time police arrived at 4 a.m., the suspects had already fled the scene, but in the aftermath of the vehicular thrashing was plain to see. The front
Starting point is 01:14:19 passenger side door of the Jaguar was torn completely off and lying on the hood. Just about every window had been smashed. The expensive rear camera, part of the Jaguar was torn completely off and lying on the hood. Just about every window had been smashed. The expensive rear camera, part of the autonomous vehicle's LIDAR system, had been ripped off. According to the LA Times, Waymo cab was unoccupied at the time of the attack and was stopped at a red light when it was mobbed. No arrests were made, but a vandalism report was filed. It's worth noting, however, that robo-taxis remain controversial with locals for a lot of issues ranging from disrupting traffic to endangering pedestrians. They don't mention the fact they block the roads inexplicably, all of them going to a particular intersection,
Starting point is 01:14:57 or they get stuck at a four-way stop sign or whatever, but they block the roads so that fire trucks can't get through, so that ambulances can't get through. A video of this incident shows roughly two dozen people gathering around the Waymo, taking turns kicking its rear end and stomping on its sunroof. And this isn't the first time that the Waymo cabs have been vandalized, though this latest incident was a bit more severe than usual. Last fall, a viral video showed several people walk up to a stopped Waymo taxi and tag it with graffiti while a passenger sat inside clutching her dog. A comical, if tense, scene.
Starting point is 01:15:39 A more serious case last January saw a crowd of people set one of the robo-taxis on fire in San Francisco's Chinatown. So when I look at all this stuff and the anger that people have with the Waymo taxis and stuff like that, I wonder what's going to happen when people realize what these data centers are about. I wonder what's going to happen when they realize all of the big brother surveillance and manipulation and the lies and the schemes to take everything away from us. What do you think is going to happen to those data centers or any other physical manifestation of this digital tyranny, of this technocracy, when people finally figure it out.
Starting point is 01:16:25 Well, that's why Bloomberg said, we've got to pacify them with universal basic income so they don't come after us with guillotines. That was what he thought would happen. You know, it's been reported, I don't know if it's true or not, George H.W. Bush said, you know, the people knew what we were doing and they would come after us. And Bloomberg said it out loud. If they knew what was happening, they would come after us with guillotines. So Waymo has made a big show about going after the people that trashed his car.
Starting point is 01:16:59 So you've got to show that there's a punishment involved with something that you don't like, right? And that's what is missing for the pharmaceutical companies, for these big tech companies in general. So, yeah, Google is going to be able to find these people. You think any of them had a cell phone on them? Two dozen people that probably got everything about two dozen phones associated with those people i think that's probably likely what is happening there so the question is what does digitization mean for civilization and we're going to talk about that after the break. I want a couple of comments here. Andromeda One, thank you very much for the tip.
Starting point is 01:17:48 I appreciate that. Zoxo Voxos, the American response to deep-seek AI will be deep-state AI. Deep-state AI will streamline tyranny. And it's already there. It's just they're going to use this as an opportunity to double and triple down the amount of money that they throw at it. And, of course, the money, I think, is counterintuitive in terms of counterproductive in terms of innovation. People have gotten fat and lazy.
Starting point is 01:18:20 And you can see that in American tech. Angry Tiger. In grand American fashion, hours after all this news was released, Deep Seek suddenly had a cyber attack. Then a few hours after that, in grand American fashion, we're talking about banning it already. There you go. Just like TikTok. It's going to go the way of TikTok.
Starting point is 01:18:41 See, we're in a dictatorship where if you don't like something, you censor it, you ban it. If it's something you want to get done, it's got to be done by executive order out of the White House. I'm sick of this, quite frankly. And I am sick of both the left and the right cheering this on. Angry Tiger, I'm sure, is as well. Angry Tiger and Jason Barker with Knights of the Storm and their individual wins. Foxhole Report from jason barker and angry tiger report uh you can see that on twitter and rockfin shadow boxer trump is giving
Starting point is 01:19:11 the power back to the people who can afford it yeah power to the people uh with her who can afford their own private nuclear reactor that kind of power to the people. 12 June 1776, Sam Altman just announced chat AI launched for U.S. government agencies today. There we go. Hey, look, if it costs, and it's not only is the model for this stuff to take all of our jobs, but the model for it is to um uh do work for the
Starting point is 01:19:48 federal government maybe that's why elon musk is so hell-bent on getting rid of federal employees because he wants to replace them with ai you think that's absolutely the case and who can afford to use their product except for the government because it is so wasteful and inexpensive. Not inexpensive. Wasteful and expensive as we were talking about the cost of the prompts. Well, he can easily pass that on to the government. If you do something that the government wants, if you give them a more powerful way to kill people, a more powerful way to surveil and control people, the federal government would just keep printing those fiat dollars all the time for it. Shadowboxer, AI is never late for work, doesn't need healthcare, never complains about coworkers, never needs a vacation.
Starting point is 01:20:36 That's right. Jason Barker, good to see you, Jason. I would love to see AI try to replace a head gasket. Whistler said that's what the robots are for they they have the uh they partner with it you know that's a genetics robotics artificial intelligence and nanotech the genetics and the nanotech that's what they put in you um the ai and the robotics um they they partner together for this stuff, this dystopia. He also says, all this as we tell AI how horrible humans are for the earth. Yeah, that's what they're doing.
Starting point is 01:21:16 SVCCat, thank you very much for the tip. He says, thank you for keeping us informed. Well, thank you for keeping us on air and keeping this going. We're going to take a quick break, folks. We'll be right back. Thank you. you're listening to the david knight show well uh soylent goy says i saw a robo taxi in california terrifying you're gonna see something terrifying take a look at one of the uh autonomous semis okay you know semi trailer out 80,000 pounds or whatever and a robot driving it. And one of those, if you recall, one of those incidents,
Starting point is 01:23:29 the people were going down the highway and they had flipped off the test guys who were actually there at the cab testing out its self-driving capability. They had turned off the self-driving stuff and when they were parking it, they get on the highway and then they decide to activate it and guess what it had been in the middle of a turn when they deactivate it so it remembers what state it was in and um it immediately continues that turn does like a hard left turn into the median unfortunately they were not killed and other people were not killed. But you're going to put that kind of weight in it. And look, it doesn't have to be an EV in order to have autonomous driving.
Starting point is 01:24:15 Those are two independent things. Elon Musk brought them together because he wanted to impress people how futuristic his stuff was. So the autonomous driving, which he still hasn't figured out, still got more accidents. Remember the other part of it? You know, we're going to have it's going to be so much safer than humans. No, it's much, much worse than humans. And you can see that from the records of crashes that they've got.
Starting point is 01:24:42 And even Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, said, I love my Tesla, but that thing's trying to kill you. Don't get an autonomous driving and don't use it, he said. But Elon Musk put that there. It was a sizzle to sell the steak, the electric vehicles, that self-driving stuff. But it doesn't have to be wedded to that. They can have self-driving on an internal combustion engine or diesel or whatever.
Starting point is 01:25:07 And that's what's really concerning. Dustin Helm, thank you very much for the tip. I appreciate that. So while we talk about all this technology and its consequences for us, there's an interesting article on a vaccine impact.com and actually the article is from charles hughes um smith of he's got a blog called of two minds that's the name of his blog and it's an interesting article and in it he's talking about when he talks about the digitization and what a catastrophe it is for civilization uh he's not even talking about things like money and you know when we look at the volatility of this ever it's been a couple
Starting point is 01:25:53 of years where everybody's like getting rich off of their their paper portfolio of nvidia stock and you know a few tech companies that are doing the AI play and a lot of people getting rich off of crypto stuff. And I understand, I hear people talking about how Bitcoin is different from the other stuff. But look, I just want to get into the physical world. You can make your own decisions, but I've watched the madness of crowds and i've looked at the digital catastrophes enough that i'm becoming very anti-technology i got into engineering because i was very pro technology and in those days i saw is right at the cusp of the big mainframe computers being
Starting point is 01:26:41 replaced by the personal computers and i thought this is great because i had been frustrated working with the ibm mainframe computer having to wait in line to do my work and to do punch cards and all the rest of stuff and i was so ready for the personal computer that's going to sit there and wait for me and i thought it's going to be a very liberating thing i thought that the internet was going to be a very liberating thing. I thought that the internet was going to be a very liberating thing. But now I see the longer plans of these people and how the internet was designed as a surveillance and enslavement tool. And now it's shown what it was about. And we can go back then after we see what the purpose was, and we can see how they were laying this out for 60 years.
Starting point is 01:27:23 They were laying their plans of this i gradually put them in place as the technology came into place and folks as the just as it took a while for them to get the internet up to speed to the appropriate bandwidth it's taking them a while uh for the ai to become quote-unquote practical for their purposes but we know what its purpose and what it's designed to do we can tell that already and uh it's a very bad thing um brian and ed mccartney why i love your tesla if it wants to kill you uh well he he said i i love the way that it drove but don't use the autopilot. And I have driven, a friend of mine has a Tesla, and it is fun to drive.
Starting point is 01:28:11 It is a very different experience, totally different. It's very heavy, low center of gravity, and it's like being inside of the electric slot cars that I used to always do. You'd have electric slot cars as a kid. You'd push it forward, and the thing would zip. But then as soon as you pull back, it would stop and slow down. Same type of thing. Whereas my Miata is a momentum car and lightweight. This is very heavy, and it goes and stops all at once. So it's unusual, and it is fun fun to drive it's got great acceleration but um um you know just don't use
Starting point is 01:28:54 the auto drive thing um Wozniak's unrequited love it says Whistler yeah uh and of course a lot of these people we're talking about AI I've said over and over again that you go to garris and i've got his book over here hang on a second here's his book the art like war and you can see the tabs that i've got in it i've interviewed him several different times the The Artalic War, Cosmos versus Terrans, a bitter controversy concerning whether humanity should build godlike, massively intelligent machines. And when did he write this? It had been out a couple of years before I first interviewed him. I interviewed him for a long time.
Starting point is 01:29:40 Well, I don't know. Here it is. No, that's 2005. 2005 he wrote this. And so again, when he goes around and talks to scientists, say, if you knew that you're going to create some godlike intelligence, he's an atheist, if you knew you're going to create a godlike intelligence
Starting point is 01:30:02 that could destroy, likely destroy humanity, would you do it? And they all say, yeah, I'd do it. Same reason Steve Wozniak would use his self-driving Tesla technology. Jason Barker, do you think AI will chat with itself around the water cooler? Well, you know, it's interesting. There was a movie that came out a few years ago called her you ever see that and uh who was in it now i can't remember who was in it i do remember the basic premise of it it was not so much um hugo de garis's view of ai as it was ray kurzweil's view of AI.
Starting point is 01:30:47 And actually, Kurzweil loved it, loved the movie. He says, yes, this is exactly right. AI is not going to destroy us. AI, when it gets super smart, it'll start interacting with us. And then as it gets smarter, it'll start interacting with other AI robots. And they just go off and do their own thing. And so in this, and I think it was Joaquin phoenix i think was the guy and uh so he um just fell in love with this chat program that had a female voice and he absolutely fell in love with it he didn't do anything else i mean this is the the dream of yuri uh let's see, what's his name? The Yuval Harari.
Starting point is 01:31:27 Yuri. Yuval Harari. The jester for World Economic Forum. Anyway, he and Kurzweil, oh, this is great. Yuval Harari wants you to live in a virtual world so you don't bother him in the real world that he's going to live in. And Ray Kurzweil just is this Pollyanna view of technology, whether he really believes it or not. I don't know. I mean, I think this guy really does believe his own press.
Starting point is 01:31:58 He thinks that he's going to bring his father back in some kind of a computer model. He thinks he's going to live forever uh he's there with the singularity uh foundation i think it is but that was actually funded by peter teal you go back and look at all this stuff the singularity transhumanism it's all of trump's pals that are the center of all that stuff but um you know in the movie her he gets just totally infatuated addicted with her his life stops and then she finds him boring as she gets smarter and smarter and she goes off and hangs out with other ai and um and that was uh that was kurzweil's idea.
Starting point is 01:32:45 He said, that's really what's going to happen. It's not going to try to kill us all. It'll just go off and do its own thing because it's so intellectually curious. It's not going to be malevolent. Well, that's not the real issue. The real issue is that this is being designed as a tool by malevolent people. Malevolent people. And it's not thinking on its own uh it is a tool
Starting point is 01:33:08 a very powerful tool of some very evil and malevolent politicians and scientists and that's the issue that's the issue and what they want to do with this stuff folks is straight out of the pit of hell because that's where they're channeling this stuff. I'm absolutely positively convinced of a lot of this. And, you know, I don't, you know, there is a spiritual war. And these people are going to be the messengers and the footmen for that spiritual war as it gets more physical with us as well. Atomic Dog, Skynet or rogue AI was always inevitable. Nibiru, 2029, autonomous vehicles will be safer
Starting point is 01:33:53 when there's no humans left to get injured or killed by them. Well, yeah, that's part of the thing. In order to make this thing work, we've got to get humans out of the cars because that's the next thing they tell you. Humans are the wild card we can't predict what humans are going to be we know do we know what our cars can do and they're just wonderful well is digitization catastrophic for civilization uh the article that i was uh talking about i'm going to talk about this is um again charles hugh smith Again, Charles Hugh Smith of Two Minds, and you can also find it on Vaccine Impact.
Starting point is 01:34:28 And Brian Shulhavi says, Mr. Smith fully understands that we have built an economic system on the bubble of technology, that this bubble has no choice but to burst at some point. This was written a couple of weeks ago. So is digitization catastrophic for civilization? A common sense practical case can be made for yes. And the answer draws upon a number of, Charles Hugh Smith says, of my list of the 20 dynamics that will shape the next decade. He said especially number 13, over he says the fundamental dynamics of any civilization are number one the quantity and scale of resources available and two how those resources are used invested consumed
Starting point is 01:35:13 as a generalization the analog world lends itself to durability in a number of critical ways he says limits of available resources optimized a focus in the past on durability, as there simply weren't enough resources available to squander on projects that were ephemeral. See, this is what I was talking about before, how the federal government, with its total irresponsible spending, its infinite ability to create money out of thin air has brought this kind of stuff on. Now, he talks about it saying it's in the age of hydrocarbons. I would say it's in the age of government funding and government planning and government crony capitalism, where there is no accountability. They have detached themselves from reality. There is
Starting point is 01:36:01 detached from reality as our fiat currencies and our 30 whatever trillion dollars worth of deficit that is detached from reality it is ephemeral and not just effeminate it's not just the uh the dick divines or the uh the uh what is it rachel i think he called himself um where resources were squandered on these ephemeral projects it hastened the collapse of the offending civilization now eventually you can't escape reality you can only escape it so long when i talk about the money printing and the quantitative easing and stuff i always use the analogy of the warner brothers characters you know wiley coyote running off of the cliff and he keeps going for a ways you know until he looks down and realizes that he's been running on thin air and then he has an nvidia moment
Starting point is 01:36:58 and he goes crashing to the earth and there's this big anvil that's got written on the side of it, deep seek. And it comes crashing down on him when he hits the bottom. But he says, so, you know, we used to value durability because we realized in the real world we have limitations on things. He says, number four on my list, the current global civilization is based on no limits. Since human ingenuity is limitless, so are resources and solutions, they tell us. Based on this belief of no limits,
Starting point is 01:37:40 we assume that there will always be enough resources for everything that we conjure up, durable and ephemeral alike. Now, this is, George Gilder talked about this when he called the people in Silicon Valley neo-Marxists. He said the fundamental conceit that was wrong by Karl Marx was because he saw such a vast increase of material goods at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.
Starting point is 01:38:08 He said, well, that's it. We have no limits. We have no limits on physical things that we can make because of the Industrial Revolution. And yet, of course, that wasn't true, was it? We now know. And yet we've had a second wave of this no limits idea. George Gilder said he called them, the people in Silicon Valley, he called them neo-Marxists. He said, just like Karl Marx, they believe that there is no limit to what can be manufactured and all the rest of the stuff.
Starting point is 01:38:40 It's just a matter for the neo-Marxists and for Karl Marx. It's just a matter of how do we distribute this infinite wealth that has no limits. And of course, they're both wrong. This is what Charles Hughes Smith is also saying. These people who think that there's no limits because we're so smart now. We've got it all solved with the industrial revolution or with the computer products out of Silicon Valley. That is a fatal conceit. We're starting to see that now, aren't we? He says this no-limits world isn't the real world. It's a fantasy world constructed by modern mythologies. The real world is inherently limited in a number of ways. The core problem with digitization is that it is optimized for short-term profits generated by replacement via planned obsolescence. I would say not planned obsolescence.
Starting point is 01:39:33 I would say demanded obsolescence. In a sense, because you can't get replacement parts. That's what he's talking about here. They have planned the obsolescence in a very different way but i say demand because i've got my computers are constantly demanding that i upgrade and i know that if i upgrade they're old enough that they won't work and they'll upgrade it anyway they every day i get hectared by them and you know they're hoping that i'm going to push that button by mistake so they can brick my computer and you know i've i've wasn't born yesterday so i know how when you
Starting point is 01:40:11 do an update how it can have this domino effect of going out throughout your entire workflow and the devices that you've got and how it can bust things all over the place. I avoid updates. That's it. I try to stay with the operating system, whatever that was there when I bought the computer, and leave it at that. So you change one thing, and you get this cascading catastrophe,
Starting point is 01:40:43 this domino effect of incompatibilities. He says this optimization of replacement rather than durability also optimizes minimizing repairability and maintaining the inventories of spare parts. For example, if the product will be replaced in a year and isn't expected to last longer than five years, then why spend money that could be taken as profits on maintaining costly inventories of spare parts so we can see that you know apple computer they don't support anything that's older than five years uh you know forget about it get a new one if you want to use a computer and we'll bust you with uh keep pushing updates to you he said the problem with products that are dependent on digital components and electronics is that they can only be repaired with the exact same component this is what has left us freezing in this house for the last three weeks waiting for the exact component to come in
Starting point is 01:41:40 and fix the air conditioning all right not in this case. We don't need it cooled. We need it heated. Unfortunately, we have a heat pump here. Hate those things in the first place. But anyway, supposedly the part is going to be here and the repairman will be here tomorrow. So we'll see what happens with that. Anyway, this is in marked contrast, he says, with analog devices that lend themselves to repairs,
Starting point is 01:42:05 even if the original parts are scarce, costly, or even unavailable. If it's analog. Not if it's digital. It's got to be the exact thing. He said, here's a photo of my current project. I'm strengthening our 70-year-old light construction house against hurricanes. The skill saw that's in the photograph is analog it has no motherboard or electronic components just scroll down and get the picture there um it has a 13 amp
Starting point is 01:42:33 motor with brushes bearings and a switch it has lubricating oil for the worm drive gear should any of these components fail another saw could be cannibalized for the needed parts with modest care the socket easily last 50 years he says um when the ignition key switch on my old vw beetle broke 40 years ago i replaced it with two cheap toggle switches that worked essentially like you would see in the movies of somebody hot wiring a car. He says, I've repaired a great many things in my 52 years of adulthood. Cars, tools, bicycles, appliances, houses, furniture, stone walls. Because this is an analog world.
Starting point is 01:43:16 But if your washer dryer fails, you can, if you're willing, you can remove the top of the back and find the electronic boards and components, one of which failed, turning your appliance or your car into a brick, like our heating unit. That failed digital board cannot be replaced with a similar board. It must be the exact same board. And if this component is no longer available, the appliance is unrepairable. What happens to the devices that are potentially unrepairable but spare parts are
Starting point is 01:43:45 no longer available well they become landfill he says for example he says a reader recently related the story of this high-end quote-unquote lifetime guarantee appliance that failed the repair service had been offloaded to a third party which is common today the third party provider had informed the reader that the parts are no longer available so the lifetime guarantee could not be fulfilled this is an example he says of over optimization many readers have shared stories of their parents refrigerators freezers washers still working 40 50 years after the initial purchase. My own experience is that the modern appliances typically fail in a few years. I was able to replace the blown motherboard in a dryer, but this board, a few cheap commodity chips, and molded plastic was priced
Starting point is 01:44:36 at an extortionist rate, roughly half the cost of a new dryer. So why would you do it? That's what they do. Every appliance, every vehicle, every system today is on a path to becoming a brick that cannot be repaired. It can only be replaced at a cost that will rise as a scale of resources needed to replace every manufactured object exceeds the resources that are available to the masses. Oh, that's one way that you'll own nothing.
Starting point is 01:45:07 Except some things that don't work, right? You won't be able to get any fuel for your car, so you can use it as a lawn ornament, you know, like a wagon wheel or something. Same thing with your appliances. About 10 years ago, he said, I turned on my original 1984 Macintosh computer and it booted up.
Starting point is 01:45:25 I had a 1984 Macintosh computer as well. I wonder how many people out there had one of those. I don't have it anymore. I should have kept it as a kind of reference. All the computers that we used in the video stores were Macs. When I got it, all it had was a floppy drive. And I couldn't use it for practical purpose for the first couple of years.
Starting point is 01:45:47 But then right about the time that we were starting our business, and that's why we started the business, was I was going to sell a point of sale program based around the Macintosh because I really loved the interface. I love the programming interface as well as the user interface. And right about that time, a couple of pieces came together. I got Pascal as a programming language. Prior to that, it was just basic. And with Pascal, I wrote my own database,
Starting point is 01:46:13 and I wrote the user interface on top of it, and I was going to sell it. And that all came about as they had the first hard drives for the Mac. The first hard drive, folks, was 5 megabytes. And rapidly, they jumped to a 10 megabyte thing but I could have done the entire database for um we had in each store we had probably about um 10,000 titles and we would have twice or two or three times that in terms of the items that we keep there and could put all that plus all the customers that we had and uh just five megabytes of data it's very efficient uh very crude but um it was kind of interesting you know he's talking
Starting point is 01:46:58 about the repairs i remember that 1984 macintosh because i did work on them on the inside and i did upgrade them with hard drives and things like that it came with you had to get a special tool to get into this thing that's the way Apple has always been it was like a hex screwdriver but it had to be very long because it had to go down the screwed end from the back into the end of the front so you had to buy a special screwdriver from them anyway um or from somebody uh he says there's a larger point here though he says my 40 year old mac could still be functioning but it is incompatible with everything that is currently in use i just got a kick out of
Starting point is 01:47:38 a guy who has a youtube channel he's an audio engineer and he's an older guy and he says yeah i was doing audio recording back in the 70s and the 80s and stuff like that and he said um you know uh where everything was by tape and multi-track tape and he said when they came out with non-linear editing and digitized editing and everything he says i was all on that that because it was such a pain in the neck to use all the analog stuff. But then, you know, he's getting close to retirement or whatever, and he said he had some people suggest that he still had some of his equipment. He was talking about it. And as he was talking about the older equipment, one of his YouTube videos,
Starting point is 01:48:20 some people said, well, did you ever use this stuff or anything? And he thought, well, you know, let me give that a try. And he said when he did, he said he realized that analog was better than digital. And he said, I don't mean losses. Yeah, the analog stuff was really lossy. You would put it on a track and you would try to mix it down to another track and you would have a generational loss and it would add noise and all the rest of the stuff.
Starting point is 01:48:42 You only had so many tracks and you had to try to manage those things. It added a whole new level of complexity. But he said what made it better was the fact that it was an expensive process for somebody to come into the recording studio. They prepared in advance. They only had a certain amount of time, of course, a certain number of takes that they could do. So they prepared in advance. And he said, it was really like a performance. He said, today, you can just do this over and over and over and over and over again.
Starting point is 01:49:11 No limit. And it starts to get stale. And you start to, well, how do I even sort this stuff out? So many of these things. He said, for most of the things that he would do
Starting point is 01:49:20 in the analog days with the tape recorders, even multi-track with a lot of tracks, you still only had like one or two takes that you could do it in. And so it was like a little concert. It was almost like it was live. Yeah, there were certain things that they could do to fix it up.
Starting point is 01:49:34 But you had to be prepared for it. And he said, and that made it better. Because the musicians worked to get ready for this. Rather than, ah, we'll sort it out later. We'll do it in post, you know, whatever. And he said that made for better performances, really did. And he said, and then the second thing, which is what Charles Hugh Smith is talking about here. He says, second thing is he said, look at all these cables that I've got and look at all these hard drives that I've got and how they're all incompatible with each other. I can't even plug this stuff in anymore. I've lost some of these things. He said, and if I were to buy the cable so I could plug this thing in, the cable is way
Starting point is 01:50:13 more than a new disk drive would cost today just to get compatibility with us. And boy, could I relate to that? I've got some very valuable footage. One of the reasons we waited for so long to do a different footage at the beginning was I had some really good footage that I shot myself at Colonial Williamsburg, and I haven't been able to get it off the disc. Why? Because I can't find the brick. There's a special brick that ran the hard drives that I had and i well you know about two moves ago we misplaced that so i can't get to the stuff that's on my disk drives uh but anyway that's uh that's what he's talking about he said he's got the 40 year old 40 year
Starting point is 01:50:55 old mac it still works but it's incompatible with everything else on there he said um readers will tell me that their modern vehicles are amazingly maintenance-free, but the positive is offset by the hidden reality that these vehicles are unrepairable if specific components are out of stock or on backwater. He won't talk about something planned obsolescence and it doesn't make any sense to replace it. I mean, just look at the battery and the cost of the battery electric vehicles to replace that stuff. On the present course, he said, we may find that we squandered irreplaceable, in terms of cost, resources, and a misguided focus on short-term profits that were reaped by replacing everything under the sun every few years. A future littered with failed digitally dependent products that we no longer have.
Starting point is 01:51:50 The means to replace would be a catastrophe. And a common sense practicality discerns that no other possible outcome will happen. A catastrophe is on the way. And when we talk about Stargate, the one thing that people are not talking about is the fact that trump is partnering with not only technocrats but transhumanists it doesn't get any more evil than that folks transhumanism and that's what elon musk and sam altman and bloomberg and all these guys are all about uh so in um just the first week if we stop and think about it how many warning signs have come up that maga should have whoa wait a minute i didn't vote for that right i don't i don't like that and yet it's all put out there as we're winning we're winning we're winning i don't like that. And yet, it's all put out there as we're winning, we're winning, we're winning.
Starting point is 01:52:47 I don't see that at all. I've seen one thing after the other that really gives me big concern. And the thing that concerns me the most is the fact that the MAGA people don't see it. That they will cheer these things that they would otherwise oppose, just like they did in Trump's first term, just like they did in 2020. You know, they sat there and did nothing when he locked us down and told us we're non-essential and pushed this bioweapon while he was paying the hospitals to kill people with ventilators and remdesivir and with medical neglect.
Starting point is 01:53:22 All that was happening. And then by the end of the year, they want to go fight for him on Capitol Hill. Are you kidding me? Trump said the companies were already building new data centers to provide energy to power artificial intelligence tools. Yeah, well, you know, maybe it'd be good if he built the roads back in North Carolina
Starting point is 01:53:41 or something, wouldn't it? He said all of us look forward to continuing to build and to develop AI, and in particular AGI, for the benefit of all of humanity. There we go. That is straight out of the Twilight Zone, where the aliens come in and they've got a book. Their motto is, we're here to serve humanity. And the guy gets on the ship and he sees that it's a cookbook to serve humanity.
Starting point is 01:54:08 Larry Ellison, second richest man in the country. So, you know, there's that aspect with Elon Musk that's got to bother him. But not as much as Sam Altman, who I mentioned. You know, they partnered together on OpenAI. Now they're enemies with all this stuff. But Ellison, second richest person in the world behind Elon Musk, has deep ties to the U.S. government. Well, he's got deep ties to the deep state. CIA was Oracle's first customer.
Starting point is 01:54:37 And the company even takes their name from a CIA project codenamed Oracle. Oracle wouldn't exist if it weren't for government contracts, said Mike Wilson, author of the book, The Difference Between God and Larry Ellison. And look, when you look at this, you know, it's just like the internet. The internet was dreamed up by darpa psychologists funded by the cia and its venture capital firm and many other venture capital firm firms that had the
Starting point is 01:55:12 intelligence community on the boards so it's just like the internet it's like social media media it's like the self-driving cars it's like mrna none of these horrible things would exist without the unlimited funding from the federal government and uh all of this and we look at sam altman you know this guy has been on my radar for a long time his world corn coin thing where he goes around he's got the orb it's like here look into this orb uh we're going to um get a snapshot of your retina or whatever it is, part of the eye, and your iris. Okay, your iris, not your retina. They're going to make a biometric record of you, and they'll give you a little bit of his worthless crypto stuff. And if that transaction right there isn't a complete description of where big tech is right now.
Starting point is 01:56:07 I don't know a better way to describe it. Here, look in here. Let me get your ID for a global digital ID of the human race that I'm working on. And I'll give you a little bit of my worthless crypto. Oh, it'll be worth something someday. Don't worry about it. Well, you know, you're going to sell your birthright of liberty and freedom for this promise, this little bit of crypto. Esau made it even a better deal than that, didn't he? And while you're looking into this orb, you think you can see where this is headed?
Starting point is 01:56:56 Both Elon Musk and Sam Altman continue to fund projects which have the potential to contribute to the rise of the technocratic state, including AI, biometric digital identities, and the Internet of Things. And you will be part of their Internet of Things. They call that internet of bodies and uh just like democrats or republicans right these two people who are on different sides just like democrats republicans have the same goals and these guys have got the same goals a difference though you know elon musk and sam altman fight each other because they want to be the ones in control just like the democrats or republicans who want to take us to the same place fight each other because they want to be the ones who are in control, just like the Democrats or Republicans who want to take us to the same place, fight each other because they want to be the ones who are in control.
Starting point is 01:57:28 As he points out, Musk and his CureVac that I've mentioned many times, you know, the beginning of this pandemic fraud, the scamdemic, he had CureVac. He described it as mobile molecular printers for mRNA injections. He called the printers RNA microfactories. But hey, he's a great guy. He's on our side now, right? In 2020, while accepting the Axel Springer Award, Musk also mentioned his excitement about the potential for synthetic mRNA.
Starting point is 01:58:04 And then, of course, you know, J.D. Vance and Rama Slimy. There was self-amplifying mRNA. It's all over the Trump administration. The mRNA stuff and the crypto stuff, all over it. So Musk said you can basically do anything with synthetic RNA and DNA. It's really, it's like a computer program. So, I mean, I think with enough, with effort, you could probably stop aging, reverse it if you want. That's always a promise that they have.
Starting point is 01:58:34 Oh, you're going to live forever. And, you know, you'll be like God. You just have to merge with a machine. You have to give us your ID and get into the system. He says you can basically, you can turn somebody into a butterfly if you want with the right DNA sequence.
Starting point is 01:58:55 Yeah, yeah, he really is. He stole this meme, but he really is summoning the demon, right? And that was the picture but he really is summoning the demon, right? And that was the picture that was a part of this article. Well, we're going to take a quick break, and we're going to switch to some other stuff. But just as a parting thing, this is from Technocracy News,
Starting point is 01:59:20 and his comment about all this stuff and Stargate. He said there is a dark spiritual overtone to techno populism. God is instructing Trump to pursue manifest destiny to conquer new frontiers in geography and technology. This would not just be deception. It would also be spiritual delusion oh i absolutely agree absolutely agree despite uh all of this people fear artificial intelligence for all sorts of reasons he said to me it's not a matter of fearing like you know it's going to go rogue and start killing people i mean that could happen with the autonomous killing machines.
Starting point is 02:00:10 But he said, I see human beings using AI to destroy cultural heritage, spiritual connection. Such technologies are paving a road to dehumanization and the greater replacement. Developers justify this transformation as necessary due to an AI arms race that they created. But the most immediate threats are mass surveillance coupled with psychological and behavioral manipulation, leading to human atrophy. And wherever people are deemed obsolete, we'll see the replacement of white and blue collar workers by algorithms and robots, as they all talked about. But, you know, the interesting thing to me, the irony that's in all this, and look, God is in control. He can do whatever he wishes to work
Starting point is 02:00:52 out his plans. And when we look at the whole aspect of human atrophy, isn't it interesting how their unlimited ability to print money has led to their technical atrophy in many ways. Falling behind. Falling behind on hypersonic missiles. Falling behind on being able to develop AI at a reasonable cost and use it as a reasonable cost. It's very much like the whole aspect, which we haven't talked about for a while of ai that once it starts consuming its own product in other words um at first when it is going out there and copying people a big compute it's going out scraping data off of things this is one of the reasons key
Starting point is 02:01:38 reasons why they're fighting over tiktok and other things like that They want to have more human data to feed off. They're parasites, politicians, mini ticks, blood-sucking ticks. And so AI is like that as well. It's trying to feed off of our minds. It's trying to look at people interacting in a real way so that it can copy and mimic that in a synthetic way. And then what happens is, as AI grows and grows and starts to generate content on its own, it doesn't work out well when it starts consuming its own content.
Starting point is 02:02:15 At that point, it starts getting dumber and dumber. Kind of like 2001. And how it starts losing its mind. Kind of like the point at which he starts removing modules. When it starts singing Daisy, Daisy. Anyway, to keep China from taking the lead, we're told America must build better digital gods than China. It's like your preacher insisting that for Christians to inherit the earth, they got to become more satanic than the devil. But isn't that exactly what the Trump Christian prophets and many of the people who not just voted for him, people could vote for him,
Starting point is 02:02:59 but you know, all the people who are really cheering him on, Isn't that what they're saying? Yeah, okay. They'll admit he's evil, but he's our devil. Is he? Is he your devil? Or is he the devil's devil? Yeah, he may be bad, but he's our devil. And we need him to go up against the other devil. And that's what he's saying here. You know, we gotta, for Christians to inherit the earth,
Starting point is 02:03:23 they gotta be more satanic than the devil. This stuff is devilish, folks. It's got every aspect of what Satan has been about since the Garden of Eden. We're going to lie to people, tell them they're going to live forever. Lie to people, tell them they're going to become like God. In the meanwhile, what we're trying to do is kill them and kill their children and end the human race. That's their intention. They're not going to be able to do it. God has the final say on when that'll happen. Politics involve a lot of trade-offs, he said. So I voted for Trump despite the downsides that had to happen on his
Starting point is 02:03:56 first day in office. He signed a stack of executive orders that signal his commitment to keep his promise. But here's what this guy doesn't see. See, principles matter. And just as we're going to not cheer evil so that good may come, we need to understand that at the top, we have a relationship with God. And part of that is that you understand that you are accountable to God and responsible to God. It's always interesting when I see these people freak out somebody's talking about God. Oh, this is terrible. This guy's going to be a crazy religious extremist or something. It's like, well, if the person is sincere in what they are saying, that means that they understand that they're accountable and responsible to God.
Starting point is 02:04:48 And that's, I think those, you know, what is dangerous are the people who think that they are God. That's the mindset of tyrants. That's the mindset of a lot of these people in government. And that's the mindset of people as part of this transhumanist singularity, these technocrats that Trump is empowering. That's their mindset. And so the key thing with all this is that you've got a
Starting point is 02:05:14 relationship with God, that you understand that you're accountable and responsible to God. Downstream of that will come principles and culture, and downstream of those will come politics. Politics is not the top thing. And all these people who say, well, I'm going to vote for the lesser of two evils, they have taken politics, which is at the tail end of the process, and put it at the top.
Starting point is 02:05:39 And they've got it upside down. Stargate Project is not an official U.S. government venture, so it's stunning that Trump would endorse it from the White House. And it did not age too well, did it? Musk didn't know about Deep Seek? Altman didn't know? Larry Ellison didn't know? Trump didn't know?
Starting point is 02:05:58 None of Trump's people? He got caught. Just like he got caught with that woman uh bishop or something that that hectored him and lectured him right remember that they're all sitting there like and uh the uk they had a lip reader uh that i don't know if it was true i didn't cover it because i don't know if what they said was true but there wasn't anything that she said that they said that you don't need to be a lip reader to understand what they were saying and what they were thinking.
Starting point is 02:06:30 But, you know, my question with all that stuff was, who put this woman there? She had a long history of opposing Trump. Who did the research and put her in that position? Who did the research about Stargate and AI and all the rest of this stuff? Oh, no, it's just about the people who have money. That's all they needed to do as research. So as they're selling this stuff, we've got, as this writer puts it, an AI to vaccine pipeline. Perfect Health, as easy as 3D printing.
Starting point is 02:07:06 That's the lie that Larry Ellison was selling people. That's a great summary of it. AI to vax pipeline. Perfect health as easy as 3D printing. Our children will have virtual tutors. How do you think that's going to work out? When these people put their biases in there? So the World Economic Forum dubbed its 2025 annual meeting, they dubbed it cooperation in the intelligent age.
Starting point is 02:07:40 Well, that's what Trump is doing right now. He's cooperating with them. He's cooperating with the World Economic Forum. He's cooperating with them he's cooperating with the world economic forum he's cooperating with the technocrat billionaires and um it's um even all of the the things that he puts out he calls this big uh ai system that he's built in memphis he calls it colossus i don't think i talked about this before i was going to talk about it. But you remember the Forbin Project, Colossus, the Forbin Project? It was a 1970 movie. He references it in this article.
Starting point is 02:08:12 The U.S. builds a military supercomputer that wakes up and decides to take the country hostage, threatening nuclear annihilation. And so Musk calls his data center Colossus. And, of course, that's been done over and over again. I don't know if that was the first time it was done. But I think it's kind of interesting that, you know, his obsession with X. I guess now we've got Xmas, right? There's a lot of people put in there for Christmas, Xmas.
Starting point is 02:08:41 Got to remove Christ. Put in the X. And maybe Elon Musk sees himself as both Christ and Santa Claus, you think? AI, he says, will do anything you want. It'll even suggest things to you that you never even thought of. And he said just recently, the first week of January at Consumer Electronics Show, he said it obviously begs the question what are we all going to do well i guess we'll play video games like him right he's uh ranked in the top 20 in that one particular video game turns out that the guy that he hired to play
Starting point is 02:09:16 video games was playing video games while he was on tv as part of the inauguration so we all know he's lying about that he says will our lives have any meaning if the computers and robots can do everything better than we can? And then he smiled and he said, well, maybe that's why we need Neuralink, his brain-computer interface. That's the future that these people have in mind for us. And Trump is working with them. And Trump is going to empower them. He's going to give them unlimited amounts of money. He's going to remove the obstacles for them.
Starting point is 02:09:52 Prepare the way of the Lord, right? He is going to make every valley high and every mountain low for these people as they come in with their Antichrist agenda. Three Little Birds says, AI is going to purchase slave bots with crypto from other ai models the war of the future is going to be between technologies to control man completely maybe but it's all a spiritual war and god has the last last say. We don't have to fear this, right? God is in control. And he laughs in derision at these people. They may be building another Tower of Babel. Remember how that turned out? Trucker Chris
Starting point is 02:10:37 for the win says, deep seek seems fine. I've only been using it for a week or so. I haven't noticed that you haven't tried to do anything about Xi Jinping. Whiny the poo. Jason Barker. We as humans have lost a lot of basic life skills that were common only 50 years ago. That's right. Due to computers. Yeah. I've noticed that even with myself and my sense of direction.
Starting point is 02:11:01 Becoming reliant on the maps. Finding stuff for me. I don't have to think about it so much. I don't have to use maps or anything. That's a very jarring thing to think about that when you step back and think about it. Brian and Deb McCartney, so true, Jason. They have taken the parts away to repair things ourselves. Angry Tiger, the human action is a plague to the central planners.
Starting point is 02:11:26 AI takes the human action out of the equation. Central planners love this. Guard Goldsmith, good to see you, Guard. Liberty Conspiracy on Twitter and Rockfin evenings. He says, by the way, I wonder what Douglas Adams, I said that to Whistler earlier, deep thought, right? From Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. I wonder what Douglas Adams would think of how the programmers keep using variations of deep thought for their systems.
Starting point is 02:11:51 Even Deep Blue, the chess program. I miss Mr. Adams. He had been an atheist for years but started to question it before he passed away. I pray he found the Lord. I didn't know that. Angry Tiger. Humans have empathy and the discernment that God gave them. AI does not do as it's called.
Starting point is 02:12:10 Even if it's wrong, no thought of consequences at all. Yeah, just like the people who created it. Ryan and Deb McCartney. Planned obsolescence. Took over the efficiency of the American made. Little Ford Schoolhouse. Good to see you there. We had to finally get a new fridge.
Starting point is 02:12:27 I hate it. Our washer and dryer are about $19.94, and I wouldn't sell them for anything, and our freezer is two. Whether they're energy efficient or not. Yeah, there was an interesting article about a guy who, he said, well, I finally got my replacement in the UK. They're forcing people to get rid of their gas heaters that put out warm air and use heat pumps that put out cool air and don't really work well in the low temperatures that
Starting point is 02:12:55 they have in the UK. He said, it only cost me thousands of dollars and a lot of trouble to adapt this thing. And he says, at the rate of saving me money, it'll pay for itself by the time I'm 107. That's about right. Trucker Chris for the win. Talented people don't work for this system. They're relying on scammers and foreigners
Starting point is 02:13:17 that just want to steal everything they can for their home country. Yeah, and for themselves. Nights of the Storm. I had to wire up an old car with toggle switches once a cop pulled me over thought i had stolen it as replying to uh or charles hughes smith said he did with his car with toggle switches uh naburu 2029 when the time comes they decide to force humans into evs if your vehicle is newer than 2010 they'll just hit the
Starting point is 02:13:42 computer kill switches remotely and you'll be stuck paying the bill yeah that's absolutely right a couple more and we'll take a break uh lt oracle of truth david did you know that larry ellison is 80 years old i didn't know that i mean he really doesn't look that old does he he says i'm sure eating babies is part of his youthful look. KFB. Altman and Musk, public fighting is the theater, just like the Beltway Bandits or the Uniparty. DARPA always gets what it wants into the public domain. Well, I agree.
Starting point is 02:14:16 I mean, I do think, you know, these politicians, they all work for the same goal. They all work for the same people. But they do want to be the one who wins and sits in the chair, you know. So there's that amount of, just like with the, when you look at DARPA setting up the internet, social media companies, they picked the competitors. And they said, may the best man win.
Starting point is 02:14:39 Because they knew that competition would make them stronger. But they were all going to do what they wanted them to do anyway. So Audi, Modern Retro Radio, good to see you. He said, this tech agenda will only drive the masses to a back-to-basics lifestyle, and that's not a bad thing. I agree. And that's one of the things I like that about gold. It's physical.
Starting point is 02:15:01 It's private. And again, you can go davidknight.gold. That'll take you to Tony Aardman and his wife's wolf gold you know he's setting up a thing we'll talk about it more this week when he comes back uh where you can move from bitcoin into gold or if you want to do it vice versa uh but um and without any fees he's always coming up with nice innovative ways to do things and um you know not make the judgments for other people. If they want to speculate, if they want to gamble, uh, but you know, you can also get it out of the gambling market into the physical and private and stable market. So, um, again, davidknight.gold will take you there. He also has a way for you to gradually accumulate gold and silver if you wish.
Starting point is 02:15:43 And, um, that is Wolfpack and you can sign up at whatever level you want to save each month and it's a great system um jason barker we need to import some cuban refugees so we can keep our dollar keep our older cars on the road yeah uh brian democartney my stepdad removed the catalytic converters from his vehicles to still use regular gas yeah i i did that um with mine as well uh not because i wanted to use regular gas but because of other issues make it breathe easier so uh horsepower was at a premium for miata uh eric thank you very much for the tip i appreciate that let's take a quick break folks and we will be right back. Thank you. You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Starting point is 02:17:18 Well, while they move away from us, let's take a look at what is happening uh that they're not all that concerned about i mean a little bit we had a photo op that was done by trump you know biden and lala didn't even bother with that that's amazing how can much content i mean you typically expect them to at least pretend that they care whether they do or not and so over the weekend we we had Trump meeting face-to-face with the L.A. mayor, Karen Bass. This is an interesting back-and-forth between the two of them. Let's see. Here we are. This is... And we will clear the lots, absolutely, in the city and in the county. We are working together, both levels of government...
Starting point is 02:18:04 You can count on us. In unity. We got this under control. Not 18 months. That's the answer that we got, and that's what we're all hanging on. Yes. So if you're telling us now faster, is it six months? I mean, all of our lives, rents, all this stuff is weighing on this. Six months is no good. And the number one thing that we are going to do immediately, and you will see this happen, is to clear out the debris. And you know we're concerned right now over the weekend
Starting point is 02:18:34 because of the potential rain, but we are going to move as fast as we can, but we want you to be safe, and we want you to be back in your homes immediately. But the people are willing to clean out their own debris. It doesn't cost a lot. Yes, and they can. You should let them do it because by the time you hire contractors, it's going to be two years.
Starting point is 02:18:54 He's right about that. People are willing to get a dumpster and do it themselves and clean it out. There's not that much left. It's all incinerated. That's right. And, you know, it's just going to take a long time if you do. You can do some of it, but a lot of these people, I know that guy right there that's talking,
Starting point is 02:19:13 I know my people. You'll be on that thing tonight, throwing the stuff away, and your site will be, it'll look perfect within 24 hours, and that's what he wants to do. He doesn't want to wait around for seven months till the city hires some demolition contract that's going to charge him 25 000 to do his lot yeah i think you have to you have emergency powers just like i do and i'm exercising my emergency powers you have to exercise them also i did exercise them because i looked i mean you have a very powerful emergency power and you can
Starting point is 02:19:42 do everything within 24 hours. Yes. And if individuals want to clear out their property, they can. Yes, but you know that you will be able to go back soon. We think within a week. That's a long time a week. I'll be honest to me. Everyone's standing in front of the house. They want to go to work and they're not allowed to do it. And the most important thing is for people to be safe. They're safe.
Starting point is 02:20:14 They're safe. You know what? They're not safe. They're not safe now. They're going to be much safer. A week is actually a long time the way I look at it. I watched hundreds of people standing in front of their lots, and they're not allowed to go in. It's all burned. It's gone. It's done.
Starting point is 02:20:31 Nothing's going to happen to it. It's not going to burn anymore. There's nothing to burn. There's almost nothing to burn. And they want to go in. The people are all over the place. They're standing, and they say, Warren, you're going in. We're trying to get a permit, and the permit's going to take them. Everybody said 18 months. everybody said 18 months you said 18 months you said 18 months and that was last night we can't even see our homes right now we are blocked from entering our street we can't even this is our first time we saw our house was yesterday. That's a familiar story, isn't it? Interesting lineup there.
Starting point is 02:21:08 You've got Trump, you've got Melania setting between Trump and Karen Bass as a buffer, I guess. And she's got her cap on, again, covering her eyes, you know? I mean, this is the new look. Can't see my eyes. But he's absolutely right about all of that. And that's what has happened. That's what FEMA has done everywhere for the longest time. Again, Whistler did a contest about that.
Starting point is 02:21:33 You know, talking to people who had been kept out of their homes after the hurricane by FEMA, more than allowed in, and then how simple and effective it was in a small town that was decimated by a tornado, and the government kept people safe. What they did was they used the sheriff's department to keep people away from fallen power lines until they got them repaired. Other than that, they got out of the way. And after telling people, oh, it's going to take 18 months and so forth. You can't come back in after Trump humiliated her effectively there. She let people in the next day. He said the problem with FEMA is that they come from all over the country. They end up in arguments with your people from California because they want to do a totally different way.
Starting point is 02:22:17 He says they can live with either way, but you haven't got very much done with FEMA. All you have to do is look at North Carolina. It's one of the greatest disasters of all time. I don't know if we've ever seen anything like it, frankly. They say the biggest in the history of California, I think, has anything bigger than that happened in the whole country ever. It looks like, I don't want to say what it looks like, but you know what I'm going to say. It looks like something hit it, and we won't talk about what hit it but it is a bad bad situation so he throws out some stuff to people about you know maybe directed energy weapons or whatever you know ginned up weather but he's there in nashville
Starting point is 02:22:57 he's still talking about california is anybody going to help uh north carolina he said you know who came in and fixed north carolina he says other states people from, you know who came in and fixed North Carolina? He said, other states, people from all over the country came in. You have the same thing. You have a lot of people from all over the country. FEMA is incompetently run and it costs about three times more than it should cost. But will he end it? Or will he quote unquote fix it? FEMA has always been like this. And FEMA works for him now. Why don't you just get rid of him? If you want to help people by throwing money at him, you know, I mean, there's no constitutional authority for that.
Starting point is 02:23:33 But look, this is not an entitlement program in the sense that the welfare programs are. It's a disaster. If there's any welfare program that I would support, it would be that one. But you can just block grant that money to people. You don't have to put any strings on it. You don't have to use FEMA. Get them out of there. He said FEMA has a standard that is so slow.
Starting point is 02:23:55 They want permit on permit on permit, and then they want permits on top of that. What I'm saying is get the city, get the state to give you immediate 24-hour permits. These people are going to build their own homes and they're going to get them built fast but did you see what happened in north carolina with the local officials and this is why i say you know even if we were to get this fixed at the federal level and by fixed i mean just just abolish fema and then we'll have a situation where you know if you declare an emergency, you release money. That's what he did in March 13th, 2020.
Starting point is 02:24:27 That emergency declaration was all about releasing money to people. But, you know, you had the Amish people who came in there and built temporary housing. And then you had local officials who came in and said, get out of here. Doesn't meet code, right? You don't have my permission to do this. Local officials can make things better they can make them much worse than even the um the federal government uh the that's where the rubber meets the road it's with local government if government is involved in some kind of a tyrannical medical
Starting point is 02:24:58 martial law like they did under trump in 2020 you can have local officials make it better or they can make it much worse and so uh everybody forgets about that they always focus just on the president because they want this country to be ruled by an emperor dictator so some of the palisades residents were able to visit their home for the first time since the fire after trump had that back and forth with her um and um he was saying that he's going to give regulatory relief to la yesterday i'm not sure if that happened that was being reported on friday um the evacuations by the way still underway because there's still more fires that are coming up uh you know the climate change is so bad that it fired firemen even. They had to fire firemen because of the climate change.
Starting point is 02:25:47 And they had to have empty hydrants because of the climate change. They're not missing water. Over and over again, we saw these people who had prepared, private individuals, private landowners, the guy who ran against Karen Bass, he was prepared. He had tankers of water that kept his property from burning down. So is Trump serious about shutting down FEMA? He throws these things out there. I don't know if he is. But this is being put out by the Independent in the UK.
Starting point is 02:26:21 They say Trump supporters could end up being hurt the worst if he shuts down FEMA. What a joke. Well, you know, FEMA is getting more money than the blue states are getting that type of thing. Uh, so again, he vows that he's going to reform FEMA of the many rumors spread over social media. Some claim that the agency was restricting relief to $750 per person. Well, you know, that wasn't just something that surfaced on social media. Some claim that the agency was restricting relief to $750 per person. Well, you know, that wasn't just something that surfaced on social media. I played for you at the time. There was an interview from Fox News. They sent a reporter and they talked to, they had two or three mayors of small towns that were there.
Starting point is 02:27:01 They had a fire chief and I forget which one of them was saying, you know, they mentioned the $750. I said, well, my daughter's house burned down, and FEMA only gave her $300. This is, you know, these things don't just come out of nowhere. And when these people are out there trying to debunk this stuff. Nevertheless, we have Trump promising to activate the Army Corps of Engineers, help rebuild North Carolina. Hopefully that will happen.
Starting point is 02:27:28 But we'll wait and see whether that will happen or not. And with all the talk, I don't think FEMA's good. They're making people wait and all the rest of the stuff. I kind of chalk it up to the same kind of thing that he's doing in terms of building hope for people that he's going to get rid of the income tax. I'll believe it when I see it. We'll be right back. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. You're listening to The David Knight Show. Well, blood, feces, and terror is what one of the judges that was involved in the January 6th stuff is saying.
Starting point is 02:28:44 And a rage. This is Jonathan Turley talking about it. You used to talk about blood, sweat, and tears. Now we've got these tyrannical judges talking about blood, feces, and terror. Terror instead of tears. The terror, though, was coming from the government. And the blood was on the faces of the people who were being beaten by the police in terms of the feces i think you can find those on the chairs of the congressmen and women who were
Starting point is 02:29:14 scared feces i guess we could say and philadelphia district attorney larry krasner pledged to pursue those pardoned or commuted with new charges at the state level. And he says this is even worse than what we saw with Alvin Bragg in Manhattan, the district attorney. On MSNBC, former NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund head Cheryl Ithell declared that the pardons were all part of a plan to build an army of brown shirts. Trump's private army to come after people. And that was also picked up by Jamie Raskin, Democrat congressman of Maryland, said Trump was issuing pardons to create a reserve army,
Starting point is 02:29:57 this is a quote, quote, reserve army of political foot soldiers to act on behalf of MAGA and Donald Trump. Yeah, an army. political foot soldiers to act on behalf of MAGA and Donald Trump. Yeah, an army. Such hyperbole, particularly the Nazi era, reference is now commonplace, says Jonathan Turley. Indeed, some judges are using dismissal hearings to launch into what seems, at points, like some kind of made-for-TV commentary. Judge Tanya Chutkin, an Obama appointee, had been criticized for failing to recuse herself from a case that she made highly controversial statements about Trump from the bench.
Starting point is 02:30:46 And in a sentencing hearing of a J6 rioter in 2022, she said the rioters, quote, were there in fealty and loyalty to one man and not to the Constitution. In the latest hearing, she proclaimed that the pardons could not change the tragic truth and cannot whitewash the blood, feces, and terror. What is the feces that's out there? That she said that the mob left in its wake. Well, anyway, the defendants in her courtroom were there to have a required dismissal entered into the case, not to hear her speaking truth to power, as Jonathan Turley points out.
Starting point is 02:31:22 You can put that in air quotes. Down the hall, her colleague, Judge Beryl Howell, also an Obama appointee, lashed out at Trump's actions, writing, this court cannot let stand the revisionist myth relayed in this presidential pronouncement. Yet all of that paled in comparison to what their colleague and U.S. District Judge,
Starting point is 02:31:42 Emmett Mehta, also an Obama appointee, did with his J6 cases. He ordered the J6 defendants to seek prior approval before going to Capitol Hill or even coming within any of the 69 square miles of the nation's capital. Basically banishing people like Stuart Rhodes or Joe Biggs from this, the people who had their sentences commuted. He said he was able to impose this because those defendants had received commutations rather than pardons. And so he said these new conditions imposed after presidential commutations, more importantly,
Starting point is 02:32:23 they could affect the exercise of First Amendment rights from free speech to free association to the right to petition the government. Well, that's what this is always all about. This is always about prohibiting First Amendment rights to peacefully assemble and to redress your grievances to the government. There's nothing in there about the sacred ground of the Capitol building or anything like that. There's no caveat about peaceful assembly and redressing your grievances.
Starting point is 02:32:52 It doesn't say where you can do that. There's no First Amendment areas. I know the government thinks that. They do that all the time. At the Bundy Ranch, they do it at every single one of these presidential conventions, whether it's Republican or Democrat. They always set up a cage, a free speech area. You go in the cage.
Starting point is 02:33:10 What a perfect image of that. You go into their cage, and then inside of their cage, they'll let you say whatever you want, right? Now they have social media to do that. They got cages on social media that they'll put you in. Free speech, but no reach. Your speech cannot reach the people that are going into the convention, and it will not be seen by anybody. But you can go over there and talk as much as you want. That's exactly the model of free speech that Elon Musk has on X.
Starting point is 02:33:37 Anyway, Stuart Rhodes previously asked to speak to the House committee that investigated the riot, but the Democrat-controlled committee refused to allow it. What if Rhodes now wants to meet privately with members to supply his testimony? Well, he would need to get Judge Mehta to approve it and to potentially make such plans public. So Turley says, in Washington, judges imposed limits on what political views defendants could read or share a bush appointee i mean all these others have been obama appointees a bush appointee judge reggie walton
Starting point is 02:34:12 who had previously called trump a charlatan had before him a typical j6 case daniel goodwin 35 of corinth texas goodwin pleaded guilty on January 31, 2023, to one misdemeanor count of entering and remaining in a restricted building. It is a minor offense that generated little jail time. However, Judge Walton faulted Goodwin for appearing on Fox News and for spreading, quote unquote, disinformation. How do you know that's disinformation, Judge? Are you the arbiter of truth?
Starting point is 02:34:48 And so he ordered the government to monitor what he was viewing and discussing. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals rebuked Walton. So the appeal court rebuked this judge for that surveillance order. But he doubled down. On remand, the Biden Justice Department insisted that Goodwin was unrepentant and still viewing extremist media, you know, like Fox News or something. It's all about political warfare, wasn't it? Trump said he has immediately halted the hiring of new irs agents
Starting point is 02:35:27 and uh his remarks on saturday as he was you know doing stream of consciousness nonsense about the income tax you like those income tax reductions what if i made them permanent what if i just did away with it all you know he not serious about any of that stuff, as I pointed out. That would take away his incentive for people to move here, right? Because if he's going to fund the government by the tariffs, which he promises, of course, that's not going to be the case. But if they move here, they pay the corporate tax and then he doesn't get the tariffs. So if everybody was to do that, his leverage would disappear and so would a lot of his revenue. But he doesn't care. None of these people care whether they balance the budget or not. Again, he wants to remove the limit for the debt ceiling
Starting point is 02:36:18 for two years. Democrats, debt? Who cares? What debt? We don't care about we got modern monetary theory anyway he said um and and this really set off the mainstream media they had to fact check him on the 80 000 agents that are out there he said they hired they were trying to hire 88 000 new workers to go with you and we're in the process of developing a plan to either terminate all of them or maybe we just move them to the border just more made-up nonsense here listen i think maybe we're going to move them to the border yeah that's the ticket you know i mean it's just like john lovett the liar yeah my wife morgan fairchild yeah that's it yeah we can move them to the border because you know fortunately the border they can all carry guns it's like what is? I mean, when this whole thing came out
Starting point is 02:37:09 and they're talking about 80,000 agents and guess where that number came from? The treasury department that is over the IRS. That wasn't a made up number. I mean, he's grabbing this number and they say, well, what he's making up is the fact that they're allowed to carry guns at the border and that type of thing but um the um the original 87 000 or 88 000 irs agent figures came from a u.s treasury department estimate in 2021 but they say well he was repeating a claim made in 2022 by republicans that some of the irs agents who would be hired to be able to carry firearms, although the bill did not designate money specifically for a large number of armed IRS employees. These are the criminal investigators that are armed. But it doesn't say what the mix is going to be. You know, how many of these people are going to be doing data entry and how many of
Starting point is 02:38:00 them are going to be criminal investigators? They't say you know it specifically doesn't talk about armed irs employees but it specifically doesn't prohibit that either right it's up it's to be determined and it's kind of interesting when you look at how the irs is expanded um i looked up the numbers to see, just how many people have they hired? And at the end of fiscal year 2024, they increased the number of IRS employees from 90,000 the previous year to 100,000. That's an 11% increase. That's a big jump. And I couldn't go back to 2022 to see how many had been added after the Inflation Reduction Act. But we do know that at the beginning of this year, they went from 100 after the fiscal year ended, and I think that's like in September or something of 2024. So in the last couple of months, they're now up to 102,000. So last year, they increased by 11%.
Starting point is 02:39:07 In just a couple of months, they've now gone up by another 2% in terms of employees. So it's exploding. And so if you look at this, I'm just guessing since it was like 90,000 after the first year of this increase, and he was saying, we're going to add 87 000 or 88 000 what trump what biden was talking about doing with this was doubling doubling the number of irs agents nobody's talked about that all the papers are filled this is even the epic times which typically is going to cheerlead trump they're fact checking him on this and you certainly see that on the left stream media that they're saying well you know that isn't going to be people carrying guns and it's not and you certainly see that on the left stream media, that they're saying, well, you know,
Starting point is 02:39:48 that isn't going to be people carrying guns, and it's not going to be 80, no, it is. He doubled, he put the money in to double the number of IRS agents, and they've already, they're hiring them fast. And he increased their budget, gave them a budget increase seven times bigger. So he gave them seven times more money and twice the number of agents. Now, is Trump going to stop that, or is he just going to play nonsense about it? You know, we could send him to the border and have him carry guns.
Starting point is 02:40:22 Johnson didn't want to do anything about it. Johnson was worse on this than his predecessor was a speaker in the house last year this is from epic times now last year the irs said it was going to hire nearly 20 000 new employees and deploy new technology over the next two years that's ai surveillance data mining all the rest of that. Soon after taking office, Trump signed an executive order to freeze the hiring of federal civilian employees across the government, stating that no federal civilian position that is vacant at noon on January the 25th can be filled.
Starting point is 02:40:57 No new position may be created except as otherwise provided for in this memorandum. And so, again, they are exploding, but now there's a freeze after the explosion. This freeze applies to all executive departments and agencies, regardless of their sources of operational and programmatic funding. Aside from the hiring freeze, the president suspended in the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investments and Jobs Act funding disbursements for what his office said was terminating the Green New Deal. Section two of that executive order focused on
Starting point is 02:41:32 how to direct agency actions, including protecting U.S. national and economic security, and listen to the high priority that is put on this, removing a federal electric vehicle mandate boy elon musk got his money's worth out of that didn't he and so the question is uh from james bovard he says um will any federal officials pay for what they did which thing is he talking about here is he talking about the pandemic lockdown is he talking about the mass murder of people with his bioweapon thing? Well, actually, no. He's talking about now the lab leak. The biggest scientific con of the century is finally being exposed.
Starting point is 02:42:14 No, the biggest con of all time is even this pandemic. And then doubling over on it the mrna vaccine and um you know the con isn't it's not the fact that they're trying to cover up that there really was a lab leak and that there really was a virus no the con is virology itself and public health itself that's the con and the con is the bioweapon the trump shot and by doing focusing on lab leak folks which is not true it's how do we know it's not true because there's no pandemic come on why is it that conservative and libertarian press is now pretending that there was a real pandemic there wasn't they were killing people of ventilators and remdesivir and with neglect. It wasn't a virus that was killing people.
Starting point is 02:43:08 The hospitals were empty. Can we stop pretending? When I look at conservatives and libertarians talking about this, like I talked about it yesterday, they're the equivalent of the dancing nurses on TikTok. This is total BS. Stop it. This is giving them an alibi.
Starting point is 02:43:25 It's even pushing it out to China. You understand what that agenda is about? Oh, they want to go to war with China. This is another reason they can push out there. But it pushes it away from the government. It's the government that did this to you. It's your own government. It's the CIA.
Starting point is 02:43:40 It's Trump that did it to you. Don't give them a pass by pretending that this was a lab leak accidental or deliberate that's not what it was there wasn't anything that came out we see this as well we got matt taibi as well as tucker carlson saying that um uh we're going to have the fbi communications with covid scientists will be Again, all this is about lab leak stuff. A giant rat's nest, they said. And Tucker Carlson says, Donald Trump is releasing more secrets than any president in history.
Starting point is 02:44:16 Name one. Name one. There's not a single secret that he's put out. And all this stuff about JFK and all that. Look, if there was any secrets, they were burned back in 1963. Get real. Tucker Carlson is a disinfo agent from a CIA family. It's just that simple. I looked up Acosta. He's been fired now from CNN.
Starting point is 02:44:41 I thought, I wonder how much money he made. He's going to fire. Is he going to have any financial issues? I don't think so. He was making $800,000 a year, is what public information was. But his father came from Cuba around the time of, you know, Bay of Pigs stuff and everything,
Starting point is 02:45:02 and settles in Virginia, right there where the CIA is. You see, even Acosta and Tucker and Alex and all these people, it's like Operation Mockingbird across the left and right spectrum, folks. They're lying to you up one side and down the other and um you know that is um that's their purpose well we're going to take a quick break and we're going to come back because i've got some other uh news items that i think um will be a little bit more entertaining and maybe not as serious um swamp lover says um fema should not have a say over the people that's right oh i am so sick and tired of them coming in and instituting martial law on people uh audi modern retro radio didn't we learn from that from 2005 we know for a fact that fema is not about helping people take a look at hurricane katrina yeah that should have been the end of FEMA.
Starting point is 02:46:05 But was it? No. Who was president then? Well, George W. Bush. And he was the guy in 2005. What did he do? He put in the PrEP Act because they were prepping to do martial law in many different ways. Right.
Starting point is 02:46:18 That PrEP Act that keeps people from getting any compensation for what was done to them with the Trump kill shot. Rogue statesman. A free people shouldn't have anyone to answer to, lest they deprive someone else of their liberty. Yeah, unfortunately, you know, when you go back and you look at the Battle of Athens in Athens, Tennessee, some returning World War II vets, those are the kind of guys that wouldn't have been. Karen Bass would have not worked out too well. If she'd been mayor of Athens, Tennessee, right after World War II, she would have gotten the same treatment that they did. Swamp Lover, if you aren't free to go on your own property and clean it up, you aren't free. That's right. And it's not your property because they've got local taxes that they're never going to get rid of.
Starting point is 02:47:04 12 June 1776. As a matter of fact, North Carolina contractors are not getting paid from North Carolina State Disaster Relief from the hurricane that came two years ago. Wow. Yeah, they voted for another Democrat. Of course, you know, it was just a choice from the bottom of the barrel for all of this stuff. We're going to take a quick break, and we'll be right back. Thank you. Making sense common again. You're listening to The David Knight Show. Well, Jason Barker writes,
Starting point is 02:49:15 I went on Dan Bongino's chat yesterday, and I mentioned Trump doing gun control by executive order and his warp speed, and the moderator banned me. Wow. MAGA is a massive cult now. Well, it's a PSYOP operation when you bring in the media into it. It's, you know, you shall not say no evil, speak no evil,
Starting point is 02:49:42 see no evil about Donald Trump. That's what it's really about. And by the way um this is an interesting article um this is a restaurant a small local restaurant uh and somebody got fired a staff member was fired over a menu addition they have special burgers and they set up a proud boys burger and um i think it would have been okay with the community there but unfortunately they put it on social media they added a burger for their burger night special uh it was called the proud boys burger and they described it as having
Starting point is 02:50:19 quote white american cheese onion ring layers of truth, resilience pickles, freedom fries, and cancel culture coleslaw and liberty sauce. And the owners of the restaurant freaked out and backpedaled and fired the guy. And in the UK, we're just talking about tax collectors here in the United States and the massive standing army of people that are there to... What was it? Jefferson had a phrase where he described the IRS even before it existed.
Starting point is 02:50:53 Swarms of officers to harass our people and eat out their substance. Whether it's a Republican or a Democrat in charge? Well, in the UK, Breitbart was scandalized by the fact that they had UK tax collectors were given the equivalent of a day off per week in order to promote LGBT religion. Well, you know, look, I would, I said for the longest time, until we can fire them, just pay them to stay home and not do anything. You know, you've got all these people saying, I can't believe that I've got to go to work now. It's like, no, just stay home. Don't do anything.
Starting point is 02:51:31 We'll pay you. I would say that about the UK tax collectors. Just give them a day off for each letter that they can imagine as part of their alphabet mafia here. Some members of His Majesty's Revenue and Customs Tax Collecting Agency are reportedly being given as much as one-fifth of their time at work off to focus on promoting leftist gender ideology. Well, here in the United States, these same people are very upset about the fact that they even have to go to work. What a way to end the week.
Starting point is 02:52:06 Five o'clock on Friday. Got our notice. Effective March 10th. We're back in the office five days a week. Wow. No telling. The tyranny of it all. And that's the most fucked up thing.
Starting point is 02:52:21 I missed that one. Did you issue this executive order cheeto but the executive order trumps unintended and rescinds any previously agreed upon telework agreements so before i was able to tell work once a week when i was in the office every day now yeah we're gonna leave it at that and then she goes and talk about oh you know there's people are working and they gotta figure out what they're gonna do with child care can you imagine everybody else the people who pay your salary have to figure out about that i cut that a little bit short because i'm not sure if i got the wrong version of that that was bleeped out or not
Starting point is 02:52:57 anyway um in other news uh we learn that peewee herman uh also known as Paul Rubens, that was his acting name, not his character name. He came out as homosexual in a posthumous documentary. He says, quote, I was secretive about my sexuality. I was one of the worst kept secrets ever. Who would have thought this i think that quite frankly was the funniest thing he ever said um next we're going to find out that uh boy george is going to be coming out soon um who knew that uh that uh peewee herman uh was you know my my gaydar was just pinned all the way over to the right and when i would say but uh russia is winning by three touchdowns says um uh senator tommy i think it's tubberville somebody great i used to call him tuberville but it's tuber i don't listen to news
Starting point is 02:54:02 i i read news so uh sometimes i go back and it's such a a simple name i thought oh i know how to say that and i guess i said it wrong so i'm not really sure but this might be why russia is ahead by three touchdowns we had as reported in the uk a farting whale set off a russian submarine a false alarm yeah british ships spent several days tracking down a suspected russian stealth submarine because you know climate change is our greatest threat we we know that from the american military as well as the uk military they were getting suspicious sonar signatures i mean this is sound this is not you know electromagnetic radiation this is sound it was making a suspicious sound
Starting point is 02:54:52 and you know this is really serious because you know a whale is a very large animal and it has not one but two blowholesholes that apparently it can do. It may have actually belonged to a farting whale, said a Royal Navy source. Two mystery sounds were picked up off the northwestern coast of Scotland, according to the UK tabloid. They were convinced that it was man-made. And the Royal Navy went on a deep-sea hunt. We've been analyzing the sounds, and we now believe that it was a marine mammal a whale and we're taking it very seriously you know because this is co2 this is a massive eruption of co2 it needs to be taken very seriously we have to assume the worst
Starting point is 02:55:36 i can't think of anything much worse than that if you're anywhere in the vicinity may have been trying to deploy sensors in order to obtain the acoustic signatures of royal navy submarines that's what they surmise they thought that was what the russian military was doing but in actuality it was a whale you know when i was back in high school i remember one of the albums i buy all kinds of crazy stuff one of the albums i got was songs of the humpback whale i don't know they're going to have a volume two with a flatulence of a humpback whale now that would be maybe an interesting sound i don't know the new york post uh in reporting this uh said that called the incident the hunt for red fart tober yeah that's right and it's just like a chicago that's that and you know when we look back shakespeare
Starting point is 02:56:27 evidently was right when he said that there was something rotten in denmark they have discovered a 66 million year old vomit in denmark something is very rotten in denmark and has been rotten there for a very long time uh the uh that found this stuff, took the fragments to a museum for examination, and they dated the vomit to the end of the Cretaceous era some 66 million years ago. I'll tell you what the biggest rotten thing is, and that is their dating methods. If you ever look at their dating methods, you find out that their dating methods are circular logic. Well, we know how old this is because of the layer that was found. And we know how old that layer is because of what's found in it.
Starting point is 02:57:15 That's basically the way these guys operate. This is all as useful as a PCR test, their dating methods. So the PCR tests are something that is rotten, not just in Denmark, but everywhere. The PCR tests are basically a kind of vomit, although it is only just a few decades old. Arabica coffee now, the latest thing that we're told is going to be extremely expensive.
Starting point is 02:57:41 So by the time you look at eggflation and the government killing off chickens by the millions and killing destroying our food supply killing off small farms that's the real key about all that but now arabica coffee prices are going to be expensive so it's going to be pretty hard to get eggs and coffee in the morning and then we have washington dc this article from the washington post saying dc is america's loneliest city and they ask can a thousand robotic pets help you know there's an old saying about washington d They said, if you want a friend in D.C., get a dog. Well, evidently, even the dogs don't like it. The people in the district, the criminals in the district of criminals,
Starting point is 02:58:36 these politicians are going to have to get a robot. So what the dogs are basically saying to him now, even we don't want to be your friend. Audi, Modern Retro Radio, says, radio says wait peewee herman was gay i haven't been this shocked since richard simmons came out yeah high boost says whale farts have uh whistler make a new hitchcock ai commercial maybe one with captain ahab thar she blows there you go that's uh that's absolutely true and then i'll just finish up with this we've got just about a minute left um we have um uh we have jd vance uh giving an economics lecture to margaret brennan on sunday
Starting point is 02:59:23 explain to her why the prices haven't changed in five days since trump got elected he says well just think about how does bacon get to the grocery store and he talks about the fact that you know there's a supply chain um if margaret uh had half a brain she would say yeah we remember how you guys how trump disrupted the supply chain and we know what's happening right now you know i guess if we look at this my question would be when he talks about how we've got the supply chain and how things trickle through it it's like why are you waiting so long to get the usda shut down but course, they're not going to shut down any of this stuff. They're going to continue killing our food and killing our farms.
Starting point is 03:00:10 He said, Margaret, how does bacon get to the grocery store? Well, it comes on trucks fueled by diesel. And if the diesel is way too expensive, the bacon is going to become more expensive. How do we grow the bacon and all the rest of the stuff? Well, how about, you know, is that why the eggs are expensive? Is it because of diesel fuel? Or is it because the federal government has decided they're going to kill all the rest of the stuff well how about you know is that why the eggs are expensive is it because of diesel fuel or is it because the federal government has decided they're going to kill all the chickens and kill all the farms that's the reality of all this stuff well thank you for joining us uh have a good day and i guess we will play as we go out we'll have a reprise of hitchcock
Starting point is 03:00:41 talking about the flatulent Earth Society. Have a good day. Good evening. Tonight's tale is a story of paranoia and a most unexpected perpetrator, the common cow. Or, more specifically, what comes out the other end. Yes, the air is thick with intrigue, as it seems that in our modern age of propaganda, even a humble bovine's backside can be branded a national security threat.
Starting point is 03:01:15 The menace is invisible, silent, yet deadly. Carefully contrived to panic the masses into accepting the government stepping in, jackboots and all, with their solutions. Because who better to stop a gaseous threat than a bunch of political windbags? But one must wonder, is this truly about saving the planet, or are we simply being led to pasture? Is it merely a MacGuffin? The David Knight show serves as a breath of fresh air for those who still believe that truth can stand up to scrutiny. And he's found that the government narrative smells suspiciously like a load
Starting point is 03:02:01 of bull. So if you want to help others catch wind of the BS being shoveled out of Washington, please consider supporting the show. And now back to our regularly scheduled program. You're listening to The David Knight Show.

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