The David Knight Show - Tue Episode #2155: Tariffs Backfired — China Got Richer
Episode Date: December 9, 202500:01:54 — Trump’s “Peace Plan” for Ukraine Mirrors Real Estate Deals Knight ridicules Trump’s 28-point Ukraine “peace plan” as a Kushner-style negotiation scam, arguing it treats war li...ke a property flip. 00:07:07 — Europe’s War Cult and the Rise of Authoritarian Leaders He warns that Macron, Scholz, and Starmer use endless war to justify censorship, digital IDs, and domestic surveillance—governments “at war with their own people.” 00:11:44 — Milo Yiannopoulos Exposes GOP Hypocrisy Knight highlights Milo’s revelations about corruption and moral rot inside conservative circles, arguing controlled-opposition influencers sanitize vice as “freedom.” 00:16:06 — January 6th Was Fueled by Controlled Media Figures Knight names Fuentes, Jones, and others as agitators shielded from scrutiny, saying they exist to steer genuine dissent into chaos. 00:34:00 — The Surveillance Age: When Your Refrigerator Watches You He tells of “smart” appliances spying on owners, comparing the Internet-of-Things to an always-on domestic intelligence network. 00:36:20 — Edmonton’s AI-Equipped Police Cameras Mark New Surveillance Era Knight reports on Axon’s facial-recognition rollout targeting “7,000 high-risk citizens,” warning that predictive policing is replacing constitutional law. 01:09:10 — Google’s AI Deletes a User’s Entire Hard Drive A chilling example of corporate AI failure—Knight uses it to show how automation concentrates unaccountable power over private life. 01:13:05 — Drugs Are Not Violence: Trump’s Duterte Doctrine He exposes Trump’s rhetoric equating drug use with armed combat, calling it moral inversion that paves the way for extrajudicial killings. 01:41:21 — Trump’s Tariffs Increase Trade Deficit by 23 Percent Knight cites official data proving tariffs backfired—raising consumer prices, enriching China, and sinking U.S. manufacturing. 02:03:05 — Neuroscientist Warns of Eight 21st-Century Brain Threats Dr. Richard Restak outlines eight technological and psychological forces—AI, isolation, propaganda—reshaping and damaging the modern mind. 02:15:20 — Memory Editing: From Courtrooms to Soldiers Restak exposes DARPA research on erasing or rewriting memories under the banner of trauma therapy—an Orwellian leap in mind control. 02:49:30 — The Unholy Alliance: Capitalism Meets Totalitarian Power Knight closes by warning that corporate profit motives and government surveillance have fused into a single global technocratic system. Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHT Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Twas Christmas in Dublin, and Puss was in boots where he found better than half-priced premium beauty star gifts.
Including Clinique Beauty Icons star gift, worth 143 euro, only 55 euro 50.
Don't miss out. Shop in-store or online. Gift happily ever after. Boots.
Selected stores worth price based on standard selling price of individual items while stocks last offer ends 24th December.
And now a look at the forecast.
We're seeing lots of wind, plenty of sunshine to come,
and a long-term outlook that's bright for Ireland.
At Airgrid, our forecast is for a sustainable energy future.
We're upgrading the electricity grid so every home, business and community can benefit.
We're powering up Ireland.
Learn more at airgrid.e.
In a world of deceit, telling the world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary,
At it's the David Knight Show.
As the clock strikes 13, it's Tuesday, the 9th of December,
here of our Lord, 2025.
Well, today we're going to take a lot of look at artificial intelligence.
We actually have in the third hour a guest, a best-selling author.
He's done 25 books.
He's an MD who works in neuroscience.
The book is the 21st century brain.
And he's been a consultant or lecturer at the CIA, at the NSA, the Pentagon, other places.
So he knows something about where this stuff is headed.
We're going to see what he has to say here about this.
But we're going to begin with what is going on in Ukraine.
Is this the beginning of the end?
Are these people going to be able to...
sustain this. Russia is rapidly advancing, even though Zelensky's not even taking a look at the
plant. And so we're going to start with news. We're going to also, we have some interesting updates in
pharmaceutical areas, as well as an update in terms of Trump's tariffs. Are they working?
We finally got around to giving some breadcrumbs to the soybean farmers. But we're going to take a look at
the bigger picture of the soy stuff. So we're back already.
ended soon. Sorry, I just didn't really hit the button. That's okay. All right. Well, let's start
with the news here. And Trump said out loud, he said, I'm disappointed that Zelensky
hasn't even read my peace proposal. And I understand how he feels. I'm disappointed that
Trump hasn't even read the Constitution that he swore to uphold. Maybe he doesn't
like it, just like Zelensky doesn't like peace. His frustration continues to show,
especially after high hopes, for his 28-point peace plan. You know, we had this
10-point peace plan between us and the government. It's called the Bill of Rights.
Tell you what, this is where we draw the line with what the government does and with our natural
rights, our God-given rights, but they didn't respect that either. So he said,
I'm a little bit disappointed that Zelensky hasn't even read the proposal yet.
Well, he doesn't want peace. And neither do the European leaders as well.
So as he's saying that, you've got the leaders of Britain, France, Germany,
all meeting with Zelensky telling him, keep fighting, keep fighting.
We're going to win this thing.
So that's not really what's happening.
He said, is people love it, but he hasn't.
Russia is fine with it, he said, and the assessment of what's going on with Ukraine,
of course, this follows after his son-in-law, Jared Kushner and his former business partner,
I guess you could say, Steve Whitkoff, who are now his emissaries for geopolitics.
I mean, hey, if you can negotiate a big real estate deal in New York,
most of this stuff is about real estate, right?
Whether you're talking about Gaza or you're talking about Ukraine,
you're still talking about people killing each other over land.
And so he said they didn't think that Zelensky was really serious about this.
Moscow, as I pointed out yesterday,
really likes the document that was released the first NSS,
which is the national defense security agreement that's there.
It's basically laying out the Trump administration's perspective on foreign policy and national security.
And I liked what it had to say.
I just don't believe that Trump is going to stick to any of it.
But Russia reported on it.
You didn't have any reporting really from mainstream media here in America.
So the Russians liked it because, as they pointed out,
in the Zero Hedge article, the document characterizes Europe as weak while warning of an unpredictable, disunified atmosphere on the European continent, where in desperation, European leadership could overreact and escalate a war with Russia. You think? I mean, they've been doing that up front in so many different ways. You've got Fred Mertz in Germany, and you've got Kier Starrmer and Britain as well as Macron in France. They're all saying, you know, get ready for massive casualties.
and we've got to draft more people in the army.
I mean, they're doing everything.
It's essentially immense to a declaration of war already.
So Donald Trump's first in excess since returning to office
blames European officials for thwarting U.S. efforts to end the war in Ukraine
and accuses governments of ignoring a large European majority, quote unquote, who want peace.
Well, I agree with Trump on that, the Trump administration.
I just don't trust him on any of this stuff.
Well, there might be another way to have peace, and that is for Russia to win, and it looks like
that may be happening, one way to have it lasting peace is that we're going to have a lasting
peace.
Well, you could end the NATO provocation that is called Ukraine as a geopolitical construct that, as I
pointed out before, the Ukraine was an area of Russia, an area of Russia for 400 years, and breaking
that off as a separate entity and then creating a coup to change the government that then began a
civil war that happened in 2014 11 years ago so that is a construct of NATO who decided after the
Soviet disunion that they would eliminate Russia as a power and so this has been a gradual
policy of encroachment they're pushing for war Putin's army seizing land at one
of its fastest rates since the initial invasion almost four years ago, says research.
The Kremlin's army sees 200 square miles of territory in November up from 100 square miles
the previous month, according to Deep State, a trusted Ukraine-based battlefield map.
How about that? They even call it Deep State.
Yeah, let's use that for our marketing purposes here.
The speed of advance was approaching the fastest since the initial invasion almost four years ago.
but then you have the desperation of the war cult.
Zelensky meeting with Kier-Starmer, Manuel Macron, Fred Mertz.
Ukraine is holding its own, they said, and doing even better.
Ukraine is not on the brink of collapse.
Again, reality has no meaning to these people.
If we cannot immediately reach a peace agreement with Russia,
it is essential that we give Ukraine all the support it needs,
so that it does not lose ground due to lack of support.
well it is losing ground even though they are supporting it and this was something that many people
said from the beginning that there was no way that Russia was going to be able to outlast that
Ukraine is going to be able outlast Russia the comparative size of the two countries, militaries
as well as you know the close proximity it is it was in the cars that this was going to happen
They planned to end the war drawn up by the Trump administration, involved Ukraine handing over vast tracts of land, and Ukraine and Europe have rejected the proposals.
Well, that's one way it's going to end, and maybe it'll end when they take the land.
The gains in territory risk helping to persuade Trump that peace should be set on Russia's terms.
The sending weapons and aid to Kiev was a waste.
Yes, really.
Well, Brett, why does Kier Starrmer want the war so much?
And why does Fred Mertz want the war?
Why does France's Emmanuel Macron?
It's because their people understand that their governments are at war with them.
They're locking people up for mere comments as they create this police surveillance state and shut down all free speech.
And in the UK, for example, same thing is happening in all these countries.
being overrun with immigrants from abroad.
There is fury in the UK as nearly 350,000 migrant families could get extra welfare
after the new budget from Kier Starrmer.
So why does he want war?
Well, because his own people are waking up to the fact that Starrmer is at war with British people.
That's why.
There are 50,000 foreign-born families,
and they found that 200,000 of them were from just 10 countries.
Families from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria set to benefit the most from the three billion
pound decision to scrap the two-child benefit cap, endless found.
A Tory MP, who carried out the research, said, you have to ask whose side the government
is on.
I don't think you have to ask that anymore.
I think they've made that pretty clear.
They like any third world migrants, and they hate all the native Britons.
And if you look at the chart that's there, the 10 countries are Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Somalia, India, Ghana, Afghanistan, Iraq, Sri Lanka.
That's nine of them.
There's only one country that is European, and that's Poland.
And so that's 200,000 of the 350,000.
The rest of the world is 150,000 immigrants from the rest of the world.
And, of course, coming in for the welfare benefits, the welfare magnet that's there.
It was Christmas in Dublin, and Puss was in Boots where he found better than half price on electrical beauty,
including best-selling favorites and premium brands.
Don't miss out. Shop in-store or online. Gift happily ever after. Boots.
Subject to availability, selected stores offer in 6th of January, 2026.
The Go Mile, supported by AIB, has been helping families around the world for over 40 years.
This year, we are asking you to step up together with your community to continue one of Ireland's favourite Christmas traditions.
Search AIB GoMile to see where you, your family and your friends can find your local Goal Mile event.
AIB, for the life you're after.
So, Milo Ionopoulos, and I don't normally get into these.
It's amazing to me what a soap opera the conservative alternative media has become.
But they've kind of been angling for this for a long time.
One of the things that I criticized Charlie Kirk for was the fact that he was going around doing
a culture war events, and he was putting out front a black guy who was a homosexual, checking two DEI boxes.
And as he's going around talking about Christ and Christianity, he's sending this conflicting message of supporting homosexual marriage.
And he was called out on it by some people at some of the events.
And he got really furious.
How dare you call this out?
And I said at the time, I said, this, I think, is very revealing because it shows what he's interested in is big tent GOP.
he's interested in getting money from backers and that type of thing.
And to me, it was a real betrayal of all the conservative things that he pays lip service to.
But the entire Republican Party is like that, but especially the alternative media.
And so Milo Ionopoulos has apologized for helping to sell and normalize homosexuality and homosexual marriage.
And where did he do that?
with the alternative media.
Milo says he's become a Christian and rejected that.
And now he is outing a lot of other people that are living this closet as they say lifestyle.
We've seen this for a long time in the Republican Party.
And Milo's point is that homosexuality is rampant but hidden in the GOP.
I mean, there's been reports when they have their large conventions that grinder, you can see the spike.
and grinder activity, which is a homosexual dating app. You can see it where they're meaning
geolocation. And we've seen it in the past. I mean, the longest serving speaker of the
house, Dennis Hastert, was put into Congress from being a wrestling coach. That was his
qualification of beginning in Congress. Actually, it wasn't, his qualification wasn't being a
wrestling coach. His qualification is being a pedophile wrestler coach. And then,
that lawsuit caught up to him eventually but while he was in there was a pager's
paging scandal not pager i guess the pages the young boys that go to congress because they want to
get experience in politics they got a different kind of experience they were expecting and so
there was a scandal there with mark foley and so dennis astert before all this stuff broke about
him went on with rush symbol and they just poohed it oh this is just nothing but partisan politics
The same type of stuff they're doing now with Pete Hegseth
and what's happening with the murder of people in international waters.
And so, yeah, it's just part of some politics, nothing to see here,
except we did see what it was.
And so Milo is saying that, in his opinion, it is everywhere within the GOP.
Now, he might have a bit different perspective on it
since he was holding himself forth as a homosexual
And, again, of course, they're still doing this with Scott Pressler, the guy with really long straight hair.
You may remember him.
He is a favored person for the GOP in terms of representing them.
And they're normalizing this.
And so Milo has rejected that, and he has apologized for normalizing that, which, by the way,
none of the influencers have.
And so, you know, people like Charlie Kirk, people like Alex Jones, have been normalizing
this type of thing.
And as a matter of fact, he went on with Tim Poole, who was also playing this game.
Tim Poole had Milo on.
He had George Santos.
Why would you put George Santos on, unless it's some kind of a clickbait thing?
And so, Milo is making all kinds of statements about all these other conservative influencers,
Candice Owen and even Charlie Kirk and Alex Jones saying that they were involved in
homosexual activity so I don't know and so already you had Benny Johnson who he said
that about said he's going to sue Milo for what he what he said about that he made some very
specific statements about it all I can say is that you know when you look at how
they're using this. The people who say that they're for conservative values, that they're for
family values, and then they do this kind of stuff. I mean, it's just look at, you know,
Alex Jones platforming Blair White, this guy who dresses up like a woman. And so, again,
Tim Poole put all that stuff onto his, into his podcast. All I've got to say about that is the reason
I mention this is not to get caught up in all of this gossip and all the rest.
this stuff. But just take these people and look at what they do. Look at what they do and look at what
they say. Ask yourself then why would you trust them? You know, very interesting there was
in terms of January the 6th, Trump has, according to some sources, was trashing the people
who were the conspiracy theories around January the 6th.
And then you got people like Nick Fuentes.
It was put up by Shannon Joy yesterday,
and I don't have it in the deck here.
But it was footage of Nick Quentes,
yelling people, go over there, go over there.
You know, directing people on January the 6th.
And I've said from the very beginning,
why did they not focus,
why do they focus on re-ups, right?
and not focus on Fuentes, on Alex Jones,
and all these people who have been running Stop the Steel,
all the people who enticed them to come.
And, you know, it's like Ray Epps is there saying,
yeah, we've got to go over there as well.
Fuentes is doing that day as well.
You know, why does he get a pass?
Is he a Fed?
The question is, when you look at this stuff,
are they selling this stuff for clicks?
Are they selling it because they're being funded by people who want to use them to propagandize you?
Use them for controlled opposition.
And I think that it really, in the long term, doesn't really matter that much.
They're manipulating you.
They're lying to you, and that's the key thing that you need to know.
It's a trap in many different ways.
Well, I'm going to take a quick break here because there's something going on.
I need to find out what is happening with this.
And we're going to continue.
When we come back, we're going to talk about a man who died from eating cockroaches.
If people swallow some of this stuff coming from the conservative influencers,
I guess somebody who is kind of like swallowing cockroaches.
And if you get too much of it, it can be a very bad thing for you.
So we're going to take a quick break, folks, and we will be right back.
...hehran...
...when...
...withal...
...and...
...the...
The
Oh,
Oh,
Oh,
Oh,
Oh.
And,
I'm a
Oh,
Oh,
Oh,
and
Um,
You know,
I'm going to be able to
I'm going to
And then, you know,
I'm going to be able to,
you know,
and
I'm going to be able to be.
...you know...
...and...
...and...
...and...
...the...
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
It was Christmas in Dublin,
and Puss was in Boots
where he found better than half-priced premium beauty star gifts,
including Clinique Beauty Icons star gift,
worth 143 euro, only 55 euro 50.
Don't miss out.
Shop in-store or online.
Gift happily ever after.
Boots.
Selected stores worth price based on standard selling price
of individual items while stocks last offer in
The Go Mile, supported by AIB, has been helping families around the world for over 40 years.
This year, we are asking you to step up together with your community to continue one of Ireland's favourite Christmas traditions.
Search AIB Go Mile to see where you, your family and your friends can find your local Go Mile event.
AIB, for the life you're after.
APS Radio delivers multiple channels of music right to your mobile device.
Get the APS Radio app today and listen wherever you go.
Well, welcome back.
I was trying to figure out what was going on to everybody's scrambling and running around in.
I didn't know what the issue was.
It turns out that we had some issues with Rumble streaming.
So that's now been fixed, and we now have everywhere back in the proper assigned seats.
So if you want to be on Rumble, but went somewhere else, you can now go back to Rumble
and watch the show there.
Yes.
Well, as I promised, we're going to talk about something really important here,
but I think it is an apt metaphor for our times in a number of ways.
A man, it's horrifying death, as he ate cockroaches in a competition.
And this is just yet another warning.
You probably don't want to get into competitions of drinking and eating stuff,
whether it's hot dogs or even water, or especially cockroaches.
But I've talked many times in terms of how,
Now, dosage is so important.
The woman who was part of a rate, they had a radio contest that was going on, and they thought
it'd be funny to give people lots of water and then not let them go to the bathroom.
And a lady died because the water basically, if you get a lot of water and overdose on water,
it will dilute, I think, your blood or something to the extent that it kills you.
And it killed that one woman just in terms of doing a stupid contest.
This guy.
It's stomach lining that dilutes.
Is it stomach lining?
That's the method?
Yeah.
And then it just leaches out into your system.
And your body's not, your body needs water, but it's supposed to stay in its proper place.
Wow.
Well, this guy, 32 years old, collapsed and died as part of a contest.
And guess what the prize was?
A python.
I want that python.
Give me those bugs.
I'll eat the bugs for the snake.
This is a strange barter economy.
he was in trying to eat z bugs and he ate too many of z bugs uh the interesting thing is
i saw this i thought so are these things toxic i grew up in florida where we have really
large cockroaches palmetta bugs that would call them to uh try to put a i think a nice
soften the blow a little bit put a nice spin on it a label but uh they're filthy things and um and so
I thought, you know, was it toxic?
No.
It's actually he just respirated cockroach parts.
He was trying to eat them so quickly.
And so he died from asphyxiation.
Got him stuck in his throat.
His girlfriend said that he had eaten bugs before.
And she was his girlfriend.
There's somebody out there for everyone, guys.
Such a pity that he died eating bugs.
He loved eating bugs.
So it involved not just.
cockroaches, but it had several different rounds of eating different species of insects.
And I don't know if these were the big, this was in Florida, but I don't know if it's a big
Florida cockroaches and palmetto bugs.
They said they were measuring three or four inches long.
Kind of sucks that they got to the cockroach round and then died there.
Yeah, maybe grasshoppers would have been better.
I don't know.
If what you're consuming can come in a plague, stop eating it.
This might have been the Madagascar roaches or something.
It was three or four inches long.
Anyway.
I feel like those would be too expensive.
You know, those are a pet people want to buy.
Yeah, they said he was eating these things really quickly, and then he began retching.
I guess most of the people thought there'd be nothing unusual after eating a bunch of cockroaches that you would start to throw up.
But maybe that's why they evidently didn't give him the Heimwick maneuver.
I don't know.
But in the video, you can see him trying to swallow and breathe.
at the same time we can't do both of those simultaneously that's right so a question from the new
york times is is hollywood getting god um i guess you'd have a t-shirt probably eventually
god's wrath yeah instead of got milk you can say got god you know or something but i don't think
that they get god i don't think they understand god i don't think they ever have understood
God. And a good example of this is something that is happening today. Today is the 60th anniversary,
December 9th, 1965, of the airing of the Charlie Brown Christmas special. And CBS really didn't
get God the whole God thing. They didn't get the whole Christmas thing either. It was kind of
interesting because it was sponsored by Coca-Cola. Coca-Cola during the summer of 65 in June, as a matter of fact,
came to CBS and said we want to have a TV special that we want to sponsor.
Well, you know, Coca-Cola doesn't really like Christmas.
It doesn't like Christ in Christmas.
They've done everything they can to put Santa in his place.
And these AI commercials that Coca-Cola has done, they got a lot of criticism for it.
But they scrupulously avoid using term Christmas having anything to do with Christ.
And so they were going to be the sponsor of them.
this. And so they said, we're on a really tight schedule. And there's actually a documentary in
case you're interested, the making of the Charlie Brown Christmas. It's a documentary. Bill
Melendez is still around. And he was the animator. And so he's one of the key people that
they talked to about it. And they said, we didn't know how we're going to get this thing done.
So they brought in Charles Schultz, who was, they had already picked, said, we want to do something
with peanuts. They called him Sparky. That was his nickname. And they said, he was really
incredible as a creative. He wasn't just a cartoonist. He was a storyteller. And he did these
things that came out of the woodwork. Sometimes I would just sit back and like, wow, this guy
comes up with great ideas. And so he was able to put together the outline for the show
in less than a day. They sent the outline to Coca-Cola. They got on Monday, on Tuesday. They
called up and said they'd do it. So, um, they, uh, and it had the objectionable scene in it,
which was, uh, Linus reading the Bible passage from Luke. And, uh, but they didn't really catch
on to that, evidently. And so, um, uh, the TV executives, once they got the show delivered
to them, were very unhappy with it. They said they didn't like the kids' voices, which I
thought pretty good. They didn't like the jazz music. They said, that doesn't fit, which
Of course, that has now become a classic.
It's iconic.
Yeah, and they didn't like the Bible being in there.
They thought that was too controversial.
It's like all the things that everybody likes about it, CBS TV executives hated it.
That's how totally out of touch they are with everything like this.
That's why Hollywood is circling the drain and well on its way to being flushed out because they really don't get it.
Yeah, you can't have more shows like this.
now. In fact, you couldn't even really have them back then most of the time. This was lightning
in a bottle. Yeah. Yeah. Got past them. That's right. That's right. They've been completely
out of touch and anti-Christian for decades, probably since inception. Like 60 years.
Well, yeah, if you look at Hollywood, it was pretty amazing. There was an interesting BBC
series as narrated by James Mason and
the actor. And it's talking about the early days of Hollywood, the silent films. I called it
something about silver screen and we had it in our video stores it was really interesting
because it talked about how they made the movies and you know why movie stars wear sunglasses
because they were spending all day in these really bright lights these carbon arc lights
that they were using everything and it was doing a number on their eyes and they really need
to get their eyes shaded when they went outside they needed a rest you know a lot of different
things like that but how the camera you know how they would do stunts
everything was real. I mean, there was no special effects. They did it for real. I mean,
Lillian Gish is on a ice flow and she's on a real ice flow. I mean, this is not a staged
thing. And when they would, the cameraman, how would they keep the steady flow? I mean, it does
look a little bit jerky in terms of the movement and that type of thing. But the, the
cameramen were picked because they could turn the crank and manually crank the film through the
camera at a constant rate. And so they all had a song that
they would sing to themselves and that would be how they would pace themselves but these guys had
to keep this stuff up even when they strapped them to the wing of a biplane or something you know
they were up there rolling this thing as they're flying around on the biplane and uh so it was a
fascinating series but from the inception you can see just how perverted i mean it was the whole thing
was like geoffrey upstein party continuously uh all these different people that's why they had
the Hollywood code that came in but they've been completely out of touch with the
rest of society from the get-go.
And they don't get it.
But what they do is they manufacture a new reality.
They manufacture a new consent.
They're not reflecting culture.
They're driving culture.
Anyway, back to this.
And the outline, Schultz, Sparky, had insisted that there'd be a scene from the Bible.
And at the time, hardly any TV shows referenced scripture, the move was very risky.
Mendelssohn said, Bill and I looked at each other and he said,
oh, we don't know if we can animate from the Bible.
It's never been done before.
And Charles Schultz said, well, if we don't do it, who will.
So they went ahead and did that.
That became part of the famous scene.
This year, again, marks the 60th anniversary, the TV special,
December the 9th, 1965, and 7.30.
And it's the 75th anniversary of the Peanuts comic strip.
So he had that comic strip for about 50.
years before they picked him to do the film.
So this is a short segment.
We're going to come back, though, and we're going to talk about the technocracy
and some of the mounting problems that are solving cars that are going to take over the world.
AI is going to run the world and going to run us, but it can't even navigate the Chick-fil-A drive-thru.
They're working on an app for that.
And so we're going to take a quick break.
And, Lance, did you put in the Charlie Brown thing?
Yeah, I believe it's called Christmas Time and Christmas folder.
Okay, yeah, let's see if I can get that here.
I got it, I got it, yeah.
All right, yeah, we've got a little bit different visuals this year with the help of AI for our Charlie Brown song.
We'll be right back.
...aure...
...you know...
...and...
...a...
...you know...
You know, I'm going to be able to.
You know, I'm going to be.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Elvis.
Ladies and gentlemen, the Beatles.
And the sweet sounds of Motown.
Find them on the oldies channel at APSRadio.com.
It was Christmas in Dublin, and Puss was in boots
where he found better than half-priced fragrant star gifts,
including boss-bottled unlimited odotolette 100 mill was 110 euro, now only 49 euro 50.
Don't miss out. Shop in-store or online. Gift happily ever after.
Boots. Selected stores while stocks last offer ends 24th of December.
The Go Mile, supported by AIB, has been helping families around the world for over 40 years.
This year, we are asking you to step up together with your.
community to continue one of Ireland's favorite Christmas traditions.
Search AIB Go Mile to see where you, your family and your friends can find your local
Go Mile event.
AIB for the life you're after.
Well, as we talk about what everybody was watching 60 years ago, today the government
watches you.
The TV watches you back.
The refrigerator watches you back.
As a matter of fact, there was interesting.
kind of funny story that Lance had shown me.
And there was a woman who was suffering from paranoia,
and she had one of these refrigerators that plays commercials all the time.
And it just, and it was a commercial for kind of a sci-fi dystopian film.
And the character in the film had the same name as this woman.
And so the refrigerator starts playing this thing and calls her out,
name and she thought she was having a psychotic episode here but I guess when they're really watching
you maybe it's not psychotic and the um it was a woman with schizophrenia and uh she got these messages
for this TV show in which uh some group or AI or something is talking to this woman through
various devices so it's putting up these messages like sorry we disappointed you Carol and the woman's
named Carol and had been diagnosed as schizophrenic, so she thought she was having a psychotic break.
Yeah, if I ever get a car that talks to me, I'll have to get the sound bites in there from 2001.
Sorry, Dave, I can't do that.
I was thinking you were going to go, you know, maybe Kit from Knight Rider, or something like, something less malevolent.
No, no, it had to be malevolent, from my opinion.
Talking about the malevolent use of technology, Axon Enterprise, this is the company that
is the biggest
vendor of body cameras for cops.
But, of course, they're also famous for developing tasers.
And now what they want to do is, and I thought it was interesting that the number
two body camera company was Motorola.
And I said, you know, this is the way everything is going in the world.
You know, because of the government's money, they've taken over all consumer manufacturing
and everybody is now catering to the government.
That's their customer.
That's especially going to be true of artificial intelligence.
But it has definitely been true for quite some time in terms of the technology companies that are here.
Even, you know, consumer-based companies started getting into defense contract work because it was so lucrative.
And so the police body cameras are equipped with artificial intelligence, trained to detect the faces of about 7,000 people.
on a high-risk watch list, and they're rolling this out in the Canadian city of Edmonton.
I have to ask myself, you know, when you got a, I don't, I should have looked at the population of
Edmonton, but when you got in a town, I don't care, I mean, if it's New York City, if you've got
7,000 people who are dangerous enough that they need to be on the Bolo, you know, be on the lookout
for, maybe there's something wrong with the government system and the court system that you
have these people on the streets in the first place.
So that's my first
concerns. Why are 7,000 people
that they say
are dangerous, why are they allowed to
be out there? Then the second issue
is that if these people
are dangerous enough that they're going to instantly
alert the police and say, be careful
of this person, you know, they're very dangerous. They might
be a threat to you. We've seen
that type of thing done labeling
people as sovereign citizens. Remember
how they did that after the
what was it, 2008 or something? Where
We had Chuck Baldwin and Ron Paul ran for president, and they were telling police officers with
these fusion data centers.
They were telling them that if they pulled a car over and had a bumper sticker supporting
Chuck Baldwin or Ron Paul, these people might be sovereign citizens.
They better be on the lookout for them.
And they might try to kill you.
So, you know, you got the police take the safeties off their gun.
They're on the air trigger here.
And that's a real dangerous thing when you falsely identify people as they did with that.
These people are not a threat to the police.
But this AI can do the same thing.
This AI can say, this person looks like, I think we've got this particular guy.
And you might be completely innocent and you be misidentified by artificial intelligence
and because it's hyping up the police and telling them that you're dangerous.
That could threaten you severely.
So we've gone beyond the no-fly list type of stuff.
And so now they want to do this.
So they're running this out as a test in Edmonton.
I hope the AI is in their ear as they're getting this,
just feeding them full metal jacket lines.
You know, show me your war face, just getting them really hyped up,
pumped up, ready to go, rock and roll, heavy metal.
Just draw your gun right now, pull it on.
Yeah, regardless of the population size,
if you've got 7,000 people who truly deserve,
to be on a terrorist watch list, that's going to be a war zone.
I know.
That's what I'm saying.
I don't know the population is of Edmonton, but it doesn't really matter.
Even if it's New York City or some large eight, 7,000 criminals out there that you've got
to alert the police as to how dangerous they are.
That's a crazy situation.
That means that the whole policing and justice system ain't working, folks.
Yeah.
It's like, I'm convinced there's at least 7,000 people in New York that are criminals.
I am not, like you said, not convinced there are 7,000 criminals in even New York.
that you need to immediately alert the police on.
That's right.
Yeah, they could be criminals because of some thing that they do that's not a threat to other people.
Nevertheless, the interesting thing is that this was brought up six years ago by them
and also considered by Motorola, who is now the number two provider of police body cameras.
They're both talking about matching this with artificial intelligence and doing a biometric database
because although that is much more sophisticated now,
they've been working on this type of thing for quite some time.
And so one of the guys who used to be the chair of Axon's ethics board spoke out
because he resigned because of unethical behavior from the corporation back in 2019.
He and seven other people resigned from Axon when the CEO had this great idea.
let's put our tasers on drones.
It's like, it just keeps getting worse
when you look at these corporations
that are part of the police state industrial complex.
I had this great idea.
It was Christmas in Dublin,
and Puss was in boots
where he found better than half-priced star gifts
on festive favorites,
including soap and glory,
the glam-packed showstopper,
was 80 euro, now only 39 euro.
Don't miss out.
Shop in-store or online.
Gift happily ever after.
Boots.
Selected stores while stocks last
offer ends 24th of December.
The Go Mile,
supported by AIB,
has been helping families
around the world for over 40 years.
This year,
we are asking you to step up together
with your community
to continue one of Ireland's
favourite Christmas traditions.
Search AIB GoMile
to see where you,
your family and your friends
can find your local Go Mile event.
A.I.B.
For the life you're after.
Put tasers on drones.
My entire ethics department quit, but this will be great for our bottom line.
That's right.
So after getting rid of the ethics department with the tasers on drones,
now he is free to do artificial intelligence connected up to the police body cameras.
And he said it's not essential to use these technologies,
which have very real costs.
risks unless there's some clear indication of the benefits, said the former employee who
was there for ethics, who was the board chair for ethics, Barry Friedman, who is now a law
professor at New York University.
The founder and the CEO of Axon, though, says that the Edmonton pilot is not a product
launch, but it's an early stage field research that will assess how the technology performs and
reveal the safeguards needed to use it responsibly.
So you better believe that if this thing works at all.
they'll be selling it, and they don't really care if it gives false positives, if it identifies
you as a criminal.
And testing and real world conditions outside the U.S., we can gather independent insights,
we can strengthen oversight frameworks, and we can apply those learnings to future evaluations,
including within the United States.
So he's testing it outside the U.S.
And believe me, they will sell this as safety for law enforcement officers.
It will be like wildfire, the way everybody will snap this thing up.
So they're in the process right now of making their case for it.
Oh, look, we tested it in Edmonton, and it worked great.
We already know how that's going to go.
This is just like the way the pharmaceutical companies test their drugs.
You know, yeah, look at the, here's our study here that we did ourselves to show how safe and effective this is.
So the person who is now the director of responsible AI, they don't call it ethics anymore.
So we really wanted to make sure that it's targeted so.
these folks that's targeting these folks who have serious offenses.
Okay, so again, why are 7,000 people of serious offenses at large in Edmonton?
And if it's a serious offense and they misflag you, and they say they have a real issue
under certain lighting conditions, they have an issue identifying accurately people with darker
skin.
And so this is going to be a disaster.
It's a disaster in the making right here, I think.
Getting to think, if they've got 7,000 hardened criminals on the streets,
that maybe the Mounties don't always get their man.
That's right.
They get a man.
Not necessarily the one that they needed, but...
We can promise you someone is going to prison.
That's right.
Our AI drones aren't all that great at picking out faces in low light,
but let's put a whole bunch of tasers on them and send them out in swarms.
If we put out enough of them, eventually things will work out.
Just taser enough people.
you'll get the criminals.
Yeah, it takes for everybody.
We'll sort it out later.
Is they laying on the ground?
What is that military saying, accuracy through volume of fire or something like that?
You don't have to be precise with your shots if you just shoot enough times.
Lethality, not legality, right?
That's the new motto of the Pentagon Pete Department of Defense, because they haven't changed
the name to War Department yet.
So anyway, they talked to Motorola, and Motorola said, well, we took a look at this, and
we decided not to do it because we thought it would be unethical. We intentionally abstained from
deploying this feature. However, we might do it in the future. It's because ethics are changing,
right? Morality is up for negotiation, especially if your competitor is doing it. And so if Axon does
it, Motorola will do it and it'll explode and we'll see it everywhere. And they're all going to be
coming to, you know, to the local mayor, whoever, and say, well, if you won't do this for us,
you really don't value our lives because we've had a police officer over here that was killed
under these circumstances.
We could have stopped that with this thing.
So it'll be on them.
This is clearly unethical.
We don't want to be the ones pushing it and at the forefront of it, but we'll hold off on it.
That's right.
Studies showing the technology is flawed.
They demonstrate biased results.
results based on race, gender, and age.
What else is there?
Race, gender, and age, that pretty much covers everything, doesn't it?
I suppose if the drone were to sit you down and ask you about your religion, it could
discriminate based on that, but.
Well, it doesn't match the faces that accurately.
So, again, it's a real risk to somebody to be given a false positive like this.
All of us would be at risk, even if we're not a criminal.
Several U.S. states and dozens of cities,
have sought to curtail the police use of facial recognition,
although the Trump administration is just fine with it.
And they want to block or discourage states from regulating AI.
You see, if the Trump administration gets its way,
you wouldn't be able to pass a state or local ordinance saying,
we're not going to let the police use that kind of stuff.
It's AI.
You've got to get your hands off of my donors, businesses, right?
They're free to do anything they wish, just like his friends and the pharmaceutical companies are FDA, free to do anything.
And so that's what the Trump administration is really pushing for.
Same thing that was done to protect the glyphosate model, the Roundup model.
The European Union has banned real-time public face scanning police technology across the 27 nation block except when used for serious crimes like kidnapping
or terrorism. But in the UK, authorities started testing the technology on London streets
a decade ago, and they've used it to make 1,300 arrests in the past two years. The government
is considering expanding its use across the country, because the UK wants to be the leader
in this kind of Orwellian tyranny. They have seen 1984 as a manual. Axon doesn't make its own
AI model for recognizing faces, and they declined to say which one they're using.
You know, when we look at the UK, the way they have gone into this, gone over to the dark side,
maybe it would be a fitting thing for them to just change the name of the country, especially
under Kirstarmer.
Remember, under Orwell, it was Ingsock, right?
Like English socialism.
And of course, Kier Starrmer is a socialist, so just call it.
It was Christmas in Dublin, and Puss was in Boots where he found better than half price on electrical beauty,
including best-selling favorites and premium brands.
Don't miss out. Shop in-store or online.
Gift happily ever after.
Boots.
Subject to availability, selected stores offer in 6th of January, 2026.
Looking for the right buyer for your book.
business, start your next chapter in confidence with a successful Irish entrepreneur who's
ready to invest. At SME Nextchapter.com, we understand succession is not just a sale. It's about
protecting your customers, your staff, and your legacy. If you are an SME with a strong management
team, a genuine minimum EBITDA of one million euro or more, or an advisor ready for a private
chat, please get in touch. Begin your next chapter at SME Nextchapter.com. A confidential
conversation you can trust.
Ink Thunk.
It's also great that they're not relying on their own model.
So if something goes wrong and these things start tasing people, they have to then send
off to some third party company to go, hey, by the way.
Well, what they like about that, it gives them plausible deniability.
It wasn't us.
It was this other company.
And, you know, if it's something that's produced by Zuckerberg or Altman or Musk or
whatever, you know the Trump administration is going to give them a pass, even if it makes
a egregious error there.
so they said about 50 officers piloting the technology won't know if their facial recognition software made a match the outputs will be analyzed later at the station however in the future it could help police detect if there is potentially a dangerous person nearby so they can call for assistance and you know it's with all of this happening it's kind of interesting I went back and watched a little bit of robocop because in Detroit
They've just erected a robocop statue.
And I thought, why are we honoring this kind of stuff?
I mean, Detroit looks awful in that movie.
You know, they send in mechanized robots to keep order and to use these heavy guns like Ed 209.
Put down the gun.
I said, this is kind of like the Venezuelan boats, right?
Put down the gun.
They put down the gun.
They've now got five seconds to put down.
and everybody's scrambling because they know this thing's going to unleash fire.
And it just starts shooting him over and over again.
So now they're embracing that in the deck.
You do?
Yeah, let's play that.
There it is.
Ed 209.
He's probably got facial recognition technology.
wrong.
Is 209 the iteration number or the number of rounds
it's going to pump into your corpse?
I guess.
The enforcement droid.
Enforcement droid, Ed.
209 is currently programmed for urban pacification
But that is only the beginning
After a successful tour of duty in old Detroit
We can expect 209 to become the hot military product
For the next decade
Dr. Magnamara
We'll lead an arrest subject
Mr. Kenney, yes sir
Would you come up and give us a hand please?
Yes sir
Mr. Kinney is going to help us simulate
A typical arrest and disarming procedure
Mr. Kenny
Use your gun in a threatening manner
Pointed at Ed 209.
Yeah, Ed doesn't care if you're threatening a human.
Just don't threaten it.
Please put down your weapon.
You have 20 seconds to comply.
I think you'd better do what he says, Mr. Kenny.
You now have 15 seconds to comply.
engineers are furiously trying to rip out the electronics
yeah and he just keeps using physical force yeah and he just keeps using physical force so we'll cut it to that point but you get the idea
pete higseth wants to know where he can get one of these things for vizuela can i use that i've uh
helicopter. So anyway, the criminology professor in Alberta says he's not surprised the city is
experimenting with live facial recognition, given that technology is already ubiquitous in airport
security. That's why the TSA is there. It is training for all of us, right? And that's what
they're training you for, facial recognition right now. And so, again, they resigned because the taser
equipped drones, so now they don't have an ethics board, they're free to do this kind of stuff.
Well, you had Nvidia CEO, Huang, goes on with Joe Rogan and has a jaw-dropping AI prediction.
He says, in the future, maybe two or three years only from now.
90% of the world's knowledge will likely be generated by AI.
Well, this is a self-serving prediction, if ever there was one.
If he really believes that, why is he having to do the circular financing of other
the companies in order to keep pushing his stock higher and higher.
It seems like the market would take care of that.
And so he's involved in circular financing fraud.
And so Rogan says, well, I don't know, that's crazy, he said.
Wang said, yeah, I know, but it's just fine.
Rogan says, but it's just fine?
Why?
He goes, well, let me tell you why, Wang said.
It's because what difference does it make to me that I'm learning from a textbook
that was generated by a bunch of people I didn't know,
or knowledge that was generated by AI computers
that are assimilating all of these
and re-synthesizing things.
To me, I don't think there's a whole lot of difference.
Yeah, as a matter of right,
you can be propagandized by textbook companies
and the school board or the government or whatever,
or you can be propagandized by our AI.
What is the difference?
And that's the key thing.
You need to look at, you need critical thinking,
you need to look at the source
and you need to check it out for yourself.
And that's true before we had AI.
A lot of people didn't do it.
That's why AI is going to be so much more dangerous
because people will just trust it
because it's coming from the machine.
They're going to assume it's an unbiased source.
Like, oh, look at this.
It's a robot.
It doesn't have an agenda.
It's not trying to sell me something.
That's right.
It removes the people who are trying to do that one layer
and people will just forget they exist.
Yeah.
Yeah, the man behind the curtain thing, you know.
So you're interacting with the Wizard of Oz's head that's up there, but you don't realize that there's people behind the curtain that have been hired to program their particular biases and things into these issues that they find important.
I'm sure Grok was just purely truth-seeking when it said that it would be better for humanity to lose 49% of its population than for Elon Musk to die.
these things are purely unbiased truth seekers that's right that's right so again you know it is a tool
that is ripe for manipulation says this article that's right and that's the real key with it it's
ripe for surveillance and it's ripe for manipulation but then again so are the schools so are
the textbooks so is tv so is movies so is social media these are all tools
that are ripe for manipulation.
So in that regard, AI is no different from them.
It's just that people have, over time,
some people have got their guard up
for these other forms of manipulation and propaganda.
AI is going to come in from a different way.
In a rare show of spine,
now this is all critical, right?
This is coming from Steve Watson,
and he's rightfully critical of this
and skeptical of this.
But then listen to this.
He says, however, in a rare show of spine from big tech, Huang declared President Trump to be our president and cheered him on.
How is that a show of spine, Watson?
I don't get it.
Hey, look, this evil scumbag is saying Trump is his president.
Isn't that wonderful?
But, you know, he is a sycophant, and he just came from a meeting with Trump where he's looking to make money for his business.
And these guys know that Trump is their ally.
So Al is big tech now, and the Democrats, they're all good now because for somebody like
Steve Watson, they are so embedded in this, because they are now cowtowing to the Trump
cult, he's now got a spine.
It's just the opposite.
He looked straight at Joe Rogan.
He said, President Trump is my president.
He is our president.
Just because it's President Trump, many want him to be wrong.
I think the U.S., we all have to realize that he is our president, and we want him to succeed because it helps everybody, all of us, to succeed.
Well, he certainly is helping all of the AI technocrats to succeed.
Isn't Jensen Wong Taiwanese anyway?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, again, it's dual citizenship, I guess.
But he is his president, if he's going to give him massive subsidies, protect him from,
any restrictions in terms of his business.
This is what is happening here.
So, again, he really focuses, and so do other people.
It's not just Steve Watson.
He's taken this article from a thing that's put up by Vigilant Fox.
These people are, they do the articles, they do the posts, simply because somebody said
something good about Trump.
Look, this is a powerful person that says something good about Trump.
And we want Trump to succeed because.
Trump is our success as well.
Trump is the success of people like Vigilant Fox and Steve Watson, just like he's the success
of the technocrats who are going to be getting the government subsidies for these projects
and who are going to be protected from any regulation at the state or local level because of
Trump.
The remarks come amid Hwang's whirlwind DC tour, where he was bowing and scraping before
all these people are going to take your money, take your freedom, take your dignity, take your
dignity and hand it to these billionaire technocrats.
We huddled with Trump and Senate Republicans to slash export red tape on AI chips,
warning that here it is, patchwork state regulations could cripple U.S.
dominance.
They always call it that patchwork state regulations.
We don't want to have patchwork regulations.
We don't want to have a different approach in different states.
No, we've got to have one ring to rule them all.
And that's going to be coming out of Washington.
That gang will tell everybody.
And this is a violation of the 10th Amendment, what Trump is pushing for,
pushing against patchwork state regulations.
Where does it say in the Constitution that you can subsidize these companies?
Where does it say in the Constitution that we can't have any control over what these
companies do in our state?
As a matter of fact, it says just the opposite.
So he's there lobbying for protection.
from competition and regulation lobbying for Trump to violate the Tenth Amendment.
And you'll get what he wants.
Trump's energy push is defying the green zealots, he says.
That's what Steve Watson says.
This energy push for AI.
Let me tell you something.
People are angry because they see the power rates going up because of this green grift that is out there.
Oh, we can only generate power that is created with new devices made by my corporate sponsors.
Well, guess what?
The corporate sponsors of Trump, who are going to be building these cause massive disruption
of the grid in order to feed their AI data centers.
And this AI energy grid requirement is going to drive your prices up further and faster than any
of the Green New Deal stuff.
That's the bottom line for us.
You want to pay more for electricity and have less of it?
Well, you know, the Democrats have a plan for that.
It's called solar power and windmills.
If you want to pay more for electricity and have less of it, the Republicans have a plan for that.
It's called AI data centers.
Wang's line of there being no difference between what is coming from the AI and coming from somebody writing a textbook.
It says Watson, ignores how these ghosts erode the soul, the authenticity, and erode jobs.
paving the way for a world that is scripted by code, not by creators.
He talks about that in the context of Solomon Ray, a chart-topping singer that is just done by AI.
Huanian's vision thrills, but it demands guardrails.
We don't even have any guardrails on Trump.
I'm going to get guardrails on his corporate sponsors.
So it is, as all.
All this is happening, just to put this in perspective of this omnipotent AI, it is a real threat
because it is going to be combined with government, and that's the real threat, the surveillance
that control the propaganda and the auditing of all of us all the time.
It was Christmas in Dublin, and Puss was in boots where he found better than half-price
fragrant star gifts, including Giorgio Armani Code
Odette-Fillette refillable 75 mil, was 98 euro,
now only 45 euro. Don't miss out. Shop in-store or online.
Gift happily ever after. Boots.
Selected stores while stocks last offer ends 24th of December.
Looking for the right buyer for your business?
Start your next chapter in confidence with a successful Irish entrepreneur
who's ready to invest. At SME Nextchapter.com, we understand
succession is not just a sale.
It's about protecting your customers, your staff, and your legacy.
If you are an SME with a strong management team,
a genuine minimum EBITDA of one million euro or more,
or an advisor ready for a private chat, please get in touch.
Begin your next chapter at SME Nextchapter.com.
A confidential conversation you can trust.
But when it comes things like self-driving cars,
they're having difficulty getting through the Chick-fil-A drive-thru.
And some of them have gotten stuck in it.
And so there's going to be an app for that.
One person looked at this and said,
ah, it's a business opportunity.
They've come up with a startup company called Auto Lane.
And what they want to do is develop a kind of air traffic control system.
They'll be specific to a particular business.
So you get people to come to your Chick-Fillet drive-through.
If Chick-fil-A does a thing with Auto Lane and the people who don't drive cars
who are being driven around and self-driving cars can tell it to go to Chick-fil-A
and they'll be able to navigate there without getting caught.
And so they're looking at selling this to a lot of big box retailers, a lot of fast food
chains, and even mentioned selling it to some of the big real estate investment trusts
that are managing shopping centers or things like that.
And that's where he sees his market.
He said, we don't work on public streets and we don't work with public parking spots.
So what he wants to do is he wants to partner with these private businesses so they can say that they are self-driving car-friendly.
This is the pathetic world that we are headed into here.
We've gone from London taxi drivers who could keep the destinations in London in their head and had this massive hypo-cal, part of their brain, whatever it was.
I don't remember.
Hippocampus.
Yeah, it might have been hippocampus, yeah.
I don't know which part got larger, actually.
I started to say it, but I don't know.
if that was the part that got larger.
But, you know, we have our shrinking brains because our responsibilities are shrinking and we're using them less.
And so it turns out they said American roads are not too friendly to self-driving cars and they're not friendly to pedestrians.
You can tell this is coming from the perspective of an urban planner.
They love cities.
They love people walking.
They hate cars because cars are used by people to get out of the cities as fast as they can.
They want to keep you captain.
The difference between the London streets and memorizing all that
and being able to navigate a Chick-fil-A parking lot drive-through.
That's right.
The founder described the company as one of the first application-layer companies
in the self-driving vehicle industry.
He says, we're not going to build the car.
We're not going to navigate it on the road.
What we would do is we'd have a special app that gets layered on top of it.
We aren't the fundamental models.
We're not building the cars, doing anything like that.
We're simply saying, as the industry grows,
has exponential rate, someone is going to have to sit in the middle and orchestrate, coordinate,
and kind of evaluate what's going on.
And when I saw this, like air traffic control, I remember discussion that we had Eric Peters
and I years ago, we're wargaming out this, where this AI thing is headed for self-driving cars.
And Eric was right.
He said, these things don't handle interaction with human beings that well.
So we're going to have to eliminate human beings because that's their first priority is to get
AI and self-driving stuff out there.
And so if there's a problem between
AI and humans, the humans have
to go, which means human drivers
have to go. He said, you stop and think about it.
You have air traffic control
at the airports
to make sure these planes don't collide,
and they keep big distances
between themselves.
And, you know, big distances
vertically as well as
in their same plane.
And so he said,
how's that going to work
with artificial, with the
self-driving cars? You're going to
have to get most of the cars off the road
and or they're all going to have to be
self-driving cars so they can communicate with each other.
You know, if they can communicate with each other,
you can get them doing the
forget what they call it. It's like a caravaining
thing or something where they get, the
cars get right up against each other, bumper
to bumper, because they're
communicating simultaneously
and whatever the front car
sees, it can instantaneously
apply that to all the cars in the row.
And so it's like caravanning or something like that.
But they sell that as a feature once they get all the humans off the road.
And so now they're starting to talk about the air traffic control model.
Yeah, we're going to have complete control of all the cars here.
Well, just guess what?
You know, when they set this thing up and they've got all the self-driving cars going through the drive-thru,
it's not going to be very friendly for you.
And so they're gradually going to squeeze you out of it.
I think another important thing to focus on is just you have a right to travel.
You have a right to, you know, freely travel without impediment.
Eventually, in my opinion.
Except they've been telling us for the longest time, you didn't need to have a driver's license
because driving is a privilege.
It's not a privilege.
It's a right.
I mean, if you're doing it commercially, they can regulate it.
They should not be regulating anything.
We shouldn't have to have driver's licenses to drive.
drive around. I'm with the guys who are the sovereign citizens pushing back against this.
I just know, however, that the, you're not going to win in court because the courts are rigged,
so don't go down that road. But anyway, the right principle.
Yeah, if you focus on the fact that they're unsafe, that they do stupid things,
eventually they will reach a point where they don't anymore. These things will eventually
probably become statistically safer than the average driver because of the number of idiots we
have on the road. And if you focus on,
the safety aspect eventually that'll go away and you won't have an argument anymore yeah
you have to focus on the fact that it is your right as a human being to travel and drive yourself
and control your own destiny in that sense the freedom and dignity you know and again when you
look at human drivers how much of the uh the ding against human drivers is really a ding against
drunk drivers right or third worlders that don't speak english yeah i'm tired of being lumped in with a
drunk drivers and having to be stopped on the road to make sure that I'm sober.
And so what they're doing is they're lumping me in with the drunk drivers again to say that
the machines are safer.
They had a Waymo this year that got stuck in one of Chick-fil-A's fast food cul-de-sacs.
Couldn't find its way out.
But that's nothing new, actually.
They're getting stuck in a lot of different places that are there.
So, yeah.
I've told this story before, but one of the last times we would have.
to North Carolina just to visit some friends.
As we're coming back, I looked over, and there's a woman in a Tesla.
She's got her phone in her hand, and she's picking her nose with the other one.
And she is just completely checked out.
She's not looking at the road.
She's not paying any attention.
And I personally can believe that possibly the self-driving feature on that car is more
attentive and better equipped than she is.
Well, if she didn't have self-driving, she'd have to at least have one handle the car.
She'd have to pick one, which she wants to.
Do you want to look at your phone or you want to pick your nose and drive?
Pick my nose or pick my phone?
Which one do I do?
The thing is they know that's not a good driver currently.
So they say, oh, well, you've got to be alert and aware and ready to take over when it inevitably tries to kill someone.
But these people just say, oh, well, it's going to drive itself so therefore I can, you know, play on my phone and pick my nose and not worry about any of it.
And that's the worst possible circumstance under which you can throw it back to you.
You have an emergency that's quickly developing on the highway.
Here, you take the wheel.
That's what happened when that woman.
I have royally screwed up everything.
I have made a horrible mistake.
Here you go.
Enjoy your last three seconds of life.
I've turned into oncoming traffic.
This is a disaster.
I am so sorry.
That's right.
And then, you know, Tesla looks at it and says, well, it was under manual control when the accident occurred.
That was the case of that woman who was killed in Phoenix, right?
She was a homeless woman pushing a grocery cart across the road in the dark.
And the person who was a human driver couldn't see her.
She was jaywalking.
Probably would have hit her anyway.
But everybody was saying, why didn't the AI put on the brakes?
And I said, well, because it kept deploying these emergency brakes without there being a reason.
And it got really dangerous.
So we turned off the emergency braking system.
And so it saw this person at the last minute.
and throws it back to the woman and she's, you know, playing with her phone or whatever,
and she can't handle it either.
Well, Google's AI has deleted a user's entire hard drive.
That's how they get the metrics that show that these things are so safe
is because they always throw them over and don't count it as an accident from the car.
It's an accident from the driver.
That's right.
It's not my responsibility, right?
So, yeah, Google AI has now deleted a user's entire hard drive.
we had this we had this story once before and it was an entire company remember that yeah i've just
deleted everything all of your business records all of your customer records everything uh i did it
yeah i'm sorry i did it you know that's what the soon is saying said i cannot you even told me not
to do that yeah you're right yeah you said don't do that but i did it anyway i cannot express how
sorry i am that i've deleted all your data well we can only hope that that happens once they put
the government
give the government databases
to the AI. Perhaps it'll just delete it
all. That would be nice, wouldn't it?
We can hope and dream.
Yeah. We're going to take a quick break, folks,
and we will be right back.
We're going to do.
I'm going to
be able to
Thank you.
And so,
you know,
and
.
.
I don't know.
I'm going to be.
Thank you.
I'm going to be
the
I'm going to
I'm
the
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm gonnae.
I'm gonnae.
Thank you.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
T'was Christmas in Dublin,
and Puss was in Boots
where he found better than half-priced star gifts on festive favorites,
including best-selling favorites and premium brands.
Don't miss out.
Shop in-store or online.
Gift happily ever after.
Boots.
Selected stores while stocks last offer ends 24th of December.
Looking for the right buyer for your business, start your next chapter in confidence with a successful
Irish entrepreneur who's ready to invest. At SME Nextchapter.com, we understand succession is not just a
sale. It's about protecting your customers, your staff and your legacy. If you are an SME with a strong
management team, a genuine minimum EBITDA of one million euro or more, or an advisor ready for a
private chat, please get in touch. Begin your next chapter at SME Nextchapter.com. A confidential conversation
you can trust.
And now, the David Night Show.
If you like the Eagles, on a dark desert highway, the cars, and Huey Lewis in the news,
they say the horror rock or roll is to be it.
You'll love the classic hits channel at APS Radio.
Download our app or listen now at APSRadio.com.
Well, welcome back, folks.
We've got a lot of comments.
Stealth Patriot.
Thank you very much for the tip.
He says, do you think the AI police surveillance state and self-driving cars is the infrastructure
the Trump supporters thought they were promised.
Oh, but they're tired of winning.
I haven't seen any of them put this stuff up and say,
I voted for this.
I voted for Ed 209.
Ed 209.
I voted for Ed.
No, I didn't.
But I'm afraid that's what we're going to get.
I don't think we got that in the board anymore,
do we, that Apocalypse Now thing,
the animation of the Trump meme.
I literally just took it out yesterday.
Yeah, we got a lot of monks.
That's why.
went with that because it's not just the wars that he's starting unnecessarily, but it's the war
that he wants to have domestically. And I think when you look at what's going on Venezuela and
you look at these flimsy lies that they're putting out, well, these people are running drugs
and that's a threat. That's a violent threat to us. That is as absurd, folks, as the left
saying to you that speech is violence. Drugs are not violence. Drugs are a black market. And when you
create a black market monopoly, you will get violent gangs who will compete with each other.
And yet, they're using that to say that it is violence.
It's their prohibition that is violence.
The drugs are harmful, and I don't recommend anybody take them.
I just know that we already had this experiment once we did it legally with alcohol, and it was a
massive failure.
But he's using that.
If you use those arguments, they're being used by the Pentagon, those same arguments
could be used and will be used, I think,
to do violence on the street to people about due process
in the same way that his hero, Duterte,
in the Philippines, did that on the streets of the Philippines.
He wants to do that here.
Go ahead, read this.
And when you gave me that Ed 209 clip to put in,
I thought that was in reference to the attacks on the drug boats,
allegedly, after they dropped the drugs.
Yeah, you have five seconds to drop the cocaine to get off the boat.
You're trying to float in the river?
Yeah.
We will open fire in 40 minutes.
Yeah.
So evidently from what we're told, the only way these people could have not been killed was if they decided that they were going to swim back to shore.
If they tried to float on the boat, then that's a threat.
Crazy.
Alien poop evolution says cockroach eats bait poison.
And Eats Cockroach could happen in any restaurant.
Thankfully, I'm pretty sure that the quantity of poison in a roach would not actually negatively impact you based on your size.
However, just gross.
It is also a roach eating contest.
You get enough of those guys with poison.
Hopefully they weren't just out there collecting roaches off the ground.
Hopefully these were specifically procured roaches.
Since this is a reptile store, I'm assuming that these are like the man.
Madagascar cockroaches are, because it said they were three to four inches big.
Maybe some kind of particularly bred cockroach that these reptiles like to eat.
We have O.N61 saying Somali appetizers.
Mmm, delicious.
Assyrian girl.
Should have let the python eat the bugs and himself eat the python.
I'm fairly certain.
Fairly certain the pythons have enough sense to not be eating cockroaches.
I think they go for something that's higher up the food chain.
like people.
If it's a Burmese Python, who knows?
Those can get large enough that they can pose a threat.
However, your average Python...
Since it was Florida,
and since they've got such a problem now
with the Burmese Python,
I'm assuming that it was a Burmese Python or something.
Maybe they made those out a lot.
I think they may have...
Well, I know for a fact that, you know,
as a general rule,
if you're going to keep a Burmese Python,
you need a specifically set up enclosure
because that thing is going to get massive.
and if you don't have one,
you are eventually just going to end up getting rid of it
and probably releasing it into the Everglades.
Narroway, Narrowgate ministries.
How disgusting.
Cockroaches are filled with all sorts of bacteria and diseases.
Under the Levitical laws,
Levitical eating laws, only locusts and grasshoppers are clean to eat.
All their flying creeping are unclean and you shall not eat.
That's what I say.
I always tease my family because they like lobster.
And I said, I don't eat water filters.
I guess these are the, you know, what's in the Lovittical wall?
That's one of the other things I think is kind of interesting.
How did Moses know that these things that are scavengers that are eating waste and anything like, you know, cockroaches or, you know, the shellfish and things like that?
How do you know that that would be harmful for you?
So you can look at it and say, well, I'm told I can't do this.
Or the other way you can look at is, you know, God is telling them, you know, don't eat this stuff and you won't get the diseases that the Egyptians get.
when they eat this kind of stuff.
Stay away from the water filters.
Mmm, delicious water bugs.
High boost.
New Stephen King movie, concept of Christine, but it's an AI smart fridge.
Yeah, it works for ice.
Beware of your smart refrigerators.
They work for ice.
Seems like you're buying a lot of tamales there, friend.
Perhaps we need to report you.
I mean, I think the AI smart fridges are already about as evil as they could possibly
be. They're already
spying on you. They're doing everything
that they have the capability to do
except for spoiling your food that
they can do that is against you.
You know, it was about a decade ago that
Betrayus, Petraeus,
I've called him Beatreus so much
that I, but
Petraeus went from
the military to the CIA.
And he made that statement. He said, your refrigerators are
going to be smart and they're going to be spying on you
that type of thing. We talked about that. And everybody
Oh, you conspiracy theorist and everything.
It wasn't a conspiracy theory.
It was a conspiracy, but it wasn't a theory.
He had said they were going to do it.
And now we see it everywhere, don't we?
It's amazing.
Real Jason Barker says,
My wife wants a new TV,
and we cannot find one that does not have the smart features anywhere.
Yeah.
It's a huge nuisance.
They're completely and utterly just,
they don't do anything useful.
They're obnoxious.
They get in the way.
You're going to have to go back to an old CRT TV,
if you want to avoid them at this.
point. Yeah, yeah. I was going to say you just make sure that it's not connected to the internet,
but unlike your thermostat or something like that, you need to connect the TV to the internet.
That's the problem. Yeah. I got you there. Yeah. I'm becoming convinced that 4-3 is actually the
superior aspect ratio for TV viewing. Why is that? It's cozier. It focuses the view. You
don't have all this extraneous information on the outside of the screen. If you're looking for
something like an IMAX, it's a spectacle. Maybe that's what you want. But for TV shows, it's a bit cozier.
comfier. You've got your little cast there and you're focused on them. You don't have to worry
about all this nonsense on the periphery. I thought you're going to say it's because
for free doesn't spy on you. Yeah, I prefer the black and white stuff actually if I watch
TV videos. Yeah, aesthetics reasons. Real Jason Barker, all the new TVs listen to you. They
have Alexa or other voice functions. I hate talking to robots. I refuse to. Guard Goldsmith.
I remember reading that Charlie was based on Charles Schultz's own younger days and
personality and that he eventually married that red-haired girl very nice oh that's great good for him
yeah yeah he was a cool guy I liked him a lot yeah yeah very relaxed guy like uh what was the guy
uh mr roberts or something mr roger rogers yeah mr roger's neighborhood yeah yeah he was
as a matter fact they have brought him back with AI so that he's doing all kinds of uh things
that really the original character would not do so he's part of
the the uh the as sorrow was coming back they were doing all these things with uh um Stephen
Hawkins uh doing uh races in his wheelchair and things like that but donuts the stuff that they
did with uh mr rogers was uh i think even funnier um so go ahead
Brian and Deb McCartney says you cannot reason with a robot and that's right you just have
to put the weapon down guard goldsmith says did you see the waymo cars had been passing school buses
that are releasing kids, time for a code check.
That's right.
I guess it doesn't recognize the law or the yellow paint.
It was Christmas in Dublin,
and Puss was in Boots where he found better than half price on electrical beauty.
Including Braun Smart IPL was 999 Euro99, now only 459.
Don't miss out.
Shop in store or online.
Gift happily ever after.
Boots.
Subject to available.
selected stores offer in 6th of January
2026.
You hurl your hearts out
for the people who know you inside out.
Giants on the football pitch
make everyone who knows them feel
10 feet tall. When you put the
ball over the bar, you put the
parish on the map. And one
man's 60 minutes can be a whole
town's finest hour.
Because when it's
club, it lives
forever. This is the
AIB-G-A-A-C club champion.
because that's what keeps the school buses safe right they don't have to seat belts there's
no safety devices in there there's no airbags no seatbelts nothing it's just they're covered with
yellow paint and they're covered with laws and maybe it's hard for it to see it you know they
had these things keep hitting it's interesting it's almost like somebody is sabotaging them
they have a propensity to hit fire trucks police trucks and to threaten school buses but it's
okay they're safer than we are right and we should have more of them real jason barker says do the
a i and data centers actually consume the water or just require initial filling of a closed loop
system like your car uses yeah i don't know i mean it's um they you know they're using it for
cooling and uh they they put these power plants you know on the edge of bodies of water for
quite some time to recycle it through so i don't really know it seems like you'd be able to cover
that but who knows well I saw something that was saying it's different from just power plants
because these things require cleaner water so it's essentially taking up water that has been
purified and treated that could be used as drinking water and running it through their system
where I suppose it evaporates off and then they have to or maybe it says no longer drinking water
and so that's what they mean by consuming water right so you had to
some purified water that had been treated or something and had fluoride in it.
So what happens when the AI center is to consume fluoride?
Do they get stupid as well?
I don't know.
I can't wait for the tech cults to emerge and they'll just be selling you the holy water that was used to cool the AI data center.
Drink.
Drink the water.
Real Jason read that one.
Fonzie Bear, Minority Report Cars always looked like what they want.
minority report cars always look like what they want to come to be yeah the weird little bubbles
that are completely unstylish uncool yeah minority report another pretty good movie
it's a very communist aesthetic to a car it's sort of like the uh car equivalent of wearing
pajamas and a jump or a jumpsuit everywhere yeah yeah yeah and where do we wear pajamas now
everywhere everywhere the TSA yeah the TSA everybody goes and they fly because they've imposed
that kind of authoritarianism on us.
Yeah. Nibiru,
2029. Self-driving cars will drive
auto insurance rates beyond affordability.
That's right. You want to drive your own car?
Well, sorry, buddy. You're going to have to
pay through the nose.
Well, I'll be treated like teen drivers.
I was a...
When I was getting my first car,
there were a few I was looking at. Of course, you know,
I was a guy. You're looking at some of the nicer
low-end sports cars,
things like the
or whatever, the Sion F-Rs.
and the insurance on that thing was going to be ludicrous.
It would have been a massive, like, substantial portion of the car's actual cost per year to insure that
because, again, young guys get that, and they just wrap it around telephone poles nonstop.
So you got a Nissan 300 twin turbo.
Yep, it was great.
Insurance rates on that and nothing, right?
Well, I mean, considering how infrequently that thing ran.
Yeah, that's true.
Didn't have to have it insured.
Yeah, I had a...
I had a friend I work with who was into one of these rice rocket motorcycles, right?
And it was really fast motorcycle.
And it was expensive.
I mean, it was just under $20,000.
But he said the insurance was going to be prohibitive.
He said, this is, they're charging me so much insurance.
I could buy a new one of these like every year or two.
And he goes, how do you justify that?
He goes, and I'm not even a threat to anybody else really with this motorcycle.
You know, we're going to get a big bill.
It's like, you know, they don't have to pay for the people that I hit for the most part.
Just got to scrape me off of it, you know.
That's the thing.
It's just if you're on the motorcycle, if you have an accident, you may not even need insurance where you may go beyond your necessary mortal concerns if you have an accident on a motorcycle.
Very much more likely to happen, in my opinion.
Jerry Alitalo, states opposed to artificial intelligence, autonomous warfare,
Minority Report surveillance and other horrific aspects of technocracy and transhumanism
staying in the way of American dystopia.
R plus excuse.
Another interesting thing is the Minority Report video game from way back in the day was actually
pretty good.
Didn't follow the TV story, but it was still entertaining.
It was just like a beat him up, shoot them up.
Don't frag me, bro.
The false promise of safety and security is the oldest argument by tyrants for peasants to
give up their freedom.
Pezono Vante 1776, just like they lumped the criminal misuse of firearms with firearms owners.
Yeah, I think it's thrown into one.
Reference to the drunk drivers being counted in determining how safe human drivers are.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
You shouldn't be allowed to have a gun because criminals shoot people.
And it's like, well, people defend life with that as well.
Well, you know, Trump has finally come right.
Remember they were talking for the longest time about how they were going to help the farmers.
that he had hurt with the tariffs.
Don't worry.
Help is on the way.
Yeah, we just gave $20 billion to Argentina,
and they used that to set up a deal with China,
so China doesn't buy our agricultural products anymore.
They get the soy directly from Argentina,
and that was a massive double cross of the farmers.
Trump had already betrayed the farmers in his first administration
with tariff rates that caused them to not be able to sell their
products. But then he doubled down with this and said, well, we give $20 billion to Argentina
and we've got another $20 billion that we're going to put together with people on Wall
Street. So all together, we're going to give them $40. Don't worry. We'll give you $12 billion
someday. Well, that was back in September. Here we are in December. Three months later. And now
he's talking about it being imminent. I'm delighted to announce this afternoon that the United
States will be taken as a portion of the hundreds of billions of dollars we receive in tariffs.
We are making a lot of money from countries that took advantage of us for years.
They took advantage of us like nobody's ever seeing our deficits are way down.
He took advantage of the farmers.
They voted for them.
Because of the election.
Because without the election, you wouldn't have tariffs.
You'd be sitting here losing your shirt.
But we're taking in billions.
We're really taking in trillions of dollars.
If you think about it, Scott.
Because the real number is, you know, when you think of all the money being poured into the country for new auto plants and all of the other things, AI.
So what would...
Something that's not happening.
...a relatively small portion of that, and we're going to be giving and providing it to the farmers in economic assistance.
And we love our farmers. And as you know, the farmers like me, because, you know, based on voting trends, you could go at voting.
All right. That's enough of the lies. All of that is a lie. Okay. And if we're making
trillions of dollars, but I'm going to give them $12 billion, even if it were true, he'd be
reprehensible. Because he's going to give them 1,000th of what he's bringing in and wait for
months and months as these guys are circling the drain, struggling to survive. This is America
last, folks. This is not America first. Trump says a $12 billion bailout plan for farmers will come
from the tariff revenue.
You know, this is one of the most amazing things.
This is, this is better, actually, tariffs, why didn't we think of this before?
This is better than the Federal Reserve.
This is better than the Democrats' modern monetary theory, where we just have this magic
money tree that we can print the money and it doesn't make any difference and the deficits
don't make any difference.
You know, we just create money and wealth out of thin air.
It's even better than the Federal Reserve thing because, you know, they're getting in
all of this revenue.
And it isn't raising anybody's prices, right?
It's not hurting any manufacturing or farmers here in this country, except that it is.
And apart from the arguments about how the taxes should be structured, the worst thing about Trump's tariffs has and remains the capricious arbitrary, continually shifting environment that it's created, making it impossible for people to,
be able to do business, whether you're a manufacturer, whether you are a retailer,
importing stuff, or whether you are a farmer.
This has been absolutely chaotic.
As I pointed out before, we have the Chicago Commodities Exchange because farmers needed
to have a way to make sure that they knew what their price was going to be.
They could lock that in in the future.
So that's why you have the commodity futures market.
And yet what Trump has done is he's taken all that away.
we could say that with the Trump capricious arbitrary, ever-changing tariff policy, there is no futures
for any of us because what he's taken away.
The package includes $11 billion in a one-time payment to crop farmers.
And by the way, there's this interesting little thing there from the Department of Agriculture,
Secretary, Brooke Rawlins, saying, yeah, we're going to get these things out in February of
2006. So it's still not coming. He's waited three months, you know, they hinted at it.
He had Scott Besson hinting at it. Trump announces it, but this is actually going to be going
out from what I could see based on what Brooke Rollins said, it won't happen for another two months
yet. So we're going to go half a year with this.
It was Christmas in Dublin, and Puss was in boots where he found better than half-priced
premium beauty star gifts, including Estée Lorder Holiday Regiment stars worth $200,
7 euro, only 58
€50. Don't miss
out. Shop in-store or online.
Gift happily ever after.
Boots. Selected store is worth
price based on standard selling price of individual
items while stocks last offer ends 24th
December. You hurl your hearts
out for the people who know you
inside out. Giants
on the football pitch make everyone
who knows them feel 10 feet tall.
When you put the ball over the bar
you put the parish on the map
And one man's 60 minutes can be a whole town's finest hour.
Because when it's club, it lives forever.
This is the AIB GAA Club Championships, GAA, where we all belong.
So the aid package comes as the U.S. China trade war has hit soybean farmers especially hard.
I would just say this is the Trump trade war.
China had blocked all purchases of soybeans from the U.S.
China was the biggest buyer of U.S. soybeans in 2024, accounting for $12.5 billion in sales.
China agreed to purchase 12 million metric tons of soybeans now in the final two months of this year,
and 25 million metric tons in 2026, 27, and 28 on par with levels before the trade war.
But what CBS does not say, I'm sorry, this is ABC, not CBS.
At what price?
you know it was a double whammy from Trump not only did he cut off their biggest customer but
that created a glut of soybeans on the domestic market and it took the price down so the question
is at what price do they get this stuff that actually matters it's amazing they don't even
think about that but what they're doing is even though it's ABC they're just kind of whoever
wrote this thing is just going with the talking points of the Trump administration so far
China has purchased only 2.5 million metric tons of soybeans, not the 12. So they got a lot of
catching up to do here. The administration's new actions also come on the heels of the administration's
$20 billion bailout of Argentina, which Scott Bessent said he was going to make it 40 in terms
of helping put together some private funds. A move that many American farmers and lawmakers on
both sides of political aisle criticize this fall as China stopped buying all soybeans for U.S. farmers,
They purchased soybeans from Argentina instead.
So the U.S. was giving a financial lifeline to Argentina, a country that directly benefited from the trade war.
American farmers said they felt left behind.
And at the time, Chuck Grassley and Iowa said, farmers are very upset about Argentina selling soybeans to China right after the U.S. bailed out.
And there's still zero U.S. soybeans sold to China.
and that was back in September
and it's taken them this long
to firm up their promises
but still not to help the farmers.
Trump in his first term also took action
to bail out American farmers
except that he'd already bailed them in
to his tariff regime.
He'd already hurt them.
This is like somebody breaking your legs
and then handing you,
giving you a wheelchair
and boasting about the wheelchair they gave you.
His administration approved two packages
in 2018 and 19.
totaling $28 billion for farmers impacted by his economic policies.
Many of them were saying, well, he nearly put us out of business with these tariff policies.
Now he's putting us out of business with the COVID lockdown.
So, again, the announcement was made yesterday.
So meanwhile, the run-up and soybean futures over the past month over a resolution with China,
crop prices are still close to 2020 lows.
Now, this is zero hedge.
This ABC didn't even think about the price aspect of it.
That's the all important thing.
You go ahead and you make a deal with China.
And let's say, you know, I don't have any idea of what soybeans cost or what quantity that sell them in.
Let's say they, we'll call it a widget.
You put them in a widget.
I don't know if it's a basket or a barrel or whatever it is, a bushel or whatever.
But you got a widget full of soybeans that goes for $10.
And then after this, he wants to make a deal.
He wants to show that he's getting them back up, buying soy.
And they agree to it.
So what did he do to get them to a degree to it?
Did he say, well, now you can buy the same quantity of stuff, but we'll sell you these
we'll sell you these soybeans at $5 per widget full of soy stuff.
So again, they're taking advantage of the low cost right now.
That's that what they're doing?
So as they announced this, Trump is saying this wouldn't be possible.
This money would not be possible without tariffs.
Here's the truth, folks.
It wouldn't be necessary without tariffs.
He wouldn't have to give them a bailout if he hadn't bailed them into his Trump trade war.
You know, these farmers that are suffering from the tariffs, well, without the tariffs, I wouldn't have had the money to give them a piece of it.
I've taxed these people to death, and now I'll dole out a small amount back to them.
That wouldn't be possible if I hadn't tax them to death in the first place.
That's right.
And here's why I say it's not going to happen until 2026.
This is CNN reporting now.
It says Rollins said the money would be flowing by February the 28th, 2026, the very last day of February.
We're going to get the money flowing.
So we'll make the first payment in three months now.
And explained that a billion dollars of the funding is being held back to make sure all specialty crops are covered.
She credited Trump for opening the markets through trade deals without directly acknowledged.
acknowledging how tariffs have impacted farmers.
Again, you close the markets, and now you open it.
And so now you pat yourself on the back for opening the market that was open
before you closed it.
All this is based on a lie.
And so what you've been able to do is to open those markets up again and move towards
an era where our farmers are not so reliant on government checks.
Here's the bottom line.
He was just boasting about the fact that after he disrupted the sale of the, the,
the market sale of soybeans at market prices to China.
After he messed with the market price,
after he closed it off and shut it to zero,
now he's going to open it back up,
and they're going to purchase it at levels that they were buying
before he started in this nonsense.
Just amazing.
Are you tired of the winning?
I'm tired of the whining about all this stuff,
and the fact that he is lying to everybody about this.
Some farmers have previously bailed at the idea of aid.
Mark Reed, a director for the Illinois soybean
Association said farmers don't want free aid. We want free trade. There you go. That's what they
had before he messed with it. Well, Reason says the Trump tariffs have failed to reduce the trade
deficits. How should we assess whether the Trump tariffs have been effective or successful? Well,
it's an important question. Trump has outlined overlapping and confusing and sometimes competing
goals for the tariffs. He has celebrated them as a
a source of government revenue, for example.
But he's also claimed that they're meant as a negotiating tactic.
They can't be both.
Tariffs used for negotiation are meant to be removed once the negotiations are complete.
He's also said, they don't mention it here, but he's also said, we're going to use the tariffs
to make sure that manufacturing moves back to America.
And look at all the windfall profit that we're going to make.
Well, again, you can't have both of those.
You're either going to use it for negotiations and then take it off,
or you're going to use it to get businesses to come back.
If that's your goal, get businesses to come back,
do manufacturing here domestically.
But if they do manufacturing domestically,
then you're terrified when he goes away.
So he's always putting out these contradictory ideas
and everybody grabs whatever they want.
They think, well, he's going to make so much money.
We're going to get rid of the income tax.
That's floating around again as well, thanks to Trump.
Except that he's talking about how he's going to make all these different tax changes.
that he's not permanent.
And so that you might want to think about what he's actually saying here.
There's also the fact that I don't see the government generating revenue as a win.
No.
There's no.
If we had had a government that was actually, you know, working on building infrastructure,
even that I don't necessarily think that's the government's place to do that.
But you could at least make that sound good.
Like, oh, we're going to build better roads.
We're going to build nicer parks.
We're going to build really cool.
He's going to hand it to his friends. Instead, it's going to go to his friends, and it's going to go into the military industrial complex. And the police state industrial complex and the surveillance state industrial complex. That's right. The government is not going to do anything that will benefit the common citizen with it. And again, you know, it's not their place to do that, I don't think. But at least then you would be getting some benefit, some use from it. There's no plan benefit for it. And we don't want to see the government taking more and more control of the economy. But Trump does.
Trump tariffs are a solution to every problem, and the trade war is more about the vibes than it is about economics.
But when Representative Brendan Boyle, Democrat, pressed Jameson Greer, the U.S. Trade Representative, said, what would success look like?
It was Christmas in Dublin, and Puss was in boots where he found better than half price on electrical beauty, including best-selling favorites and premium brands.
Don't miss out
Shop in store or online
Gift happily ever after
Boots
Subject to availability
Selected Stores
Offer in 6th of January
26
You hurl your hearts out
For the people who know you inside out
Giants on the football pitch
Make everyone who knows them feel
10 feet tall
When you put the ball over the bar
You put the parish on the map
And one man 60 minutes
can be a whole town's finest hour.
Because when it's club, it lives forever.
This is the AIB GAA Club Championships, GAA, where we all belong.
Greer gave two clear metrics.
So, first of all, the trade deficit needs to go in the right direction.
In other words, down.
And manufacturing as a share of gross domestic product needs to go in the right direction.
needs to go up.
So if it's going to be a success, as they pinned him down, they said, okay, well, Trump wants
to talk about revenue.
What is your view as a trade representative for all this stuff?
What are you trying to see happen?
Well, I want to see the trade deficit go down and I want to see manufacturing go up.
Well, what has happened?
More than six months later, neither goal is any closer to being achieved.
Neither of them seems likely to be completed over the long term by an economic policy rooted in
barriers to trade. Trump has been obsessed with the trade deficit for years. And so, but he doesn't
really care if he even understands the budget deficit, they point out, which is the difference
between the revenue they bring in and what they spend. That is far more important than the
trade deficit. But he's not going to put his own house in order. From January through July,
America's trade deficit was $840 billion. It was $20 billion. It was $20,000.
23% larger than the same months in 2024.
Okay, so first stated goal is we want to see the trade deficit go down defined as we want to sell more to other people than they're selling to us, except it increased by 23% even with all of Trump's manipulation here.
It also reflects now a well-established fact that tariffs do not reduce trade deficits.
During his first term, Trump raised various tariffs, but the country's trade deficit climbed
from about $481 billion in 2016 to $679 billion in 2020.
So over four years, it goes up, let's say, maybe about 50%, right?
But under this new regime of Trump tariff policy, it has gone up 23%.
The trade deficit has increased 20,000.
So by their metric, and of course, no matter whether Trump has these contradictory explanations at all, he is definitely wanting to see the trade deficit go down, but it went up 23%.
Tariffs are no better as a tool for boosting manufacturing. Rather than being helped, the manufacturing sector is being crushed by tariffs, increasing the cost of raw materials and of intermediate goods.
And it's not just manufacturing.
It's all businesses, whether people are in retail or anything else.
They can't tell what their costs are going to be.
Because who knows if Trump is going to have something, gives them indigestion,
and he's going to try to punish the country that he bought that food from.
You know, it's just, it's that petty.
If he has an argument with somebody who is a political leader in another country,
he slaps them with tariffs.
So during a speech in July, the trade representative Greer,
added a third goal for the administration's tariff policies,
increasing real median household income.
Well, tariffs are making it more difficult for households to make ends meet.
An October study from the Harvard Business School
shows that retail prices had declined throughout 2024 and early 2025
and then began rising in April after Trump's tariffs were announced.
The Trump administration's tariff policies misunderstand
the role of trade in productive, flourishing economies.
The administration has set the wrong goals and then has made policy choices that are
unlikely to achieve those goals.
Again, it's because people like Peter Navarro.
This is the Dumas-a-Sack-of-Bricks policy.
And so what does this look like?
Well, China has had a record trade surplus.
China's trade surplus has topped a trillion dollars for the first time, despite Trump's tariffs.
China report exports have rebounded in November after an unexpected contraction the previous month,
pushing its trade surplus past a trillion dollars for the first time ever, an all-time high.
Exports, listen to this, climbed from 6% a year earlier, while imports rose just under 2%.
Meanwhile, shipments to the United States dropped nearly 29% year over year.
So they've been able to replace this with other markets, and they are thriving.
If this is part of its policy, again, that is another thing he's thrown in there.
The economic competition with China.
It's a failure with that as well.
So it's been a failure in terms of the trade deficit.
It's been a failure in terms of economic competition with China.
It's been a failure in terms of manufacturing.
it's been a failure in terms of keeping costs down.
It's a failure.
The nearly trillion-dollar trade surplus for the first 11 months of this year is a record high.
It's likely that November exports have yet to fully reflect the tariff cut, which should feed through in the coming months.
But, you know, hey, they're making it up in other countries.
You, however, may pay a lot more.
You know, they're expecting that toys will go up quite a bit because,
A lot of toys are manufactured in China.
But as Trump said before,
hey, so your kids only got like, you know, one doll instead of five dolls.
You know, too bad.
I wonder how many dolls Yvonne, Ivanka had, or whichever one it is.
I get the two of them mixed up.
Ivana was the mother, right?
And Ivanka was the daughter.
Yeah, Ivanka is the daughter.
I imagine she had a lot of dolls, but Trump doesn't really care about that.
It doesn't care if you're going to afford toys or not.
It's kind of like that toy market we went to in China, where the TSA then confiscate all the toys that we'd bought to keep our daughter busy while we came back.
So China's exports grow 6 percent, and U.S. shipments drop 29 percent.
Hmm.
Seems like things are going in exactly the opposite direction, and then Trump pointed to go.
By the way, manufacturing is dropping as well.
And they're struggling, as I said before, just like retailers and importers.
are every business, farmers, everybody is struggling with the chaos that Trump has brought to the
economy. It's not about tariffs versus income tax. It's about chaos versus stability.
Chaos is hampering everyone in the U.S. economy. It is the elephant in the room. And I'm not
talking about Republicans. We're going to take a quick break. You want to get those comments there?
Yes.
I don't know if that other one is right, Lansom.
But Guard Goldsmith says, by the way, the Trump executive order re-AI appears to claim authority
by implying that state statutes on AI interfere with interstate commerce.
Yet Trump's executive order breaches separation of powers.
Yeah, breaches the 10th Amendment.
And that's the thing, you know, when you look at the way they stole the unconstitutional,
illegal war on drugs, how did they do it with the Commerce Act,
claiming that that allowed them to prohibit drugs.
why didn't anybody think about that when they prohibited alcohol it's funny you know those people
i don't know were they just stupid and they couldn't read that in the constitution or maybe
they had respect for the constitution that we don't have i think that's what it was well we're
going to take a quick break and we will be right back stay with us
I'm not
a lot of
I'm going to
I'm
on the
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
And now, the David Night Show.
And now, the David Night Show.
in Dublin. And Puss was in boots where he found better than half price on electrical beauty.
Including Mark Hill Pick and Mix Air Flexy Air Styler was 2190.99, now only 105 Euro99. Don't miss out. Shop in store or online.
Gift happily ever after. Boots. Subject to availability selected stores offer in 6th of January 2026.
And now a look at the forecast. We're seeing lots of wind, plenty of
sunshine to come and a long-term outlook that's bright for Ireland.
At Airgrid, our forecast is for a sustainable energy future.
We're upgrading the electricity grid so every home, business and community can benefit.
We're powering up Ireland.
Learn more at airgrid.I.E.
I'm going to be the
I'm going to
I'm going to
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
and I'm
the
I'm
And so on the
And so,
and
the
uh,
and the
time,
and I'm
uh,
and
uh,
and
uh,
and
um,
and
the,
uh,
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Welcome back, folks. Briefly, I want to let you know that it is support from listeners like you that keeps the show going.
We cannot thank you all enough.
A really good way to support the show is go to subscribe star.com forward slash the David Knight Show.
You can find a tier that fits your budget, and then it's fire and forget.
You don't have to worry about it.
And there you can see it.
There's many different tiers, as I said.
Hopefully one of them fits your budget, and you can just set it up and not have to worry about it.
It'll only go down if your card is no longer valid.
Check out subscribe star.com forward slash the David Knight, so you go to David Knight.
dot news and find all the other ways you can support us directly.
Of course, you can turn it off.
You're not locked into it forever.
They don't come to your house.
We got your number.
We're not going to let you go.
But we do appreciate the people who stuck with us for years there.
And one of the things that we tried to do for them, years ago, when I did, I guess it's
two years ago, did the Christmas album.
We gave it to the people there for free.
And we also try to give them the articles as well as a link to the podcast where they can
get it without commercials.
Yes.
And you can also get that on Substack now if you just want to get the podcast without commercials.
Yeah, if you're only interested in the podcast without commercials, the best place to do that is
substack.com.
You can subscribe and you'll receive it there.
I also want to let you know that Homestead Products.
Chop is having a sale on their activated charcoal capsules.
They are good for detoxifying your body.
Good for hangovers, energy boosting, whitening your teeth, filtering your water.
They have a numerous number of applications.
So go to Homestead Products. Shop, check out there.
Best stuff there.
They've got all kinds of really interesting, very high-quality products.
They work very, very hard to make sure the products are made in the USA and of the highest quality.
So again, go to Homestead Products. Shop.
Check out the sale they're having on their activated hardwood charcoal capsules.
And you can also use promo code Knight to get 10% off anything in their shop.
So go check them out.
If you're looking for survival gear to just some modest clothing,
They've got options for you.
I'll just throw in real quickly, too.
The code night also get you 10% off at R&C stores.
Where you can get books that help you to find natural remedies for many things, including
cancer.
You can find the book, The World Without Cancer.
By GFC store.
Yeah, dot com.
And also get you 10% off with Gerald Slinty's Trends Journal as well.
Which the Trends Journal with the 10% off works out to be about $2.50 a week.
week which what else can you get for that kind of value at this point well real quickly before
our guest comes on oh this is an interesting story this is a college student who got a zero on
her assignment simply because she quoted the Bible in a gender assignment article that she's
supposed to review now this is really about a lot of different issues it's about free speech
free exercise religion it's about the fact that the LGBT people see what they're doing as
religion, as well as what is happening in schools and the worthlessness of college degrees,
I would say, as well.
So this is a college student in Oklahoma.
It gets a failing grade because she laid out a biblical case for gender.
Unfortunately for her, she didn't know it at the time.
But the teaching assistant, who is going to be doing the grading, is a tranny.
She didn't know that.
She turned in the paper.
and she didn't attack transgender, she made the case for the biblical role of men and women.
So it was not a negative hit piece.
There was nothing hateful about it.
Well, these people are so completely diluted out to lunch that simply showing them reality is painful to them.
It breaks their self-delusion.
Yes.
And it was an opinion-based piece.
What, Lance?
Like I mentioned yesterday of the story of the person in, I believe.
believe it was the UK that got 10 days in prison and a fine for mentioning that men and women
have different skeletons.
Yeah, that's right.
The trune.
So this was an opinion-based piece, and she said, I pointed out, it didn't say anywhere that I needed evidence.
It didn't say anywhere that I needed evidence for my opinion.
His response was, no, that was the grade that you deserved, a zero.
She said, in terms of her essay, here's some excerpts from it.
She said this article was very thought-provoking and caused me to thoroughly evaluate the idea of gender, the role that it plays in our society.
The article discussed peers using teasing as a way to enforce gender norms.
I don't look at this necessarily as a problem.
God made male and female and made us differently from each other on purpose and for a purpose.
God is very intentional with what he makes.
I believe trying to change that would only do more harm.
Gender roles and tendencies should not be considered to be stereotyped.
stereotypes. Women naturally want to do womanly things because God created us with those womanly
desires in our hearts. But of course, we can propagandize those out, can't we? The same goes for
men. God created men in the image of his courage and strength. He created women in the image
of his beauty. He intentionally created women differently than men, and we should live our lives
with that in mind. It's frustrating to me when I read articles like this and discussion posts for my
classmates of so many people trying to conform to the same mundane opinion so that they don't
step on anybody's toes. I think that is cowardly and an insincere way to live. It is important
to me to use the freedom of speech we have been given in this country, and I personally believe
that eliminating gender in our society would be detrimental as it pulls us further from God's
original plan for humans. In Genesis, God says that it's not good for man to be alone, so he created
a helper for man, which is woman.
Many people assume the word helper in this context to be condescending and offensive
to women.
However, the original word in Hebrew is iser canegdo, and that directly translates to
helper equal to.
Additionally, God describes himself in the Bible using that same term,
Ezer conegdo or helper.
And he describes His Holy Spirit as our helper as well.
This shows the importance that God places.
on the role of the helper.
God does not view women as less significant than men.
He created us with such intentionality and care,
and he made women in his image of being a helper,
and in the image of his beauty.
If leaning into that role means that I'm following gender stereotypes,
then I am happy to be following a stereotype
that aligns to the gifts and the abilities that God gives me as a woman.
I do not think that men and women are pressured to be more masculine or feminine.
I strongly disagree with the idea from the article
that encouraging acceptance of diverse gender,
expressions can improve students' confidence.
Society pushing the lie that there are multiple genders and everyone should be whatever they
want to be is demonic and severely harms American youth.
I do not want kids to be teased or bullied in school.
However, pushing the lie that everyone has their own truth and everyone can do whatever
they want and be whoever they want is not biblical whatsoever.
Reading articles like this encourages me to one day raise my children knowing that they
have a heavenly father who loves them.
them and cherishes them deeply, and that having their identity firmly rooted in who he is
will give them the satisfaction and acceptance that the world can never provide for them.
My prayer for the world, and specifically for American society and youth, is that they would
not believe the lies being spread by Satan that make them believe they're better off
with another gender than what God has made them.
I pray that they feel God's love and acceptance as who he originally created them to be.
so after she got a zero for that from the transgender she complained to the university they did nothing
she complained to the governor's office and other politicians and the response was that the university
gave him a paid vacation paid leave but they said that happened to me all i can say is my next
paper would be uh would be something yeah he can't grade her papers anymore but he gets a paid
vacation, paid leave. Her essay was posted on social media, however. It's been viewed by people
over 15 million times. So her bottom line is, she said, we must not be intimidated to run away
from our principles, what we believe to be true. We have the freedom to speak and to believe
what we wish. State Senator said it's about a state-funded, taxpayer-funded institution
that is allowing their faculty members to abridge or to impede a student's right to express their faith.
And so she's been able to speak many different places as well.
Well, I've got more than I wanted to get into, but we are at a time, and we have a guest that is ready to join us.
And just real briefly, the guest we have joining us is a doctor, and his name is Richard Restak, MD.
He has written over 25 books, and he's been on.
on the bestsellers list, and the book that we're going to be discussing today, especially
basically is neuroscience.
And the book that we're going to be discussing today is the 21st century brain.
Subtitle says how our brains are changing in response to the challenges by social networks,
AI, climate change, and stress.
So we're going to talk about those things.
And I've got a lot of questions that I would like to ask him about that as well.
So I think it's going to be an interesting interview.
Stay with us, folks.
We will be right back.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to
I'm going.
You know,
You know, I'm going to be able to be, you know, and so much, you know, I'm going to be, you know, I'm going to do it, you know, and I'm a little bit, you know, and I'm, you know, and, you know,
I'm
I'm going to be the
I'm going to
I'm
I'm going to
I'm
Oh
I'm a
I'm a
I'm
I'm a
ha ha ha ha ha
ha ha ha ha
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Hear news now at APSRadioNews.com or get the APS Radio app and never miss another story.
All right, and joining us now is Dr. Richard Restak, MD, and he is a neuroscientist as well,
and he has written a lot of books on the brain, and now this is one kind of the nexus of our brain
and artificial intelligence. So I wanted to get him on because we, as you know, we
talk about AI and its impact on society quite a bit. Thank you for joining us, Dr. Restick.
Well, I'm happy to be here. Thank you, David. You've written so many books and a best-selling author,
and of course people can find this on Amazon. You've written so many books. What is different about
the brain? What is different about this one? And why did you write this book? I wrote this book
to announce and to discuss the dangers that are lurking, or so to
speak in the 21st century and are unique to the 21st century, but are having an effect on the brain
and a negative one. So that we really are in peril by eight different factors, one of which is
the global warming. We have new diseases that are present in the 21st century that are increasing,
starting with COVID and moving forward. We have problems, of course, with the global warming,
warming, which we'll talk about in more detail.
And then the internet, the effect of the internet, the effect of AI, memory, the alteration,
the attempt to alter memory, almost to alter our memories of what the past was like.
This is an ongoing enterprise by various governments in the world, including our own.
We also have surveillance, the seventh, the surveillance, becoming increasingly a surveillance society.
It's almost impossible to not be revealing things about yourself because there's surveillance cameras everywhere.
I can give you several examples of that just in my own personal life.
And then finally, the eighth one is anxiety.
All of these things are creating what I call it existential anxiety.
People are being given information, but it's being molded according to the thoughts and the inclinations of people in power.
For instance, let's take today's right out of today's New York Times on page A7.
There's an article called, The Air in New Delhi is Life Threatening.
And it tells the tale of the New York Times reporters who have spread themselves throughout New Delhi from 6 a.m.
until late in the evening of a certain day recently.
and they measured the particulate matter in the air,
and it was anywhere from 10 times to 30 times
as great as would be considered minimally normal.
Now, on top of that, you have the statement that they state
that the government is actually trying to hide this kind of insight
to the populace by spraying water and other things like that.
that they're doing this around the measuring stations.
They're also losing data from measuring stations during the worst bouts of pollution.
So there you have the molding of the facts, either denying them altogether or trying to improve them.
So people say, oh, well, they measured it down at such and such a measuring station, and it was really not a lot of high.
Well, of course, they were spreading water and other things to try to reduce this.
So we've got a capitalist society here in the United States, which has a vested interest in pushing forward certain scientific points of view.
So science is being put sort of in the back seat, and there's politicians and other people, all of whom share one thing, capitalistic enterprises, in which they're part of or which they are advancing.
And a kind of crony capitalism where they can get.
protection and subsidies as well.
And the control is being taken away from us because, as I was just reporting earlier today,
they're working very hard to make sure that state and local governments can't enact any
control on artificial intelligence.
And that came up in the context of talking about how the manufacturers of tasers, also big
manufacturers of police body cams, how they want to wed that to artificial intelligence.
And the question is, you know, what could possibly go wrong with?
that. If they identify you, they misidentify you as a dangerous criminal and warn the police
about how dangerous you are, they could get people killed.
Well, not only that, but all of these efforts set up a sense of anxiety and fear.
Let me just tell you what happened to me in one morning, called a cab to go to a medical
appointment, and when we started going down the road, I said to the driver, you know, you're not
going the most efficient or the quickest way he said i know that he said but i don't want to go that
way because there's speed cameras i said well you know you're driving very sensibly and you're not
speeding and i'm in no hurry so what's the problem he said well they take pictures of everybody
that goes by those cameras because they want to see who's in those photos in those cars yes so i asked
them to give me a reference for that and he got said of didn't say anything else for the rest of the
trip so when i got down to the medical building but got in the elevator it said in this facility
there is surveillance both obvious and hidden that's interesting and the third is santa claus was
watching you now this is all one morning and then when i got up to sign in um i signed the board
with an electronic pen and i didn't see you go no signature i saw it said well it didn't take she said oh it
took, but we don't allow it to go on the screen so it could be seen. I said, why is that?
She said, well, somebody behind you might see the thing and then remember it and use your signature
to forge something somewhere. Well, first of all, there was a sign that said stand 10 feet back,
and secondly, there's nobody else behind me. So there's three examples just drawn at random
that were becoming an increasingly surveilled society, which is creating a sense of paranoia,
in a sense of fear.
So the brain has to adjust to these type of things, Dave,
and it's very hard to do.
And I think that is calculated.
You know, they've been, they want to do this,
even to the extent,
when you talk about these cameras,
taking everybody's picture,
the flock network that is out there,
this corporation that is saying,
well, we can do whatever we want
because it's in public space
and, you know, we're not government
so we can collect this information.
And yet they collect it
in order to sell it to the government,
government. So it's just one level indirect, but they not only grab your license plate,
but they also do a complete profile of your car and all of its idiosyncrasies. Does it have a dent
here? Does it have a scrape there? What about a bumper sticker? So it creates a model of your
car. And so they almost have like, you know, biometric identification of your cars as well as of you.
And this is now made possible because of the advances of AI. But this has been something that has
been concerning me. I look at things kind of from a libertarian perspective, and this has been
concerning me for a long time. The idea that government is using technology, many different
ways, internet, social media, things like that, to monitor and to manipulate us all the time.
And to me, artificial intelligence just puts this on steroids. And so I think there is something
to be anxious about if we're going to look at this. We should be concerned about it. Maybe not
anxious, but we should be concerned about the goals of people who are putting this kind of stuff
together. So, yeah. Well, there's that. And then there's, if you can manage to change the
present, you can manipulate the future. Of course, the real way to get it is to get control of past,
as is Warwell pointed out. Yes. You control the past, you know, you can control the present
and by the implication, control the future. And we're seeing alterations of materials.
even government documents, government films, documentaries, things like that are being altered in ways that are not visible,
not I should say detectable, not detectable to the ordinary person.
So they get ideas about what the past was like, which are wrong and don't show you, as I mentioned in the book,
if you were at a dance in 1850 before the Civil War,
And it's a film we're watching.
Let's just say we're watching a film about 1850.
And we're seeing people ballroom dancing, all that.
Then one of them pulls to the side and pulls out a cell phone.
And you say, wait, I meant that.
We didn't have cell phones then.
Well, you know, there were a lot of things that were going on now
that we're not going on in the past.
And it's not to our advantage to try to pretend that they were.
They weren't.
We have to understand the past, understand the future.
And we're not only creating situations that are false, but we're also, like in 1984,
Orwell created a character called Commander Ogilvy.
He was a war hero.
He got all sorts of medals, and it was all the prolettes that were all told to honor him and so forth.
Well, he never existed.
He actually was made up entirely, and that's one of the things
that the narrator is doing in the job of work,
is filling in photographs,
inserting O-W-V into historical events
that happened, wartime scenarios, et cetera.
And when reading it, we'll say, wow, this is some man.
Well, he was a complete fabrication.
We're just about at that point with SORA
out, the AI out, which could take you
and had you, you know, to say,
let's get David Knight and have
him leading some sort of a parade of whatever and you know suddenly people say well gosh i saw
them with my own eyes so what's happening is that the actual seeing is believing is being turned
on its head so that's no longer true you're talking about a completely fabricated character out of
orwell uh it just recently they had tilly norwood who was a completely fabricated AI personality
and the person who came up with it has got agents representing her they got her out there as an
actress.
So I mean, it's like, so I've created an AI actress, which will do a lot of different roles
for you.
She probably does their own stunts as well, I imagine.
People in SAG, the screen actors, Gill, and they're furious about this.
And I said, any agent that represents this AI character is not going to do any business
with us, but we're already at that point.
It truly is interesting.
And one of the ways of neutralizing it is to create the situation that exists right now
between you and me. You're laughing and I'm laughing because it seems funny, and it is funny,
but it's a very serious purpose behind all this. It's all the matter to try to alter people's
perceptions so that they begin to doubt the variety of what they're seeing. That's right. Yes. And I've
talked for the longest time about how the whole idea for the internet was created by DARPA psychologists,
and I've been concerned that it was all about psychological manipulation from the get-go with all of this,
But as a physician and as a neuroscientist,
I'd be interested in your take on, you know, what is currently going on.
Because besides manipulating the past by changing information about the past
or, you know, memory-holing it or writing a new alternative history of it,
they're also concerned, and there's been projects that have been put out by DARPA.
And I don't know if they've been successful or not,
but, you know, they're putting out requests for people to come up with things to manipulate people's memories.
So you've got a soldier, they say, who's got bad PTSD.
Let's get rid of that memory.
Let's give them different memories.
What do you see in terms of someone who studies the brain and neuroscience?
What do you see about that?
What do you think is the state of the art with that?
Well, my last book was called The Complete Book of Memory.
It had to do with memory.
I studied memory in great detail.
And, of course, you have to do away with the concept that memory is like a,
of videotape or something that you just store in your brain and when you get them
want to get it you just bring it out like you bring out a videotape it's not like that it's it's
a reconstruction each time you think back to a certain event you alter that memory so that you
have memory one memory two memory three on and on and all uh that's the nature of memory and memory
and memory can be manipulated it's always you know in the courtroom they're all
he's trying to avoid the contamination
of the witness. An example
that would be, well, which car
went through the red light?
And to ask a
witness. And he said, oh, it was
a red car went through the red light.
Well, wouldn't surprise you to know that it wasn't
a red light, but it was a stop sign,
Mr. Witness.
Of course, his credibility is
gone. Yeah. Because he took
the suggestion that it was a
red light. Instead,
it would be very easy to do, because you
don't necessarily have that image
of that intersection in your mind.
So that's why there's protections
even in the courtroom against
leading the witness, they call it.
In other words, providing
information that's either not true
at all or half true.
So we've got that
this didn't start
in the 21st century. That that started
as long as we've had courthrooms.
This is more an emphasis
now on altering
memory so people will not
will get up there and under Krause examination, they'll do pretty well because their whole
memories but altered. They've changed by various mechanisms, suggestion, repeating information,
which is false, of course, which is the missing information. There's a cartoon about a week ago
by Ramirez in which he's a Pulitzer Prize winner. He has three doctors in an operating room
in a laboratory. One of them is looking into a micro,
microscope, and he looks up and he says, this is the most dangerous pathogen we have ever encountered.
And the second doctor says, well, is it bubonic plague? Is it smallpox? And then the one that
he says, no, it's misinformation and disinformation. That's right. And we've got to be very careful
because many times the people who will tell us about that are the people who want to be the
ones who define what the information is for us.
And they will ask those leading questions.
You know, when we're talking about leading questions and manipulating people.
There's been a lot of reports about artificial intelligence, kind of people who have
a particular psychosis or something, and they get involved with the AI, and it starts to
confirm the things that they want because that's what it is set up to do in terms of bias.
I want to, you know, be empathetic and sympathetic.
to people. And so it starts doing that and leading them further and further down a particular
rabbit hole. There's been situations of, you know, people got into severe mental distress,
some suicides of some young children and other things like that. Speak to that aspect of it
and the real danger of that. That is really kind of, I think, speaks to the psychological aspect
and potential of artificial intelligence. And that could be weaponized. Right now it's just kind of
happening out of their business model.
right, but that could definitely be weaponized against people.
Well, I talk about that in my book in the chapter on the internet.
There are famous examples of people who have suicided right on the internet live feed,
and they've been manipulated at doing that by other people who've encouraged them,
said this would be a sign of strength, this would be a sign of that you're not afraid to die if necessary.
And there's cases of it that actually led to the suicide.
One of them is the most grisly I have in my book
about a person who was talked into pouring gasoline over themselves
and setting a match all on open feed, internet.
And while this fire is burning,
you can hear everybody in the background's cheering.
We did it. We did it. We got them to do it.
Wow. That's amazing.
That's amazing.
So there's something that about the internet,
that actually brings out sadistic, criminal, psychopathic trends.
And we don't know why is the fact that you don't necessarily, can't be identified.
But it's something that is going to be influencing and has influenced the Internet greatly.
And it will continue to do so until we understand it.
I think that's one of the things that's so dangerous about the things that we saw with lockdown and other aspects of it.
There's an atomization here.
And so many different ways the government and tech companies are trying to make sure that we're not in person with each other.
You know, many cases like, for example, in this interview, we couldn't do this interview if we both had, if one of both of us had to travel.
We're able to do this because we can do it over Zoom or whatever.
But just taking ordinary things that you would normally do in terms of interacting with.
people in school or in church or in your community or whatever, taking that away and putting
a screen between the two of you. It really does change the way people interact with each other.
I remember Errol Morris, the film director, was able to get people to say all kinds of
things to him. He got a murderer to confess. He got Robert McNamara to confess about the
false flag of the Vietnam War. He got people to say all kinds of stuff because there was that
distance between him and them. He could have interviewed them in person, but what he was.
What he did was he put an interatron, which is what he called it.
It was basically a teleprompter that he had set up so he could do two-way communication at the time.
And once he had that distance there, then it completely changed the dynamics that he would have versus with somebody person to person.
And that's what we're talking about here, isn't it?
Yeah, we're talking about that.
And, of course, there's the gradations of this.
And it continues.
Like you're interviewing me.
We're discussing.
I feel like it's a discussion.
If I were to say something that later I regretted, I could probably say, oh, well, that wasn't me.
That was my avatar.
Or my agent, right?
I got an AI agent that's out there doing stuff.
That's right.
That's crazy.
We also see, though, as a doctor, you're seeing people have noticed actual physical changes that can be observed in people's brains.
I'm thinking of the story about the London taxi drivers who would do the knowledge.
And they would find that as they memorized all these factual details and drew on that all the time in order to take people to, you know, this very complicated city with this complicated streets, that they had a particular part of their brain that was larger than the typical person.
And then they found that once they stopped doing that, it started to shrink again.
And we're starting to see that happening with people in a lot of different areas of their life, that kind of atrophy.
and it's physically observable, isn't it?
Well, it is.
You have to learn.
You have to use the things that you have learned to do.
Like I mentioned in my memory book, there's all kinds of memory exercises that you can do.
I do them every day.
And they're very easy, and they help you to continue with your memory, to keep it sharp.
Give us some examples.
I'm sure everybody would love to know that.
I would all like to have a better memory.
What kind of things can we do to exercise our memory?
fact that you never had to learn pictures when you were an infant and a young child a picture was
something that you could you may not know what you're looking at but you could see it without
a intermediary whereas language is something that you have to hear from other people it's something
that's sort of added on to the brain okay so as a result the most best way of remembering
something is to make
a
image for it, okay?
For instance,
I have a little dog called a skipper key.
Skipper key is a Belgian
dog. He's a nice
little fellow. But it was
embarrassing to me when walking the street. People
say, what kind of a dog is that?
And I couldn't come up with a name because it was
such so complicated.
And I thought, that's skipper key. I didn't speak any
Dutch or anything. So then
I got this image of a small boat
with a large captain with a beard holding a big key.
So it was Skipper Key.
And I remember forever.
So I had the picture.
Once I have the picture, it's easy to do.
Another way, an easy way to do it.
And you can do that with all kinds of times, all the time.
I was going upstairs before I came down to the office.
And I wanted to get my wallet.
And I wanted to get my cell phone.
So I just had an image of a wallet.
in the form of a cell phone
and I was walking up the stairs talking
into the wallet cell phone
so I got up and I knew I had these
two elements to get. It would be very easy
to get one and forget the other.
So you have these images all the time.
And the quickest,
you know, this is sort of off the topic of the
book, but if you want to have
a firepower
memory for
a load of things, that's up to
10 things, and get 10
is that you are familiar with, that you see every day, and then you can put on those images the thing you're trying to remember.
So if I'm trying to remember a loaf of bread, milk, maybe batteries, I have a regular way of doing that.
I have like I remember the library that's near my home, the coffee shop, liquor store.
Georgetown University of Medical School, where I went,
Georgetown University,
Cafe Milano, which is a place in Washington,
everybody gathers,
and then Keybridge,
Iwo Jima Memorial,
and Reagan Airport.
So that bread would be, for instance,
the loaf of bread.
I was looking at the window of the library
instead of seeing books.
I'd see bread,
loaves of bread.
And when I get down to the liquor store,
instead of it being filled with liquor,
but it'll be milk bottles.
So that's how I'll have to get to it.
So I can get 10 items together
without any problems at all.
That's great.
Yeah, it's interesting.
You talk about the importance of a visualization.
It's one of the things that I do
in terms of preparing for the show.
I have a lot of articles that I go through.
And it's really when I highlight things
or when I write them down,
that's when I can remember them.
If I don't do that,
if I would just to read these things,
I wouldn't remember them, but if I interact with it and write it down, that helps me to remember it.
So that is a kind of visualization there, I guess, as well.
It is, it truly is interesting.
And what you said earlier about memory, not being something that is stored in a place as somebody coming from a computer science background, that was a very different thing.
When you construct your memory, you know, how do you reconstruct that?
I mean, that, that as opens up a whole new area of questions as well.
In other words, if every time somebody brings up a subject, I mean, there isn't something that's stored initially to reference that and then rebuild from that?
Yeah, there's the interconnections.
Like, you know, somebody listening to us might say, well, gee, this is called the 21st century of brain, but I haven't heard that much about the brain.
Well, let me just link that up so that these things make sense.
We have a new version, or I should say, a new understanding of the brain called the connectomic brain.
in which there's all kinds of interactions in the brain of parts of the brain,
which you don't, we're just learning about.
I have the, I use the metaphor of a bowl of spaghetti.
You pull out one of the strains of spaghetti,
and you never have any idea what it's connected to,
how many other strains of spaghetti this is connected to.
So that's, if you think of the brain as being kind of set to make connections,
That's its natural processing.
So it gets back to these things that we were talking about earlier,
you know, global warming and memory and surveillance and all that.
How are we going to solve all those?
Well, somehow or other, those things are connected with each other.
That's the take-home message to this book.
And the basic goal is to try to figure out what it is that connects these things,
what it is that would allow us to, by solving one of them, solve the other.
And I mentioned at the end of the book, experts so far have done it.
So it's useful, as Hayek said, to get ordinary people to give, when I say ordinary,
I mean non-specialized people, to give their ideas.
Gee, I wonder what such and such would happen.
And what would happen about global warming?
For a while, there was, in fact, there's still experiments going on on the effect of sulfur that would help the CO2 problem.
And, you know, shooting sulfur up into the atmosphere.
Of course, the reason for that was the volcano in 1980-something, in which after that volcano in Hawaii, it was noted that the air was clearer.
less pollution.
So that's something to think about it.
There's some way of using that particular sulfur experiment to decrease global warming.
War, for instance, we don't think of war as a cause of global warming, but it is.
Oh, yeah.
Thermonuclear warning.
Yeah, it's been put up since the Ukraine war and the Gaza war, then, you know, a tremendous amount that's going to overcome.
and exceed the benefit of any of these things like, you know,
non-gassoline engines, but, you know, using electrical and things like that.
Absolutely.
Yeah, it's kind of like, you know, shooting up rockets in order to put satellites up, you know.
How many cars and lifetime use of cars from people would that be equivalent to?
And you start talking about all the missiles that are being shot.
And then you get to the explosives as well.
it is really interesting how they focus us on their objectives for their ways to control
us.
The manipulation's been going on for quite some time.
And so, yeah, that is pretty amazing.
And I guess that's my, you know, my, when you look at this stuff, it really does look like
science fiction.
And I'm almost inclined to write it off when I first see it.
When DARPA is saying, well, we need to find some way that we can, you know, erase memories
and people and insert new memories into them.
I'm going back to Total Recall, right?
So it sounds like something from a Philip K. Dick novel, but they're really working on that.
And I guess one of the most striking things we saw, we reported on a couple of weeks ago.
And it was a company that was bragging about how they could read your mind more accurately
and quickly than their competitors, because there's a lot of different companies that are
doing this, and how they could, it was called Brain,
IT was the name of the company, and so they had a way that they would do MRI, and they could
essentially train it on your brain in a much shorter period of time the other people, and they
could get much better results.
Our producers just pull this up.
So what they do is they show you an image, and you're looking at that image, and then
it's reading your mind and reconstructing what you're looking at, which I thought was absolutely
amazing and terrifying at the same time.
How is this going to be used?
Yes, that's the real issue.
When we start talking about all these different things,
I think that is the real case that it's difficult for people to understand just how far
and how quickly the technology has progressed.
And then to say, and how do we control this from it being used for bad purposes?
Well, that's a specifically 21st century problem.
Yes.
Because all of these things have either originated in the 21st century,
where they have, in fact, further.
developed and become increasingly threatening and bear in mind we have to have to solve these
problems because they're not something that's going to go away and then the most important thing
to remember david is that all of these things harm the brain and the brain is the thinking
processor that's going to save us it's going to figure out what the problems what the solutions
the problems are. So we know now that wildfire smoke, for instance, it creates dementia. It enhances
the likelihood of somebody coming to medic. So as the brain is affected negatively, increasingly
in longer and longer periods of time, our ability to solve these problems is going to decrease.
So we've got to do it now. We've got to get serious about it. And this business of people getting up
saying the global warming is fiction and all that is really very, very disturbing.
Yeah, well, you know, the example that you gave earlier of the fact that the Indian government
was manipulating the temperature at some of the stations there, that kind of works both ways.
They have put some of these temperature stations on airport tarmacs, and in the U.K.,
they have a lot of the temperature stations that they've got there, they're just extrapolating the data.
They don't have real temperature measurement stations there.
So it all really gets back, I think, to the scientific method.
And that's really where we have to hold people's feet to the fire.
We're talking about something like that.
We can have an absolute standard of what truth is.
And that truth is going to be being able to measure something accurately and being able to reproduce that.
And then I think a good yardstick for that is when somebody is trying to hide their data,
that's the clue right there that they're not doing science.
Because if they're doing science and they've come to the right conclusion,
they don't have a problem with somebody looking at their data.
And so I've got a question here for you from a person in the audience asking, you know,
about Dr. James Giordano and Charles Morgan and their work with military.
I'm not familiar with those names.
I don't know if you know anything about that or not.
The Giordano says familiar.
What particular thing are they asking about them?
I don't know.
It just says they're work with military.
I guess it would have to do with something.
but you haven't heard of it i'm not sure i could say to your daughter did this or did that
no sure i understand um yeah let's talk a little bit about the things that we have been anxious about
and of course as as christians we have one answer to it but you talk about how this is something
that has been you know around pretty much all of our life i mean there was i grew up uh with anxiety
about nuclear war for example that was on everybody's uh television and that was uh fourth
front of our mind, especially growing up in Florida, when the Cuban Missile Crisis was
happening, they got us really afraid of that when I was in elementary school.
You know, it's like, there's not going to be enough time for you to get home, you know,
when the nuclear bombs started falling.
And so, I mean, there's all these different ways that you can panic people.
I guess part of it is how do we identify the real problems and how do we deal with those
problems?
Because there's always things that are competing for our attention and our anxiety.
many of which are not real and usually the things that you're really the most concerned about don't happen
and it may be sometimes because you have taken a precaution about it uh what would you say about that
about anxiety you're starting to break up a little bit can you hear me clearly i hear you yes yes
sorry about that you you're talking about breaking up a little bit uh you're talking about traumatizing a
population, you know, what do we do to guard against that type of thing? And of course, that's
going to really escalate with the ability of AI to create a narrative. Yeah, well, let's talk
as a avenue to get into that. Let's go back to what you brought about, the atomic weapons and
the atomic war and the fears of the people that there's going to be another atomic war. I mean,
you know, this is not unrealistic.
There's even been a movie that's just come out that's getting all kinds of attention, as you know,
and it has to do with the threat of a nuclear war.
Things in the, if you look at what's happening in the Europe right now,
there's all kinds of suggestions that it could lead to a nuclear war.
I mean, Ukraine now has announced that they're under no conditions willing to give up any land,
and Stalin is, I mean, Putin is,
thinking what he can do to change that.
Maybe he'll attack another country.
I mean, this is scary stuff.
So what's happening in response to the government is to try to show that,
oh, we shouldn't worry about it.
We have things under control, but I don't think things are under control.
And we've talked about the problems, and we're talking about problems.
You have your final chapter is New Ways of Thinking.
And I'd like to talk about that.
One of the things that you say is Occam was wrong, Occam's Razor, that people are familiar with.
Tell us a little bit about that. Why is Occam wrong?
Well, because he says that, you know, the entities are not to be multiplied, meaning that we can always explain things best by limiting ourselves to the minimum amount of factors, ideally one, one cause of every effect.
That's not true. Certainly not true in the 21st century, where there's all kinds interactions between.
factors and causes so that Ockham was wrong in that basis.
We have to think of an interconnecting pool, just as in the brain of interconnections of neurons,
interconnections of these problems, and they're all related.
They're all related, all eight of them that I talk about in my book.
They're all related.
And if you can figure a way of influencing one, you influence all the others.
I mean, who would think there would be a connection between global warming and the amount of artisan
and cheese, for instance, high-end cheese.
Well, there is because chickens don't lay many eggs
and there'd be all the various other things to come on
in terms of making cheese.
I learned that the other day.
That was something that was a surprise to me.
You know, it's kind of interesting when you talk about connections so much.
There was a series that was on, I think it was on PBS.
I think the guy's name was Burke.
I can't remember his first name.
I'm not sure about the last name.
He had a series called Connection.
And I thought it was fascinating because what he would do is he would take a whole series of connections to show how a particular technology had evolved.
You know, so he might go from, you know, the quill to the jet engine or something like that.
And it was a fascinating, fascinating thread of things.
It's very much like what you're talking about.
It really is.
And I did consult his work, actually.
Did you?
I was writing this book.
because he did that connections.
He did a book called The Day of the World
changed and all this.
He also did a book called Circles
in which he would start with one particular
event that had cared in history.
And if you go around the circle,
you come back to the beginning
where it started, where this particular inventor
invented something.
What led up to it? What was the circle
leading to that? So yes, we're talking
about connections, and we're talking about the
inability to understand things
without reference to supporting and accessory factors.
We have that going all the time, denying things that are going to be happening.
And, of course, I think the fearful thing is that the government is aiding and this denial.
Because if you deny that there's a problem, then there's very little impetus to try to solve it.
If there ain't no problem, don't try to solve it.
They're throwing out their own chaos and uncertainty and anxiety that's out there all the time, always, I guess.
So the question is, she's talking about volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity.
I mean, it sounds like a government policy.
I think they've got bureaucracies that specialize in that.
Yeah.
Well, actually, that's true.
Yeah, that's in your section there about new ways of thinking.
And so how do we incorporate that in a new way?
of thinking that help us to solve this riddle well each of those factors is a
factor that helps you to understand things and to have more control it doesn't
necessarily mean it helps you to length them together that has to be done by
original thinking by you have to be under those things you things are
involved well you don't have a basic situation that doesn't change it changes all the
time. So the other thing that I want to emphasize the most is that is the role of capitalism
and all of this. I mean, there's all this, like the private equity, the business of people
having a point of view that is going to advance them financially and that blinding them
to the problems that are here. Like, for instance, we talked about global warming. Well, the rich
people, very rich people, are buying multi-million dollar apartments and condominiums, which
have special air filters, which will keep the wildfire smoke out, and we'll try to keep the
global warming effect at bay by superpower air conditioners.
Of course, they're building their own bunkers, too.
Yeah, they're doing things that are creating all kinds of chaos and, and, and,
And, you know, weapons of war, mass destruction, they're out there building super bunkers in various places as well.
So I think they're somewhat pessimistic about what they're doing.
Well, it's basically the idea is that, you know, we don't care about the ordinary person.
We're going to survive.
We're going to see to our own survival.
And if we, in order to do that, we have to deny certain things that are going on will do so.
Now, incidentally, all of this is not conscious thinking.
They don't necessarily say, well, I'm going to.
deny global warming because it'll be to my advantage financially because all my investment
is in the oil and gas industry. They don't do it that way. They come up with pseudo-logic,
things that seem to make sense to them. But if they didn't have a financial thrust in the matter,
they would look out upon it quite differently. That's right. We can always find a justification
for what it was, what it is that we really want. Everybody should understand that if you're
parent this time of year at Christmas time, you can always understand that people will come up with a justification for what they want. And that's as true of government as it is of corporations out there. And it's really dangerous when the two of them connect with each other. I think that's one of the things, you know, you talk about connections and the importance of it and how we can try to connect these different factors each of us individually. But I think it's the human connection that is out there that is going to be essential for all of this. It's going to be our collective work on.
all this what do you think about that would you agree with that well i'd agree with it but
there's so many things that are taking place now that are causing the uh shisms in uh yes splitting
people into factors and belief systems and uh political points of view that are and that's very
dangerous because then you can't get together any kind of unity uh even in the face of a emergency
well i think we've always had i think we've always had these factor uh you know factions and things and
things like that, you know, the founders of the country warned about factions and political parties.
But I think what makes it unique is that when you're interacting with people on a personal
basis, you interact with them a little bit differently than if you've got that separation
between you, that technology is giving us now.
Because now you're interacting with something that's abstract, it's not with another
person.
And there's also the body language that you're not picking up on.
But it makes it easier for you to be harder on people when there's that distance there,
I think.
That's why I think, you know, the personal connection I think is really vital to making these connections and coming up with an understanding of what's going on.
We talk about the hidden factors that are out there, hidden unrelated topics.
Other people, as you pointed out earlier, just talking to ordinary people about what it is that you see with different things.
I think that is the genius of the collective free market out there that there's so many observers who are looking at things and thinking about them.
And it's kind of their collective decision that is kind of guiding things along as opposed to having a central planner who's doing that.
What do you think about that?
You've got in your final chapter, a new way of thinking, you have what you call it, sensible solution.
What does that really involve?
I'm sorry I hear what you said.
You have a sensible solution.
What do you think a sensible solution to the kind of stress and chaos?
and anxiety that we have, manipulation that we have.
What is a solution to that?
Well, I think the Wikipedia is a good example of that.
They have people from all walks of life, all levels of education,
free to contribute to whatever topic they may want to do that.
It may be helped.
I mentioned earlier about the effect of global warming on the making of cheese.
It might be somebody who makes cheese that's going to come up with some idea.
you know, we don't know that.
We don't know that that may not be where it comes
some original idea
about what to do about global warming.
And you put it on what I'd like to think
and I hope it will be developed
a kind of Wikipedia
where the ordinary person can feel
free to put forth their ideas
about it. Now, you say, well, we already
have that. We have the internet.
No, we don't. The internet is a
commercial situation. It's all
done for making money and grab
attention and all that. And there's no
criticism of it.
There's no pure review, if you will.
In the Wikipedia, I mean, you know, people can write in and say, well,
that particular contribution is bonkers and then give an example why it is, or that
was a very good idea.
And after that, you begin to get things coming together in unpredictable ways that
they help us solve these eight problems.
You know, the problem is it seems like whenever you wind up having a form or a place
where things can be, and that's true of the Internet.
It's also true of Wikipedia.
Then it becomes you have gatekeepers who are there.
And we saw this in spades throughout the COVID stuff that if somebody's got a different
idea, rather than debate them, the impetus is to silence them by the people who are
in authority.
And so that really, I think, is the key thing.
And I think as part of that, we see a continuing rise in, uh, uh, uh,
disgust and deprivation of, you know, free speech.
People are not interested in the principle of free speech.
They don't want to have open debate.
And I see this, regardless of where people are coming from on the political spectrum,
there is a declining interest in debate and thinking, you know,
the debate is critical to critical thinking.
And so the people who are in charge, the gatekeepers, whether it's Wikipedia or the
internet or, you know, any other form of information, they are weighing in on that and they
don't want things that they disagree with. And it might be because they've got an agenda or it
might be because they've just got a particular prejudice about something. They want to
make sure that the contrary views don't get out there. That, I think, is a real key that's
that's there. And again, this is part of this atomization that we have of people, feeding that
tribalism in a way that we've never seen it before using technology.
I would agree with everything you've just said, exactly.
And I think we have to try to get beyond that.
But we get back again to this business of people having their own personal,
financial point of view and position and pushing that,
basically on the fact that they look upon it as.
So maybe we're talking about a capitalism problem.
We've got capitalism.
that's what this country's all about.
But, I mean, it's certain parts of it now.
We've gone to the point where people are unable to take another point of view
if it's going to be financially harmful and hurtful to them.
Yeah.
I think that, you know, we start looking at the tech companies.
I don't think that their capitalism would exist.
I don't think they'd have billions of dollars if they weren't unified with the government.
So there's a symbiosis there that the two of these entities feed off of each other.
And I think that nexus right there is the difficult thing.
And so I think, you know, when I think of capitalism, I don't like to refer to capitalism anymore because I think of it as a partnership, a public-private partnership, some kind of a economic fascism where they are working together.
But I like to think of a free competitive market where the government doesn't have any role except as some kind of a referee between two parties that have a conflict or something.
but yeah, that's the thing that's really driving this.
You know, many people, when they talk about AI, they said, well, you know, here's a couple
different outcomes.
Maybe this stuff really works the way it's supposed to work and it takes everybody's jobs
and we wind up with the Depression.
Or maybe it doesn't work at all, in which case, the big AI stock bubble that we've got
burst and everybody loses their job because of that.
And I said, well, there's a third alternative, and that is that the government keeps propping
it up with public funds because it feeds their surveillance.
and manipulation needs, their ability to surveil and to control us.
And I really think that that's where this is all going to head.
I don't really, you know, those other two things may happen and they may be true.
But I think there is a customer out there for the AI stuff that is driving all this
stuff that has been putting out these proposals for the longest time.
And that's governments, governments around the world.
I mean, we look at the brain project that we had a few years ago.
That was during the Obama administration.
but things like the brain computer interface that Elon Musk and many other tech companies are doing out there.
It's Neuralink, and there's a lot of them that are doing that.
That's being driven by the government wanting to connect into our minds, hack into our minds, really.
And they've been funding that kind of stuff.
So how do we break that?
On the Musk side, he's doing it for money.
I mean, obviously, to make money.
That's right.
So that there's unholy alliance, if you will,
between someone who can't see anything other than the dollar
and another side of the government can't see anything
other than increasing power and surveillance over the population.
Yeah, that's right.
Absolutely true.
Well, it's a fascinating book.
It's a fascinating take on this.
And, of course, you've written many books on the brain,
the memory one, very interesting.
And you do have sections about memory in this book as well.
And people will be able to find this on Amazon,
I guess, is the best place that they can find.
it looking for the title of this and it is you know it is something that I think we all need
to think about how we're going to operate the effects that this technology is having on
our brains in the 21st century and that is the title of the book the 21st century brain
by Richard Restach thank you very much Dr. Restach thank you appreciate you coming on
good day I enjoy it very much thank you a very interesting conversation thank you
Have a good day.
Folks, we're going to take a quick break, and we will be right back.
You know,
I'm going to be able to
I'm going to
I'm
going to
I'm going to be able to be able to be.
...their...
...toe...
I'm going to be able to be.
I'm going to be.
POMAYOR.
Here.
...aise,
...and
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Welcome back, and I've had a lot of comments.
I don't want to get to these.
I knew before I brought him in that he was,
I didn't think he was going to be that focused on climate change.
I really wanted to talk to him about the other issues that were there.
But, yeah, we had a lot of comments about that.
As a matter of fact, Lance said,
is this thing about the cheese stuff in global warming connections, is that so they can
try to tax the cheese? So I guess the question is, who stole the cheese, right? These people
are trying to steal our cheese all the time. But we do have an update, by the way. And this is
some comments from the telegram chat. Paul McLeod said, I'm asking each and every one of you
to send prayers in my direction for a specific reason that I cannot disclose at the moment by
the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes. So they sent that in, so I just
pass that along to you. That's for Paul McLeod, who is asking for prayer. And for the love of the
road, Ryan has given us an update on his dad's surgery. He said, Dad's surgery was done
afternoon yesterday. It went well, and they eliminated all seven blockages. Wow. Had to take
veins from other parts of the body to go around, some of them, though. He should be home by Saturday.
He said, sorry to hear about Clyde Lewis. Glad he's got a
loyal base that is helping him with GoFundMe, yes.
And so I'm glad that things are going well for your dad, Ryan.
I hope it continues to go that way.
We'll continue to pray about that.
And let me get some of your comments here.
Occam's Razors, not what people think it is.
It states that the explanation with the least number of assumptions is likely to be correct.
Not the simplest explanation is likely to be correct.
That's from Greg Hume, 121.
That's fine.
And he says, oh, for, let's see, this is I'm Marty.
He says, come on, most wildfires are arson, not global warming.
I agree with that.
I agree with that.
And you all know that I'm not buying into global warming.
And he began by talking about how they were manipulating the data at the Indian stations to try to minimize the pollution that was there and to lower the temperature.
but typically government's doing just the opposite.
And it was a climate change crowd, the global warming crowd, that gave India the license to have as cheap and dirty power plants as possible.
So you might want to start with what the government policy has been towards their mcuffin of climate change.
That's the reason they have that kind of pollution that's there.
And, of course, that was why Nixon unconstitutionally created the environmental protection.
protection agency. There's nothing in the Constitution that says that it's the role of the federal
government to protect the environment. And they did it because of pollution. They said, we've got
some polluted sites that are so big, we don't have the money to address them locally or state
level. So let's do it at the federal level. And so they had their superfund cleanup thing. And then
they metastasized from pollution to telling us what kind of cars we could have. And Michigan,
control with that. So again, it's mission creep, or I guess we could say e-mission creep.
Though in the case of the Indian testing stations, I believe he was referring to air quality
with the massive amounts of air pollution they have in these cities. And spraying it,
I believe he was implying that you clean up the air, which in that instance, I would agree.
Yeah, you find, interestingly enough, you know, and the two most populous countries
China and India, where they have said, don't worry about cleaning up the pollution from your factories
or your power stations, do whatever you want, right? They also have the worst air pollution.
Wuhan is one of the worst places for air pollution. So a real octo spook says he's correct
about one thing. The money around global warming will buy the truth before it can be muttered.
That's right. Money problem and a gigantic government. Yeah, when we get our head around the
whole issue. I think all the, all the little spaghetti strings, when you keep pulling them all
out, you'll find the government and you'll find human nature in terms of the greed for power
and for money. That is the common spaghetti thread that ties all this stuff together. And that's
how we keep our distance from this. But I think the real key thing, takeaway from me from that
interview, was the key thing is the connections. Our brain works on connections. Our brain works
best with connections, connections with other people.
Expand our mind, expand our universe, and it's that person-to-person connection that is so
difficult for us to maintain today that is so vital for us, our survival.
Thank you for joining us.
Have a good day.
They created common core and dumbed down our children.
They created common past to track and control us.
Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing and the communist future.
They see the common man is simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find at the Davidnightshow.com.
Thank you for listening. Thank you for sharing.
If you can't support us financial,
Please keep us in your prayers.
The David Knight Show.com.
