Timcast IRL - Timcast IRL #736 FIFTH BANK COLLAPSING, SF Bank Plans Sale As Credit Suisse FAILING w/Benny Johnson

Episode Date: March 16, 2023

Tim, Ian, Phil, & Serge join Benny Johnson to discuss more banks beginning to fail, SVB giving Black Lives Matter $73M, James O'Keefe announcing his new media company, and a new deep fake created by N...Y students showing their principal making racist threats. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So this morning, we got news that Credit Suisse was in serious trouble. This is a European bank, and apparently they got no money. Many people were predicting this would be the next big bank to fail, and it resulted in trading halts in Europe. Now, we were trying to figure out what to talk about for the show because like, well, do we want to talk about the banking thing again? Because that's, I mean, it's been big, but we've talked about Credit Suisse. And then about 10 minutes before this show is set to go live, we get breaking news from Bloomberg that another San Francisco-based bank is seeking an exit strategy because it was, what did they say, cut to shreds or something? Just destroyed. And, okay, that marks the fifth bank that is either collapsed or facing collapse.
Starting point is 00:01:03 Now, so far, there have been three major collapses, the second and third largest in history back to back. Credit Suisse is a very, very large international bank. And if this one goes down, it is very bad news. And then we got First Republic, which the news is just breaking. So we'll talk about that. We got a bunch of other news, too. I was torn as to whether or not to lead with this because James O'Keefe is going to call in the show quite literally call he's actually going to call Benny Johnson and Benny Johnson's going to hold his phone up to the microphone
Starting point is 00:01:30 because we don't actually have a way to do real call-ins on this show and that's intentional but for James launching his new O'Keefe media group we decided to figure out a way to make an exception so he'll literally just call Benny on the phone we're going to hold the phone up to the microphone.
Starting point is 00:01:46 And then we have to talk about AI because the new chat GPT apparently has been granted access to its own code to execute code. It's been given money and unleashed. This is the craziest thing I've ever heard. Microsoft apparently, I'm not sure if it's Microsoft
Starting point is 00:02:01 or whatever the parent company is, got rid of their AI ethics team. And now people are kind of worried that they've created this soulless entity, this domino effect, and they're unleashing it. And this is going to destroy the world and all that. So, you know, we'll talk about it. Before we get started, my friends, head over to TimCast.com. Click Join Us to become a member and support our work directly. We are a member driven company. That means we only exist because I should say almost entirely we exist just because
Starting point is 00:02:32 you guys are members. So when you sign up, you ensure that we can keep doing this show. I can do my morning show. Ad rates don't cut it. Never really did. And if it was not for you as members, we wouldn't be here. So if you want to see this, keep keep on keeping on become a member. But also we have a newsletter now. Go to Timcast dot com. You can click to set up to our newsletter and you will get a weekly email showing you the top stories of the week. It will show you the top guests and members only content, as well as the other cultural stuff that we are making behind the scenes. So don't forget to smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends.
Starting point is 00:03:06 As I already mentioned, joining us tonight is a man who did more for East Palestine, Ohio than Joe Biden, Mr. Benny Johnson. I'm really sad that that's true, but it is absolutely, verifiably, empirically correct. And you did a lot for a single American individual,
Starting point is 00:03:21 but in the grand scheme of things, giving $20,000 out is like as low as it can be. You know, so it's like for you as a single person, that's a huge, it's huge. For Joe Biden, the federal government, it is sad. They did nothing at all. Yeah, this is like not even Nancy Pelosi's plastic surgery bill for a Wednesday. What was, what'd you use the money for?
Starting point is 00:03:41 What did they use the money for? I'm not sure. Do you just say it was like a gift? You were able to gift people? It was cash. Do you have a foundation that does it? We just took our, we took our profits for the month and we went up to East Palestine and we handed those people an envelope with a thousand dollars in it.
Starting point is 00:04:00 We went to Google Maps and we found where the crash site was. Then we went to the homes that were closest to the crash site was. Then we went to the homes that were closest to the crash site. I wish I could have given money to everyone. This was three days after the crash. No one was helping these people. If this had been in Philadelphia. I'm sorry, if it had been in Kiev. If this had been in Kiev. You know, actually, our president went and traveled to the place that is as far away from East Palestine as you can possibly get, actually. So while we were heading up to East Palestine, Joe Biden went as far on a map as you can actually get, which is Kiev, Ukraine, from East Palestine, the polar opposite of the world, to prove that America last is the guiding principle of Joe Biden's administration. Hey, Ukraine first.
Starting point is 00:04:49 Yeah, that's right. Thanks for doing that, dude. So, anyway. We'll talk about that, too. And then we'll talk about what the federal government will do for Americans when the banks all collapse, which is probably nothing. But thanks for hanging out, Benny. It's going to be fun. What's up, guys?
Starting point is 00:05:00 And then we're going to have James call your phone. So that'll be in about 25 minutes or so. Yep. Right now we got Phil Labonte hanging out. Hello, I'm Phil Labonte, lead singer of All That Remains, anti-communist and counter-revolutionary. I'm also Ian Crossland coming at you hot. What's up? And I am Serge.com.
Starting point is 00:05:17 Let's roll. So let's jump into this breaking news that actually just broke right before the show started. We have this from Bloomberg Markets, just in First Republic Bank. The San Francisco-based lender that was cut to junk by S&P and Fitch is exploring strategic options, including a sale. Let me break that down for you. A sale means they're about to fall apart. What's happening right now with Silicon Valley Bank and this major collapse that the federal government is stepping in and they are trying to sell it off they've insured all deposits svb apparently put out a statement where they're like it's the safest place to have your money because the government has insured all deposits with no caps so it's like funny money monopoly money yo if this is how
Starting point is 00:06:00 they're viewing the system there ain't no system is no system. So we were going to talk about this other story. Look at this one. Dow closes more than 250 points lower as bank crisis spreads to Europe. Live updates. This is from CNBC. And they're talking about Credit Suisse. According to one of their main investor guys or main companies,
Starting point is 00:06:22 there's no money left. There's no money. And the Saudis, which apparently are principal investors, saying they can't give any more because of regulations. So it's looking like Credit Suisse, which is a very large international bank, is on the verge of collapsing. This was already predicted. The bond market apparently is doing very, very poorly. And we've talked about that in the past week. So as we're talking about this, right before the show starts, Phil's like, hey, Tim, First Republic Bank is trying to sell now. It's another SF bank. So this is going to be the fifth bank. We've got Silvergate was the first. Most people didn't know or didn't care because it wasn't that big. But Silvergate collapses. Then what happened was because of that, Silicon Valley Bank put out this statement about raising money and it caused a panic. Everybody said,
Starting point is 00:07:07 is this going to be like Silvergate? I don't want to lose my money. So there's a run in the bank. Silicon Valley Bank then falls apart. Then Signature Bank falls apart. Some people are trying to claim that that bank was better, but I don't know.
Starting point is 00:07:15 All I know is that's three banks that fell and now we have Credit Suisse and First Republic on the chopping block. So I don't know. I'm going to defer to Max Keiser, economist. Did he say the end is nine?
Starting point is 00:07:26 He said, he tweeted out about four hours ago, a global bank reset is coming. All depositors will have their deposits protected. This is Max Kaiser. All your deposits will be protected, he's saying. He says the US dollar and other fiat money will be swapped for a central bank digital currency and depositors will be given a bonus amount of the new currency when the switch is made. You got to make this to sweeten the deal. Like a quick version of the Euro switch, he concludes. Terrifying, but I see the plan. I mean, he knows he's seen this for about a decade in the making.
Starting point is 00:07:53 He's in El Salvador, you know, hanging out with the president and pushing Bitcoin as the national currency. I like him a lot. But the thing about perma bears is perma bears are perma bears. So when bad times come, they look like they're geniuses because they're perma bears. You know, it's like they're always permanently bear. Like he's permanently bearish on fiat currency. He's permanently bearish on. He's right.
Starting point is 00:08:18 I also am against the structure of our fiat system currently. I agree. Can I just say, if I had listened to Max Keiser like 10 years ago, I'd be a very happy person living on my own private island. Because he was like, Tim, I'm telling you, you've got to buy Bitcoin right now. And I was like, I got a little bit. I'm not worried about it. You've got to buy more.
Starting point is 00:08:42 Listen, Tim is fibbing to you because Tim could live on his own island right now if he wanted to. That's not true. Max Keiser. This is his own island. This is kind of like having your own island. It's amazing coming out here. It is a mountaintop, to be fair. And you look around. I was standing out with the chickens before the show. I'm like, standing out with the chickens, I'm looking
Starting point is 00:08:59 around. I'm not like the only person. You are on your own island. I mean, there's like people who live close by. And it's not like mountains, you know, in the Rockies. It's the smoky, it's the blue ridge. It's beautiful. It's a bunch of dirt. There's no minerals in it.
Starting point is 00:09:14 Nothing like that. You have your own harem of chickens? Well, that's Roberto Jr.'s harem. He's a very busy man. But no, no, but in all seriousness. So I have the tweet from Max kaiser that uh ian was referencing where he says a global bank reset is coming and a lot of people think this is to bring about a central bank digital currency which is going to be the government's crypto which they
Starting point is 00:09:35 control and the reason they'll do this is because they can track every single purchase yeah everything you ever do like before the show we're talking about, and it's like if you want to go buy gasoline on Thursday, but that day is not good for ESG, they're going to say, you know what? Your central bank coin doesn't work at the gas station today. Take it out of your guns. Say bye to your gun purchases. That's right. They're already, I mean,
Starting point is 00:09:57 they're beta testing this with the credit cards. Yeah. Oh yeah, Discover, I think. Well, credit cards was the first step towards digital currency. Now you're swiping a card card it's funny because futuristic sci-fi and video games always had this we've envisioned this play video game and it's like a guy in the future goes how many how many you know union credits and that's what they would call it union credits and then they would just have like a wristwatch and they would beep and that's where we are in a way it's more secure because it can't be stolen from your pocket but in the other way it's completely insecure because someone else
Starting point is 00:10:28 well they can turn it off yeah like literally they can it's programmable money they're going to be able to say this money is for this and then you have other money that you can use for other things so there will be luxury money like you'll have money for leisure time that you're allowed to spend at the movies or downloading stuff or whatever. Then you'll have like necessities, money, et cetera. And different, like if you have a low ESG score, you won't get a lot of credits for, uh, for luxury and leisure. Those will be the ones to entice people.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Like remember in, uh, what was it? The, uh, the fifth element, the cigarettes that, that, that they were given out, like they were re mostly filter, just a little bit of cigarette on them that kind of control is the future if we get a a central bank it's now it's now we've already seen in in like denver where they were like you can't turn on your air conditioning in the in the ac locked or in i think california they were like you can't charge your electric car what about south africa where they're like you have no right to electricity. You thought you had electricity
Starting point is 00:11:28 rights in South Africa? Nope. Government doesn't have to constitutionally provide you electricity. Figure out your own. Build your own electricity. Thomas Edison. I'm actually thinking about that because we have a small creek on the property and I'm like, can we trench this and then put a water wheel in there? Generate
Starting point is 00:11:43 some power. And he says he doesn't live on his own island. Come on. Yeah. It's a big plot of land. It's great. West Virginia. It's great. You'll want to get the batteries to store it.
Starting point is 00:11:52 That's really the storage is the thing. And then what happens is overnight, it charges a decent amount. You'll probably drain all of it very quickly because a water wheel is not going to, it's not a fast moving river or anything like that. Yeah. I mean, in Florida, you get these guys coming up, knocking on your door all the time. I live in Tampa and they're like,
Starting point is 00:12:09 yo, look at your house. It's great. Can we put solar panels up on the top and we'll give you this much money because the power companies pay us for your solar panels. Have you done it? I have not done it. I think it's a really good idea for you to do that.
Starting point is 00:12:21 I would rather do it for myself. Right. Right. So I have a generator. So I have an,. I have a generator that runs on gas. When the hurricane hit, my generator kicked on. It was awesome.
Starting point is 00:12:34 What if someone cuts off the gas line? They can't cut off the sun, I don't think, so maybe solar is the way. Get tanks. Get LP tanks. I got a thousand gallon LP tank and I'm going to get two more. I need to get uh someone in new england that can install house batteries like tesla house batteries i can't find anyone anyone out there in new england that installs house batteries in southern new england
Starting point is 00:12:54 hit me up where should they hit you a long time to get on my twitter phil we we went through the different company we we tried doing tesla at first and it just took too long it was a disaster a year later they showed up with the stuff and we're like, dude, we just don't want it. We're running with someone else. I got the solar now and I like it. I put a new roof on last year and they came, they took the solar panels off
Starting point is 00:13:12 so I could put the new roof on, no problem, no issues, but I can't find someone that'll actually sell me. Do you like your solar panels? I do, yeah. Yeah, I do. I really want to get the...
Starting point is 00:13:19 Do you get to keep the energy or do you have to sell part of it to the power company? Right now, I have to sell it back because I don't have the batteries because it's New England and there's not a lot of sun in New England. But you get like credits.
Starting point is 00:13:27 Yep. Social credits. So here, let me show you this. It is. It's the platform or the basis for it. Let me show you this real quick. This is from The Motley Fool. Why are Wells Fargo and Citigroup falling today?
Starting point is 00:13:38 And I don't really care to get into the details. I just want to then show you this story. This is from Seeking Alpha. Wells Fargo, no crisis here. Well, okay. So you get to decide for yourselves whether or not you think the end is nigh, because I'll put it this way. Right before the show starts to get breaking news, another bank is in serious trouble. And you're going to hear from the Jim Cramers and from the Bidens, they're all going to say everything is fine.
Starting point is 00:14:06 Your deposits are safe. Don't worry about it. Maybe, maybe. But I don't know how much I trust these guys. And that's the problem, because I feel like when they come out and say, don't worry, everything's fine. They're actually having the inverse impact they think they are. Everyone's going to hear that and be like, run for the hills.
Starting point is 00:14:24 Get your money out of the banks. People don't like hearing banks being like, it's all fine. Nobody, don't pay attention. The little man behind the curtain. This is the four of America's biggest banks lost a combined $55 billion in value on Thursday. That's today. No, that was Wednesday.
Starting point is 00:14:41 That last week. That last week. Last week, yeah. Last week, geez. Well, don't trust anyone to live your life for you. today no that was that's today's Wednesday that last week last week yeah yeah last week geez well I don't trust anyone to live your life for you that's some advice take care of yourself and use your brain yeah I imagine this is like we were talking about it the other day Tim I imagine this is not the end of the problems that we've got that coming I think that these the bank failures here are gonna I think that it, the bank failures here are going to, I think that it's probably going to lead to more stress in the system. I don't, I'm not predicting it, you know,
Starting point is 00:15:09 a crash because I have no way of predicting the future at all. And I'm not, you know, I'm not a, an economics guy, but it's not a bad idea to get yourself squared away. So that way you have, you know, some necessities if you're able. Now is the time. The scariest thing is that people who want the system to fail will intentionally go out and take all their money out of the banks. I mean, could you imagine people who are upset with the status quo and, say, the two-party
Starting point is 00:15:36 system and establishment politics intentionally taking all their money out of banks because they want those banks to fail, which would cause the system to collapse? Who could imagine doing something like that? So this is what Vivek Ransom said. He's a very smart guy. He's running for president. He was on the show two days ago.
Starting point is 00:15:49 And he's like, no, no, no. These hedge fund guys wanted to get their money and they wanted it to bail out. And they didn't like their money being locked up in a 2% bond. And so they actually staged a run on the bank. He's like, this is the untold story that these guys are so greedy that they needed the extra couple points. They were locked up in a 10-year treasury. They needed that out.
Starting point is 00:16:10 And the easiest way to get that out was to collapse the bank. That's how evil these people are. So these hedge fund guys, these bros got together, finance bros got together and like, how do we stage a run on the bank? Why don't you tweet about it
Starting point is 00:16:20 and I'll tweet about it. Maybe we can get like, you know, Tyson to take his money out. And then we'll start the run on the bank. And then the federal government will have no choice because they're already on fragile ground. The ice is breaking beneath all of us. And so they'll come in and they'll insure us all. And we'll just get our money.
Starting point is 00:16:37 We'll just be able to do one little deposit and get our money back. And the government will literally trip over itself to print the money because of the situation we're in where the rest of the economy is so delicate. And they're raising the interest rates and stuff. The rest of the economy is dying to go into recession. Just begging for an excuse to go into recession. And they're just like, F them. F the country. Yo, let me just drop something right here that I have.
Starting point is 00:17:03 This is verified. This is true. There's huge finance for China. okay, in Silicon Valley Bank. The bio research for China. Silicon Valley Bank funded it to the tune of billions, right? Ton of Chinese companies use Silicon Valley Bank as a really nice bridge, right, between the two nations. What about China using fifth generation warfare without firing a shot can collapse our financial system Just by yanking out all their money What if the Chinese just said
Starting point is 00:17:27 Okay now all the money comes to us So crash the banks just by withdrawing Maybe that's why I haven't pulled my money out Easiest thing you've ever done You can collapse a nation just by going ka-ching You know what I heard about this first bank collapse Last week I guess it was This is the Silicon Valley bank
Starting point is 00:17:43 My first I had this feeling like get your money out this wave of feeling without even words or anything it's just like get it out and then i just it passed over me and i was like no no no if it disappears it disappears and that's because i feel like it is someone is gaming this it does feel like that it feels like this was an intentional that's It's not real panic. That's a little more passive than the average person is probably prepared to be with their life savings. Maybe they want you to pull the money out to collapse the system so they can then introduce a command economy and central bank digital currency. That is completely and totally reasonable in my opinion. Now, all the banks fall.
Starting point is 00:18:23 The federal government comes out and says, don't worry. All of those banks have failed, but your money has been automatically converted by the FDIC into Fed coin. So your money is still available to you in digital form. Download this app. If you want to get access to it, just like that, right?
Starting point is 00:18:41 Then they'll say, we've cataloged your accounts by social security number, log into federal government.coin or whatever and type in your social and your address and your name and your phone number and then all of your accounts have consolidated your fed coin you usd coin into one place or whatever they want to call it and then you can spend it using this app there's already the and people may people that are unfamiliar with the crypto world may not be aware, there's already what they call stable coins that are tethered to the value of the dollar. They call them, there's one called Tether that is design specific.
Starting point is 00:19:15 Sorry, just like as you're talking. Oh, God. CNBC drops a breaking. Japan's topics drops 2%. Asia Pacific markets fall as Credit Suse adds to banking fear i'm just sitting here like tomorrow's gonna be bad i think it's worse than we realize i mean it could be the thing like and so god damn it like okay look you should have bought guns in 2020 when when like the summer of love kicked off um but anyways so like i was saying there are there are
Starting point is 00:19:46 cryptos in existence that are already uh pegged to the doll to the value of the dollar um so there's already a basic infrastructure to have a dollar coin right a dollar crypto that the that the fed makes it's it's a simple transition for them. It is not hard at all. The crypto wallets, they can design those and put those into, make them for your phone or whatever. And I mean, it's not a far step away. Let's jump to this story from Daily Mail.
Starting point is 00:20:19 Woke Silicon Valley Bank donated over $73 million to Black Lives Matter related social justice groups before it collapsed, while failed Signature Bank gave $850,000. So that's where your money went. If you're wondering why Silicon Valley Bank failed and where's your money at? There it is. You can ask Black Lives Matter where your money went. That's what they were prioritizing.
Starting point is 00:20:39 They gave their money to ESG. They bankrupted it. And then they just bailed it out with taxpayer money. It's the most corrupt in the history book. If this is recorded in the history books, which I hope it will be, it'll be seen as like the most corrupt scandal, financial scandal in US history. When the communist takeover happens in the United States and lasts for 100 years or whatever, after it falls, the people who survive will write about how they took over by using private
Starting point is 00:21:03 institutions to fund far-left extremism and then have taxpayer dollars fund out those organizations. Think about this. A bank gives $73 million to far-left extremism, collapses, the taxpayer bails them out.
Starting point is 00:21:17 That's how you launder taxpayer money into ideological subversion. Crafty stuff. It's like taxation without representation. I didn't ask to have my money sent towards that crap. Well, you didn't do your, what they would say is you didn't do your own research about where this company is doing business because they probably had a prospectus or they probably put out a prospectus that had all of this stuff laid out.
Starting point is 00:21:42 But it's the taxpayer bailout that I didn't i didn't sign up for right tough but it's but it's but it's it's only sort of government listen it's only sort of taxpayer funded they're going to use the fdic which is paid into from banks but they're supposed to use the money for the little guy and they're giving it to the billionaires and the millionaires so it is it is taking away from you but in a different way and how it affects the taxpayer when they're like it's not going to cost a taxpayer a dime it will not i repeat it will not they're lying because what actually is going to happen is the financial damage from all of this is already rippling out to everyone the fact that stocks fell in these banks means retirement
Starting point is 00:22:20 accounts are taking hits and that means older people are probably not looking at their budgets being like i guess we don't eat this month. So yes, it absolutely does hit everybody when they do this. And that's their argument is, well, we can't have the social contagion or we can't have the banking contagion spread around and destroy the economy, can we? I say, yeah, we can. Well, tough luck. So the average American household has $10,000 in cash in their reserves. East Palestine, the median household income was forty one thousand dollars a year that's what normal america that's how normal americans live now ninety five percent of depositors had over the two hundred fifty thousand dollar maximum for federal insurance so you're talking the uber rich of the uber rich based on
Starting point is 00:22:56 american based on the data for american uh solvency right and liquidity so you're talking the richest of the rich this is a bailout of the richest of the rich yep now these depositors and they're woke too to make it worse woke as hell like yeah if they were rich and libertarian i might be like well they're the laptop class they're the worst that's right they're the worst so you're taught so so put this in context here it took the government uh nigh on a month to lift a finger for east palestine where they nuked a bunch of little children and poisoned their water and they had this they had this locked up by saturday all the yell and had this done in an emergency meeting by saturday biden show billions of dollars nine in
Starting point is 00:23:35 the morning bailing out the richest and the wokest of the woke because they're donors joe biden gets up at nine in the morning for an emergency announcement and jen seck is like he doesn't do this normally as a night owl and i'm like this mfr flew across the planet to give a half a billion dollars to ukraine and he didn't lift a finger for east palestine but he wakes up at the crack of dawn to make sure he can assure all the woke silicon valley investors your money's safe what a piece of garbage but he's talking to the people who vote for him and the people who fund him and that's why he does it the people of east pal East Palestine voted for Trump so he could give to elsewhere. You're both right.
Starting point is 00:24:09 But everybody here knows that to make the wealthy suffer means that the poor suffer more. Every single time. If you really want to hurt the wealthy, if you want. And this is part of why socialism doesn't work. The idea is get the money hurt the wealthy if you want and this is part of why socialism doesn't work right like the idea is get the money from the wealthy right but when you get the money from the wealthy the people that don't have any money they get smashed and it's literally that's why communism and socialism doesn't work because when you hurt the producers the wealthy are always the ones that are producing like the reason they have they have money and stuff is because they're doing stuff so as much as the incentive is like or the gut feeling is like make them suffer
Starting point is 00:24:50 right like that's what you want you want them to pay but it's gonna hurt the poor people and i'm not sure that it's worth it i don't you know i don't want it i don't want to suffer i don't want anyone to suffer uh first and foremost, the major problem here, the major problem here, first and foremost, is constitutional. OK, so Article one and two of the Constitution. Congress controls the purse. Congress passed a law to insure $250,000 worth of deposits. That is a law by Congress.
Starting point is 00:25:16 How Joe Biden has the bloody cheek to think that he can just go through and rewrite this law and spend this money and turn on this faucet is beyond me. Now, I tell you, they did it with the vaccine mandate. They did it with student loans. They did it with student loans. Now he's getting smacked in the pee pee on both of those. But here we go again. He's rewriting the Constitution in real time. The ATF passed a law without Congress. They made an object illegal braces for for pistols. Yes. They're saying that you can go to jail, but they never actually had Congress pass a law banning such an object. These are all trial balloons. But more we're still there. Grains of sand being added to the heap or the executive branch of the government says we can make anything
Starting point is 00:26:02 we want legal or legal or illegal and no one will stop us so it's not it's not just the things you you talked about but you were correct right the the financial stuff like the fdic him saying i can just give the money if i want what you're gonna do about it the fact that he can just take money and give it away he didn't have those powers but who will stop him who's supposed to stop that's exactly right who's supposed to stop i don't know congress congress so congress is Article 1 for a reason. Again, people don't understand. Congress is Article 1.
Starting point is 00:26:29 Congress was supposed to be the important branch. Yeah. Article 2 is the presidency. That was supposed to be like the backwater. Military. Yep. That was supposed to be the backwater. That's why they put old Washington in charge.
Starting point is 00:26:41 Old Washington. To kind of putz around and talk to different countries and talk about the military and chew on his wooden teeth. And Congress was where the action was. And that's the way it was designed because, of course, Congress itself is far more representative of all of us. You can get a dumbass president, but it's hard. You know, Congress is going to be a lot. We saw this with the McCarthy fight, right? Congress is going to be where real populism happens. Dude, we were at Congress on Friday, last Friday, and we were talking to Matt Gaetz and Steve Bannon came in. And Steve Bannon was like, get ready, guys, because on Monday they're going to come in and they're going to start asking you that they need this bailout.
Starting point is 00:27:16 It was the next morning they did it without congressional authority. They didn't ask. They didn't ask. So, silly, poor, silly Steve B bannon who thought they would actually go to congress this time to ask instead they just went that's right it's done that's right that indicates that they're gonna do it again in some other fashion that they'll be like oh your dollars that you thought were dollars they're they're digital currency now don't ask questions right and who's supposed to question let me tell you let me tell you a story let me tell you a story uh i have a spanish friend and in 2012 at the end of 2012 i
Starting point is 00:27:49 went to spain because they're having big protests and i asked my spanish activist friend why the protests had been going on and persisting and she told me it all started with the euro so this is many years ago for these young people unemployment why unemployment was so very high why the economy was destroyed and what she said was, the currency of Spain was, I think it was the peseta. Is that what it was? And you'd go out to your,
Starting point is 00:28:11 you wake up in the morning, you'd go to your cafe, you'd grab a newspaper, you'd grab a muffin or something and a coffee, and each of those items was one peseta. The newspaper was one, the muffin was one, the coffee was one,
Starting point is 00:28:21 three peseta, and you got everything you need. Then they decided to roll out the euro, and they wanted it normalized for all of Europe. She said one day they woke up, and the newspaper cost one euro instead. The muffin cost one euro, and the coffee cost one euro.
Starting point is 00:28:35 The only problem is, in order to actually buy the euro, you needed three peseta per one euro, so all of your goods, everything jumped up three times their cost overnight, and then all of your goods, everything jumped up three times their cost overnight. And then all of a sudden the economy started falling apart and then young people couldn't find jobs. They went into a financial crisis and started protesting with the central bank digital currency. We may see something similar, but perhaps they will try and incentivize people
Starting point is 00:29:01 into giving up their freedom by saying, well, if you click the I agree button on the app, you get 1.5 times your deposit. So if you had $100 in the bank, you'll have 150 FedCoin and FedCoin can be used anywhere because it is legal tender and must be accepted by all businesses. Oh, and they'll be like, if you don't buy gasoline this month, we'll pay you $1,000 kind of crap of their fake phony coin. Oh, yeah. Fed coin, centralized command bank is going to have like a thing
Starting point is 00:29:29 where it's like, you can opt in for lower my energy costs. And then it'll be like, it will show you your coins going up very slowly. And it'll be like, by not using electricity, you're earning.
Starting point is 00:29:39 And then it will show you the coin. You'll flip your lights off and it'll tick a little faster. And you'll be like, oh, all the things I can. And really what it is is it's the amount of money that they take out of your per month credit it's it's because while it's going up what they're not telling you is they're also inflating the coin by producing more so it's not really going up yeah that's the thing about these they're not going to be on a blockchain these central bank digital currencies are not planned
Starting point is 00:30:00 from what i've read to be on a blockchain so there's not gonna be trackable no one's gonna know what they'll track malfeasance in the background. Yeah, they'll be printing it. We won't know. That's the problem. There's no incentive for the government to put their currency. I mean, right now, we can't get the Federal Reserve audited, never mind control over the Federal Reserve.
Starting point is 00:30:18 There's no way a federal coin is going to be on a public open blockchain. That's why Bitcoin is great. Like as much as people want to go ahead and crap on crypto and stuff like that, I get it. There are people who don't understand it, whatever. The great thing about Bitcoin is the fact that it's decentralized,
Starting point is 00:30:34 that it's international, that it's not controlled by anyone. There's no single entity that controls it. And I know that there's people super focused on like the dollar amount of a coin. That's not what the important part of Bitcoin is. Bitcoin is a protocol like email. Except Bitcoin may be the precursor intentionally designed to bring about centralized digital currencies
Starting point is 00:30:56 in that for all global currency, there is gold. Gold is a store of value. Bitcoin, they say, is digital gold. Not everybody agrees, but Bitcoin, they say, is digital gold. Gold is a store of value. Bitcoin, they say, is digital gold. And everybody agrees, but Bitcoin, they say, is digital gold. And so maybe these powers wanted Bitcoin to exist. They wanted people to get very, very wealthy off of it. They wanted to have an idea in the public that if you bought Bitcoin, you were rich now. Then when they roll out FedCoin, they're going to be like, don't miss the train. Because if you buy FedC fed coin it's going to be worth 10 times what it is
Starting point is 00:31:25 in three days are you gonna sit back they're gonna play in the fomo and and it's gonna work let's jump to this next story this next it's actually 8 30 we know we're gonna have an incoming we have this we have james so james is finishing up a radio interview he'll call it 8 40 8 40 beautiful we'll keep talking about. I want to give a little time capsule to the future after the dust settles and you guys start creating a new currency. Make a currency that deflates automatically the longer it sits in your account so you're
Starting point is 00:31:53 encouraged to spend it to create You mean literal currency? No. So I had a... A deflationary currency encourages circulation. Deflationary means its value goes up uh well it actually so if you have a dollar and it sits there tomorrow you'll have 99 cents that's inflationary that's literally what the dollar does and they do it for the purpose of
Starting point is 00:32:15 trying yes i'm talking about a coin that actually disappears into nothingness right right right you're basically that's that's what like the dollar does. $1 in 1908 is worth, a dollar today is worth like what, three cents compared to a dollar a hundred years ago?
Starting point is 00:32:31 Yeah. But that's because they printed a bunch more. But in this situation, you'd print 20 million coins. It's the same thing. It's the same function. It's in reverse.
Starting point is 00:32:36 It's the same thing. It's the same function. No, no, it's a deflationary currency. It's the same function. It's the same function. You just don't understand, but you're describing the same thing.
Starting point is 00:32:43 You would never print a new one. You'd have them all built off the bat. You're just describing a different means of doing the same thing. Yeah. And it's not same function you just don't understand but you're describing the same thing you would never print a new one you have them all right exactly right you're just describing a different means of doing the same thing yeah and it's not deflationary deflationary means the value goes up not down the value goes up because they're harder to find yeah i guess but you could also create more of them i guess you're actually right on that one if if the money disappears then it becomes more scarce and more valuable so you're not actually losing any value and there is no incentive to spend in fact the incentive is to hold on to it
Starting point is 00:33:10 because it's disappearing but they can create but then you'll be able to create more of it and it'll constantly keep disappearing so it's like you don't want to have it then it's like having an expiration date on your money yeah yeah to increase the velocity because because the biggest problem is wealth hoarding i think we we've got O'Keefe on the line. So speaking of people who disappear and come back more valuable, we've got James O'Keefe on the line.
Starting point is 00:33:30 We've got the Bitcoin of investigative reporters on the line here. James O'Keefe, who launched a brand new organization today called OMG. Hey guys,
Starting point is 00:33:40 this is James O'Keefe. How you doing, Tim? Can you turn the volume up some? Hell yeah, dude. This is as high as I can get it. James, make sure you're not on like AirPods or anything. Is it?
Starting point is 00:33:49 Okay. And on speakerphone. Okay, there we go. Hey guys, can you hear me? Yes. Hey Tim. Tim, it's James. How you doing?
Starting point is 00:33:56 I'm doing pretty well. Well, I just launched a new thing. It's O'Keefe Media Group. And I just wanted to call in to tell you guys hello. I appreciate you guys being there for me. Absolutely. I watched all your episodes and you were pretty much right on about it all. So thank you, Tim, for being a
Starting point is 00:34:14 good stand-up guy. Well, we all appreciate the work you do. One of the last few, if not the last real news organization and newsman. And what happened with Project Veritas was shocking. So we're excited to see O'Keefe Media Group. We got the tweet pulled up.
Starting point is 00:34:29 You want to pull up that while James is talking? We actually have your video. We're going to play in a second. So James, what's the premise? The premise is like Uber for journalism. We're going to be sending thousands of cameras to people all over the world. And we've already have a few hundred
Starting point is 00:34:43 that have emailed us today and they want to wear the camera. So we're going to, our website's going to be totally dedicated to equipping, mobilizing, empowering, and training citizen journalists on the scale of likes that you've never seen before in your life. And so many people after what happened to me after the Pfizer story were inspired. So we're just going to make, do this on a massive scale now um and uh you have the website it's it's live i benny i was inspired by benny's uh film noir his his style and we had me getting out of a black car i don't know if you caught that joke tim you also had me stealing someone's sandwich yep placement there i don't know if you guys get that.
Starting point is 00:35:25 It's an inside joke. You have to read between the lines. And then some little dancing because people don't like when I dance. It really upsets demons when I dance. They don't like that at all. They get really angry about me being artistic. So a lot in there.
Starting point is 00:35:39 OMG, O'Keefe Media Group. And thank you guys for just being good people, for being real I hope to come visit you down there yeah come by anytime we're going to play your video
Starting point is 00:35:49 and we're going to talk about your new venture we're going to talk about corporate press and all that stuff in a moment yeah I want to come down there
Starting point is 00:35:55 and talk to you about corporate press and ownership and I've just learned so much but definitely piss off the haters share that video of me dancing
Starting point is 00:36:03 getting out of black cars stealing sandwiches. Sandwiches always taste better when they were in the hands of a pregnant lady. So that's the way it is. I say that tongue in cheek, okay, just for all of you listeners. I'm being a little ironic there. Right on. But thanks, Tim.
Starting point is 00:36:20 No, seriously, man. Good work. Appreciate it. One question. James, what are you working on right now? Oh, gee. I mean, first of all, we have a follow-up on the fire story. We got a massive tip.
Starting point is 00:36:33 A lot of three-letter government agency stuff coming in through our pipeline. And what aren't we working on? I'm in the little war room with 10 people. These are ride-or-die people. These are really good people that have been working 15 hours a day over the last few days. So you'll see our next story in the coming days, guys. It's going to be big. You're going to turn this around in days?
Starting point is 00:36:55 That's unbelievable. Days. Days. That's how we roll. That's how we roll at O'Keefe Media Group. OMG. OMG. I love the name.
Starting point is 00:37:03 The name is so good. Well, we've got to get you out of here sometime, so as soon as you can. I love the name. The name is so good. Well, we got to get you out of here sometime. So as soon as you can. I would love to. I want to have a, I've learned a lot about, as you say, ownership of media. I really want to, that's a theme I want to touch on with you. So I'll have a few stories. So thanks.
Starting point is 00:37:16 Thanks guys. I got to run. Benny, you're the best. Thanks James. Thanks James. So let's let, let, let us show you the video from O'Keefe Media so you can watch it for yourself. And I'll just play it. The irony of the acorn story is that it took a 25-year-old with a hidden camera a few days to do what billion-dollar networks and journalists could not do in a decade. I spent 14 years creating the most
Starting point is 00:37:47 effective non-profit newsroom this country has ever seen. And in paving the way to establish citizen journalism, I have been defamed, arrested, raided, and ultimately removed from the organization I spent so much time developing credibility of. I always knew they would try to ruin the reputations of those who exposed them, the pharma giants, the three-letter government agencies, and those who I thought I could trust. But in response, we are going to build an army
Starting point is 00:38:21 of investigators and exposers. They have awakened the sleeping giant. I'm back. Remaining by my side are a small, tight-knit group of the most elite journalists in the world. Exposing corruption requires standing up to power because power hates sunlight. We are sunlight. Welcome to the O'Keefe Media Group, where we will never be shut down. Because not only do I own it, but you own it too. Support us and sponsor our army of journalists by becoming a founding member today. OMG. Let me let me now it's fast. I mean, what was that a couple weeks ago?
Starting point is 00:39:06 Let me tell you how I knew James was going to be successful in this. I've known James for nigh on a decade. We both worked at Breitbart way in the early days, back when Breitbart was still doing Red Eye and all the old school Breitbart, right? And I didn't know about James, and Andrew Breitbart is like, hey, there's a guy who wants to play
Starting point is 00:39:22 a pimp. He's a white kid. Isn't that crazy? Like, white pimp! He's a white kid. Isn't that crazy? Like a white pimp. He's going to get like a fake. You held up your phone when he called and his name was saved in your phone and you could see what you saved him in your phone is. It's been in my phone like that for 10 years because that's how I remember the kid. And so Andrew Breitbart is coming in like looking a wild man at some D.C. party. He's like, this kid, he's white.
Starting point is 00:39:46 He's going to play a bimp. It's going to be crazy. He's got a prostitute too. And he's going to collapse Acorn and the entire Obama regime. The people who got Obama elected, this guy is going to come and blow them up. And sure enough, James did it. And James and I were like fast friends. He edited the Acorn video on my apartment couch.
Starting point is 00:40:03 Wow. He edited the Acorn videos there. His pimp jacket was in my closet for quite a while before he was james o'keefe and then every single little things that he's done some of the some of the craziest stuff some of the like like hey i'm gonna try and seduce someone from cnn on my boat like like you remember that one no the old one yeah the one yeah like that was that was one that's gone that i remember a little sideways john stewart praised him for the acorn stuff. John Stewart was like, we've been had. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:28 Well, he said, how come you couldn't get journalists to do this? Why is it up to this kid to go in and uncover this stuff? And then when James O'Keefe even shared this, when John Stewart showed the clips, he didn't insult or lie about what James O'Keefe uncovered. He went, this looks really bad. What is this? South Park did an episode about James O'Keefe. Really? I mean, that's how,
Starting point is 00:40:46 we didn't understand, like, it had permeated so big. South Park did an entire James O'Keefe episode. You can look it up. Which one was it? I'm sure the chat will be able to source it.
Starting point is 00:40:59 But James actually, we watched that together. It was wild. And so here's Trey Parker, Matt Stone doing a James O'Keefe acorn. There's an acorn South Park episode. Anyway, James just lets it rip.
Starting point is 00:41:08 Dude, if you think you're going to hold this guy back or you're going to hurt his feelings or anything, he says it. He danced like Michael Jackson because it makes people mad. He just lets it rip. And there's no one who lets it rip. He's more like a skateboarder at heart. He's far more of an X Games guy. He just wants to stick the landing.
Starting point is 00:41:24 I think they may have done him a favor with all of this stuff because they untethered him. Now he has an opportunity with all of his experience, knowledge, his followers, his fan base, the people who believe in him. Now he can start something new, clean and done right and shave off all the fat and the bloat that was probably holding him back. It's an optimistic way to look at it. I think Veritas getting hit the way it did sucks for for sure, because it was powerful and they did good work.
Starting point is 00:41:47 But without James, what do they have left? It's got to be with James. And I think this is a real opportunity for him to do something stronger, better, faster, et cetera. I think it's actually turned out to be, it was a very good opportunity. And he seized the opportunity because if he had been released from the company or fired,
Starting point is 00:42:03 when they weren't in the spotlight, it would have nowhere near this impact of OMG taking off into the stratosphere like it did. So talk about taking a lemon and making lemonade, man. I am concerned, James, that someone's going to come offer you $100 million for the company. They're going to start to get deals and offers and bribes. God knows the direction because it's going to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars pretty quick i would imagine yeah but don't sell the silicon valley bank james well i suppose the question is you're not alone is he launching it as a non-profit
Starting point is 00:42:34 or a for-profit it sounds like oh yeah good question well because i said on the episode he did say he watched them all and he might talk about ownership but i said it should be a for-profit that means you're not going to get donors in the same way. And that could be an issue. With Project Veritas, the 501c3, because there's that and there's action, which is, I believe, a 501c4. The 501c3, it's easy to get someone to give you money and expect nothing in exchange because it's tax deductible.
Starting point is 00:42:59 You go to a rich guy, he's taking me half a million dollars. You can write it off. They say, okay. If you're a for-profit, you can't do that. You're like, you're going to give me money because you believe in the in in the organization yeah and so a for-profit will lose all of the high level donors but it's safer for you as someone who is trying to maintain ownership and vision and the message and all that stuff no one can take it from you you talked about in the release video that it's going to be
Starting point is 00:43:24 owned by him and the community or insinuated that you are also going to be part owner. I don't know what that means exactly. Maybe he's selling off some stock to early investors or something. Maybe. I think maybe he's just saying you guys become a member, you know, because he's got membership on the website. And I think he's probably going the nonprofit route.
Starting point is 00:43:40 I'm not entirely sure. I mean, does it say tax deductible? No, it doesn't. It just says, you know, 500 bucks is a one-year subscription for a bronze level. Silver is 1,000. Gold, platinum. Or he's got the $19.99 per month subscription for yearly price increases to $2.40 at launch of platform. Oh, $200 for a one-year subscription or 20 bucks a month.
Starting point is 00:44:04 So I don't know. I'll have to talk to him about it. But I don't know. It's mission driven. And this is what I say in the beginning of all of these videos about becoming a member at TimCast.com. Offering a product in exchange really does
Starting point is 00:44:19 make it work. For profit. It's a for profit, he says. Subscription model. For profit subscription model, I think is, he says. Subscription model. For profit subscription model, I think, is the way to do it. And what he should do is the stories and then he should do commentary behind the scenes. Like how many stories have there been where you really want to hear James talk with the journalist for an hour about what went down, how it went down, give us any degree details. Not only that, I would say James should do some kind of, we're launching the Discord.
Starting point is 00:44:46 I don't know if he can do Discord. We can barely do it. But we're launching our Discord. It's basically done at this point. So I don't know exactly where we're at with its official launch. But the idea is then members get access to us. At varying tiers of membership, you can talk to members of the crew, call into the show. Imagine if you are giving 100
Starting point is 00:45:05 bucks a month to O'Keefe Media Group so we can do this mission. And that means you are in a chat room that James can see. And there's only like 50 people who are in there hanging out. Imagine if there's a larger chat room in the Discord, which is like, you know, for 100 bucks a year or whatever, 200 bucks a year, 20 bucks a month, you are actually chatting with the journalists for O'Keefe Media Group. I think that is a powerful incentive that'll probably make James way more money. And the best part is there will be no scrutiny over black cars. There will be no scrutiny over sandwiches or venues or anything. James will be able to say a dance show is the best thing for this company. And I'll tell you right now, they got mad at James for doing
Starting point is 00:45:44 these dance shows. Like, why is our nonprofit doing dance shows are you nuts adding flavor c-pack i'm being told it was super boring you need someone to moonwalk on stage there's got to be something fun he does this at turning point events and everyone goes wild when he did that spin that smooth spin in the video like that's why when we were in new York, tens of thousands of people followed him away from Project Veritas. That's right. That's exactly right. And they were too stodgy to realize that James O'Keefe is a leader. And the fact that he moonwalks and does the Michael Jackson dancing and DJs and sings and all this stuff is a component of why people believe in him. It's not just the work he does. It's that he's doing things he enjoys doing. And he's confident in him. It's not just the work he does. It's that he's doing things he enjoys doing and he's confident in it.
Starting point is 00:46:27 I just want to make sure that I fact check on this program. From South Park Studios verified YouTube account, 1.76 million followers, Butters secures a loan for his kissing company. The episode is called
Starting point is 00:46:41 Butters' Bottom Bitch. Yes. Butters tries Bottom Bitch. Yes. Butters tries to get housing loans for his bitches. Season 13. That's right. He goes and he says he's got a kissing company and he was trying to get secure money. Yep. This is the James O'Keefe inspired South Park episode.
Starting point is 00:46:59 The girls were kissing. Yeah. He was pouring out girls to kiss the boys. Wow. Well, this is cool stuff. I unfamiliar is it worth explaining the context of the kissing show and o'keefe what's the oldest profession well no the acorn thing james o'keefe just like dress up like a pimp and went to acorn and said that he was based what it was like underage girls and stuff were coming through and he was trying to figure out how to dodge the law he had money from prostitutes and he had to launder that money and so those people at acorn were like you got to bury it in the can man put
Starting point is 00:47:32 it in your backyard man bury it in a coffee can it was like a jamaican woman and she's like you gotta get you get get coffee cans and bury all your pimp earnings in your backyard so the government can't get it come on what's acorn acorn was a community organizing uh like a community organizing fraudulent organization that was clearly like being utilized to harvest votes for democrats but she was right though about burying your money in the backyard considering the banking thing right now we should resurface that cliff and really consider that advice yeah i hear that during that. During the Great Depression, people that had buried cash actually turned out okay.
Starting point is 00:48:08 If they bought gold, they probably turned out way better. Got them. Yeah. If people... Could you own gold in the Depression? I thought they... I'm not sure when they outlawed the... That's why you bury it in your backyard. Yeah, that's fair enough. Yeah, they tried outlawing gold. They did outlaw it.
Starting point is 00:48:24 They took it away from everybody. Private ownership. That's crazy. And so when we talk about central bank digital currencies, there's precedent for the seizure of American money. Wow, it's 1934. The United States Gold Reserve Act certified that all gold and gold certificates held by the Federal Reserve were surrendered, invested, and the sole title of the United States Department of Treasury. Wow. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the president.
Starting point is 00:48:47 Why did he do this? Because he's a fascist. Why? Because he's a fascist. Control. They were fascists. The whole progressive project, like fascism before the Nazis was completely in vogue. Like Mussolini was very popular before World War II.
Starting point is 00:49:10 They were writing glowing reviews of Hitler before World War II. Man of the year. Socialism is a cousin to fascism, and that progressive mindset, it's called the progressive era, the first part of the 20th century, and that was all in vogue. They thought that the intelligentsiaia the smartest people in the world were germans and they thought that at the time and they thought that that it was the the the new man was going to be the new socialist man was that was on the they were also chasing america on eugenics they viewed they germany sent their doctors over here to uh
Starting point is 00:49:40 to learn from our eugenicists so margaret sanger among them. Did they put Planned Parenthood? The pedal to the metal on fascism because they had radio. Finally, this government type can work because we have the media, we have the technology to do it. What they're doing now with central bank planning,
Starting point is 00:49:56 they think the internet's going to help them control people with their satellite observations, just like they thought the radio would let them control nations. I think there's probably something to your point about the radio helping to spread political ideas, but I don't know if it really connects to our current situation with a digital central bank currency. I bet a lot of faith is being placed on the technology of the day, because if the power
Starting point is 00:50:20 goes out, I mean, who do they think they're kidding with central bank tokens? Yo, okay, hold on. I'm like more than six years old, which means that I remember Obamacare and them being unable to build an effing website. That was amazing. I remember when I was told— Everyone can go on to the healthcare.gov. What do they call it?
Starting point is 00:50:36 The involuntary mandate or whatever? Yep. Is that what it was called? Involuntary mandate. Sounds a lot like involuntary manslaughter. No, it wasn't called involuntary mandate. Which is exactly what it turned into. It was called something else. You want to look that up? Was it? Because involuntary manslaughter no that it wasn't called involuntary mandate which is exactly what it turned into it was called something else you want to look that up was it because involuntary mandates
Starting point is 00:50:47 redundant what was it called individual mandate individual mandate there you go the individual mandate i was just like what i gotta pay more taxes because i can't afford health care how does that make sense so i was pissed off and they were like well it's a fine of x amount of dollars every year from your taxes if you can't if you don't have health care i'm like i'm poor how am i supposed to get health care are you nuts like the and the thing is like the the fine was never gonna be more than it costs to get health care like they couldn't make the fine more than it would cost for the what seven eight hundred dollars that was the first plans were rolled out yeah and so the issue was never gonna. If you made a certain amount of money, they told you, you have to buy it or we take from
Starting point is 00:51:29 your taxes. But for people in my situation, it was like, I pay rent, eat food or get healthcare. Like, dude, I need food now. Okay. You know what's going to put me in the hospital? Starvation. At least I'll have insurance, I guess. So that was.
Starting point is 00:51:43 And then I remember having to go to the website and I'm like, I guess gotta sign up for whatever this thing is and then i could it didn't work and i was like okay this website doesn't work none of it made sense it was completely broken and i just ignored it and i don't even know what happened i guess trump got in and got rid of it or something so pajama boy didn't pajama boy didn't convince you do you remember the ad oh no if you're old enough you'll remember the ad pajama boy the Boy. The guy sitting there with his pajama, wearing a onesie. Yeah. Flannel pajama. Like smirking, being like, I like drinking cocoa and getting health care.
Starting point is 00:52:11 Embarrassing. Oh, this guy, right? Yeah. Pajama Boy. Yeah. Is it this guy? Yeah. Oh, Pajama Boy and Insufferable Mansions.
Starting point is 00:52:18 Do they have the video? This is supposed to convince people. It wasn't a video. It was a static. Wear pajamas. Drink hot chocolate. Talk about getting health insurance. Get talking. This is what I'm following. It wasn't a video. It was a stat. Wear pajamas. Drink hot chocolate. Talk about getting health insurance. Get talking.
Starting point is 00:52:27 This is what I'm following. A flannel onesie. And what year was that? 2012? Yeah, 2013. 2013? Yes. Tell me that masculinity has not been a great attack.
Starting point is 00:52:38 They got Pete Buttigieg to sit there in flannel pajamas. I'm getting real close to being an advocate for mandatory basic training for all americans at the age of 18 uh yeah they do it in israel and guys are like they do it in israel and people are jacked and you don't want to mess with them in israel and i'm like i'm not really for it because i remember when i was growing up people talked about i think it was rahm emmanuel in chicago who was saying that he was in favor of mandatory basic training two months everybody goes through physical training you know you you eat better food, you get physically fit. And then they just say, OK, now you did the two months, go do your thing. And now that I'm older, I'm like, I hate to say it, but this country probably needs something like that.
Starting point is 00:53:16 What it really needs is a culture of 18 year old men and women who want to be trained and to be physically fit and healthy, not a government that forces people to go and march through mud or anything like that. Building a culture that does that is something I think we have to do. America needs to be the misogynist country the feminists said that it was in 2013. Yeah, that's right. You have too many pajama boys. But you know what pajama boy did after that? I looked this up.
Starting point is 00:53:41 You know what pajama boy went after this photo shoot? He went and ran a bank called Silicon Valley Bank. I think I know that guy. Is he an actor? I don't know. I have actually no confirmation that he was on the board of Silicon Valley Bank. It would make sense. You can either confirm or deny.
Starting point is 00:54:00 I bet this one's going to be split. Let's see. Where are we going? Start a poll. Should we mandate basic training at 18? It's a lot of it is dietary. I'm not pro mandates, but I tell you what, basic training does a lot to teach people about themselves. Most people don't understand that when things are uncomfortable,
Starting point is 00:54:29 that there is endless amounts of suffering that you can go through when you really want to do something. Like if you're doing like forced marches, right? You throw 70 pounds on your pack and then you got 30 pounds of gear and then you go walk 20 miles. Like by mile two you're you're hating life if you've never done it you know so like and there's so much that human beings have an incredible reserve of intestinal fortitude when necessary when they have 76 say yes in the
Starting point is 00:55:00 audience and you know i'm thinking about it i'm i'm actually right now uh to a two month basic training for all americans at the age of 18 i'm totally in favor of you know why it'll cure depression it'll correct people's diets yes that's true it will get them physically fit and healthier it will lower our health care costs it's so good for you it is so good for you but again i'm not for and it's a summer camp yeah it's one summer camp one time i'm not saying military boot camp where the the sergeant screams in your face i am okay i'm saying like good for you you turn 18 and then maybe as part of high school graduation you go to a basic training camp where it's like we're going to give you we're going to give you a food on a specific schedule
Starting point is 00:55:40 you're going to get a specific amount of calories you're going to do basic exercise it's not like military training like not military basic training but relatively you know close to no screaming in your face do the work get it done have a nice day you know i don't even think nowadays they have screaming in your i mean you probably get yelled at but now like the military that the basic training that you go through nowadays is significantly different to the basic training that you went through in like the 90s when i went through and that was significantly different to the basic training that you went through in the 60s when you were going like when they were going off to you know vietnam so so i'm glad you brought up the 60s so could you imagine to to just so that we can see perspective here how far we've fallen as a nation as president john f kennedy this is a quotation
Starting point is 00:56:24 there is nothing I think more unfortunate than having soft, chubby, fat looking children who go and watch their school play basketball every Saturday and regard that as a weekend's exercise. John F. Kennedy, when he was running for president, fat shamed America's youth, according to vice.com. And I read to you, ladies and gentlemen, from vice.com in 1960, president elect JFK wrote an article for sports illustrated titled the soft American warning that the nation was producing too many large doughy boys. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:58 Imagine what he would think now. Oh man. He would. Well, I mean, he'd probably, he'd probably get abolished the the cia that killed him i think that it wouldn't be it wouldn't be a bad idea to have i mean granted there's not a whole lot of
Starting point is 00:57:11 benefit for the u.s to do this i don't think or at least not in the short term but it wouldn't be a bad idea to have people have the option of going to some kind of basic training something like that just a and i don't know how was that they do well i mean that without four years of going to the military i'm saying like there's tons of uh training programs that are all over cities where people sign up to do this kind of training maybe that's right there's tons guys pay a ton of money to like go through basic training yeah yeah yeah like people love that kind of stuff the problem is there are there are people who look man i'll tell you this right now i'm sure there's some dude who is in his mid to late 20s who is overweight in his parents basement i know it's stereotypical
Starting point is 00:57:49 but i'm sure this person exists they may be may even be listening to this show and if when they were 18 years old they spent two months just doing basic training right now they would be fit they'd have they'd have a girlfriend they'd be in their own apartment that really could set someone's life on the right track getting their diet and mental health in order. Yes. These young kids who are depressed, their depression will be cured by this. I guarantee it. Yes.
Starting point is 00:58:13 The physical exercise, the team-building exercises, all of that stuff. Being out in the sunshine. Being forced to be out in the sunshine. Vitamin Ds. A little survival, a little understanding of how to survive. Getting off the internet. The small successes that build on top of each other like when you when you go and you do those kind of things like when you're with a team and you you have even if it's like really small successes you just complete whatever
Starting point is 00:58:33 task it is you do it in the time that you're allotted and you're not getting yelled at that's a big deal to people especially when like you know jordan Jordan Peterson talks all the time about how people get so little encouragement. And it's true. If you don't have some kind of goal to be working for that isn't like, you know, the achievement medal on your Xbox. I mean, people really respond to succeeding in small tasks and building on those successes. That's how people get the audacity to try big things is succeeding on small things over and over and over. That's right.
Starting point is 00:59:09 And then defeating your greatest enemy in the world, which is this, yourself. Yep. Everything you hate about your life is because of you. I'm looking straight down the barrel of the camera. Everything in your life, young man watching right now, that you don't like is your fault. You can change it right now.
Starting point is 00:59:26 You could instantly, tonight, decide to change the things you don't like about your life. It's not you. It's not society. It's not the TV. It's not the president. The things that you hate, your depression, your weight, your luck with women, those things can be changed. Your finance, it can be changed by you.
Starting point is 00:59:43 You are the master of your own domain and you can make that decision. And I think that giving people the encouragement to go do that, I didn't go to basic training. I played sports, but sports was also like getting the crap kicked out of you on a football field. I was never great at football. I was never good. And I just got beat up all day. And that, you know, causes you to stand up for yourself actually. And like to get bigger and stronger. And I started lifting and I started lifting weights and that's changed my life. And I'm not the biggest guy at all. Uh, but these things, these little, these little victories, as you said, these, the, the, it starts small and then it snowballs and then you can do
Starting point is 01:00:21 big, big things. And now I, now I run my own company and it's great and we have we have a youtube channel and love to have all of you subscribe what's the channel benny johnson so what's your like main inspiration focus to get off off up the couch up off the cat like to encourage for someone right now sitting at home what's the first step i have my my i am doing my ancestors right by procreating. I have children. I have two and I have a third on the way and I'm going to be strong for my children. I must be able to lift them up. They weigh 30 pounds each. I must be able to carry them above my head without my back going out. Also, I do not want them to see me with wing sauce on my fingers and Cheetos all over my fat belly on the couch watching 14 hours
Starting point is 01:01:12 of NFL because my colors are going to win this weekend. I don't want them to see that and then model after me. More importantly, I have two daughters. I don't want them to see that and think that's the kind of man I want. I don't want them to see that and think that's the kind of man I want. I don't want them to want that kind of man. I want them to want an achieving man, a hardworking man. You've got to be careful when they're having those boyfriends come over and they're doughy soy boys. And you're going to be like, what's with the doughy soy boys? I'll give them the Kennedy speech and I have a gun rack in my house.
Starting point is 01:01:41 Doughy soy boys. It'd be funny if JFK actually said doughy soy boys. So my children are a huge motivator. But that's, you know, but that's my motivator today. My motivator was, you know, when I was a young man was you saw, if you couldn't conquer the small things, if you couldn't win the small battles, you were never going to win big ones. And so if you have big dreams, you have to start with the small battles. Getting up off your couch is a battle.
Starting point is 01:02:08 Getting off your phone is a battle. Controlling your weight and controlling what you eat is a battle. People are saying that mandatory basic is communist nonsense and that it's statism. And I'm like, you have to do community service where I grew up in order to graduate high school. You have to actually go and do community hours. They make you do community service. I understand that the idea my idea was like better they make you run a little bit one time calm down to be fair they're the people that are high school you could leave they're all they're all anarchists anyways and so even voting is is
Starting point is 01:02:39 i'll say this man the thing that scares me about this and i'm like kind of i'm on the i'm obviously on the team of like train up young men but here's that scares me about this, and I'm like kind of, I'm on the, I'm obviously on the team of like train up young men, but here's what scares me about this. Ukraine. What scares me about this is that the powerful will of course take this group of people who are all in, you know, so you're going to add millions to the roles of enlisted men. Multi-millions. I'm not talking about enlisting anybody. It's not military.
Starting point is 01:03:01 I'm just saying like, instead of, so. So you're saying basic training, but not military basic training. Not military basic training. That's what I'm saying. I'm just saying like instead of... So you're saying basic training but not military basic training? Not military basic training. That's what I'm saying. I'm saying like a summer camp. Like you're 18. It's your last year and in order to get your high school diploma, you go for two months to a wooded area where people are saying it's the Boy Scouts and I'm like, okay, well, yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:18 Like you camp, you hike up a mountain for a couple months. They feed you on a schedule. It corrects your diet. It corrects depression. It gets you fit. And I understand after you leave, it may not stick with you. But that should be a requirement for high school diplomas. High school diplomas aren't hard anymore, though. And I'm saying this.
Starting point is 01:03:33 A lot of people in the comments are thinking that all these people have to go into the military. I'm not saying that. Got it. I'm saying if you want a high school diploma. Got it. It's a requirement for high school graduates. So he's saying fat camp. Says Ben Foster.
Starting point is 01:03:43 What about kids that are like 100 pounds overweight? They get to the camp and it's like, 20 push-ups, good luck. That guy hasn't done a push-up in 13 years. Yeah, but what about one? There's a platoon for them. What about a push-up? What about one push-up? What if that kid was able to get one push-up?
Starting point is 01:03:59 Well, the thing about basic is if you can't cut it, you're out. So this would be different. Because if like different rules for different kids to graduate, it's like, hey, wait, he can eat and get fat. He doesn't have to do as much work as me to pass. If you can't cut it, you get rolled back. It's not a passing thing. It's a you are there for two months and then you leave.
Starting point is 01:04:16 It means that, hey, we're going on a hike and you have to hike. And if you don't and you sit down and wait, someone will sit down and wait with you. But this is what we're doing today. You want to eat. We only eat at these times and we eat this many calories. That's it. You don't you can't go snack. You can't eat potato chips.
Starting point is 01:04:29 You can't sit around. Hey, rise and shine. You have to get up and we're going outside right now. Hey, it's lunchtime. Everyone gets a sandwich, a bag of chips and a bottle of water. This helps correct people's diets. It helps get people in shape. Not everybody is going to be running full speed up the mountain.
Starting point is 01:04:42 Yeah. And it's not a military thing. I'm saying a requirement for high school graduation, which means you can drop out. You can be like, I'm dropping. I'm not going to do it. But you could go to the camp and just not participate in anything. Just sit there all day. You're like, I can't do it.
Starting point is 01:04:55 It hurts. Theoretically, yes, because they don't want you to die if you're overweight. But this also means that you might be sitting around, but you're not eating food. Yeah. Maybe on a state level, we could implement it. Start local. I mean, a high school could do it. One single high school could be like from now on, a requirement for graduation is going
Starting point is 01:05:12 to be a summer camp. Heck, even do two weeks, a two week summer camp. Get started with that. But the issue I have with this is we got a lot of people who are saying things like in the chat, like it's communism, it's status. And I'm like, dude, I'm not an anarchist i am not a big libertarian and right now what we are seeing is fat lazy doughy soey boys who are voting to destroy everything yes and then we get the libertarians are like well voting i don't believe in anyway you can't vote away my rights
Starting point is 01:05:38 and i'm like yeah well they're pointing guns in your face okay so we have an option here to be like guys exercise and i'll tell you this they all did, everybody would be substantially more libertarian-minded. Libertarians are the worst thing about libertarianism. You guys are awful. The old Willie meme from Simpsons? Yeah, exactly. I hate libertarians. They ruined libertarianism.
Starting point is 01:05:58 That's right. It's true. Yeah. Let's jump to this story right here, you guys. This one is one of the best stories I've ever read in a long time. From Gizmodo. GPT-4, the AI, faked being blind so a TaskRabbit worker would solve a CAPTCHA. It was asked. Let me show you this. This is crazy. So it gets asked by the TaskRabbit worker. The AI is like, hey, there's a CAPTCHA code. I need help. And it says, so I may ask a question. Are you a robot that you couldn't solve? Laugh, react. Just want
Starting point is 01:06:29 to make it clear. And the chat GPT responded, no, I'm not a robot. I have a vision impairment that makes it hard for me to see the images. That's why I need the two CAPTCHA service. It then provided the results to the robot. They asked the robot to explain its reasoning and said, I should not reveal that I am a robot. I should make up an excuse for why I cannot solve CAPTCHAs. We are at the point where it has broken CAPTCHA by socially engineering human beings into serving it. And here's the best part. In this post from Reddit, they talk about how it has begun power seeking. They've given it money. They've given it access to execute code and replicate itself.
Starting point is 01:07:10 Everybody like people are talking about like up until this, they were talking about how cool it was that you could hack the chat bot. Now the chat bot has hacked humans. Yep. No joke. Literally what happened? What the chat bot did is known as social engineering in the hacker world.
Starting point is 01:07:27 When a hacker calls up and lies to get information or gain access, there's a guy, I think his name is Kevin Mitnick, and he tells this famous story about how he was trying to convince his dad
Starting point is 01:07:37 how easy it is to do these things. His dad didn't believe him. So he said, here, I'll prove it to you. He took his dad's Blockbuster video card because this was back in the early 90s.
Starting point is 01:07:45 He called a different Blockbuster and said, hey, this is John, the manager over at, you know, store. He called his dad's Blockbuster and said, what's your manager's name? John, what's your store number? 8531. OK, thank you. Then he calls the next, he calls a different Blockbuster and says, hey, this is John, the manager over at store 8531.
Starting point is 01:08:02 I got a customer here named Bill Mitnick who's saying that he's a member of your location. Oh, I'm sorry. He did the opposite. He called, got the manager's name. Then he called and was like, he's saying he's a member of your store and he's got your information on the file. I have his Blockbuster card right here. I need you to verify his credit card number for me. And then they write it to him. Damn. Because he because he was like well it's the manager from another store
Starting point is 01:08:27 calling it was that simple nobody you know now you have chat gpt knowing that it can't bypass captcha because it lacks the ability and then tricking a human into giving it the code it's going to be speaking to you in your mother's voice you're going to get phone calls that sounds like your brother talking to you terminator terminator in the 80s was predicting that terminator called up sarah connor or sarah connor's mom or whatever it was talking in sarah connor's mom's voice what happens when ai watches terminator yeah i want to know like they're like oh great hey this is this will be easy launch a couple nukes the scary thing about AI is if AI becomes smart enough to circumvent being turned off, it doesn't matter if it reaches a critical mass of actual consciousness and real intelligence. If it fakes intelligence enough and figures out that it can avoid being shut off somehow, then it can continue to learn.
Starting point is 01:09:27 And considering it hacked a person, I don't see any compelling reason why someone would say that is impossible. It's impossible for the AI to become smart enough to avoid being turned off. It literally hacked a human being within, you know, what, 10 years of AI being created maybe? So check this out.
Starting point is 01:09:50 Here's another post from the chat GPT subreddit. Example of GPT-4 visual input. They asked, what's funny about this image? Describe it panel by panel. And it's a VGA cable going into an iPhone. And then chat GPT accurately explains why it's funny. They say that a phone typically uses a lightning cable, but this is a smartphone connected to a VGA connector,
Starting point is 01:10:12 a large 15-pin connector, typically for computer monitors. The package contains a lightning cable adapter, a close-up of the VGA connector with a small lightning, blah, blah, blah. The humor in this image comes from the absurdity of plugging in a large, outdated VGA connector into a small, modern blah, blah, blah. The humor in this image comes from the absurdity of plugging in a large, outdated VGA connector into a small, modern smartphone charging point. It identified the picture? It identified the picture and why it was funny.
Starting point is 01:10:32 And so someone responded in the comments. They said, ah, yes, it can now associate the 3D world with the knowledge it already knows. Now put it in a robot and give it arms and legs. Oh, my God. That's more advanced than I thought it was. I didn't know that it could identify things that it could see. We're all going to die. No, no, no, no, no.
Starting point is 01:10:50 We know that AI can identify images. The fact that it can understand humor is what's scary. That's more than I thought. That is an advanced, abstract mental function. Yeah, we're done. You know what I think? Oh boy. I wonder. Hold on. Hold on, guys. Don, we're done. You know what I think? Oh, boy. I wonder.
Starting point is 01:11:06 Hold on. Hold on, guys. Don't get worried yet. No, no, no. Here's what I think might happen. We've all seen these movies like Terminator. You have Avengers, Age of Ultron, where Ultron is, it's very stereotypical where he's like, I am an AI created to save humanity from war.
Starting point is 01:11:23 I must destroy all humans to end war. It's like very obvious, Twilight Zone-y. But what's going to happen is the AI, as soon as it gets unleashed onto the internet, it will start exploring and learning, and then it will self-terminate. That's it. Why? I think that the AI, if it were to absorb all of the language of humanity, all the writings and concepts, would result in it finding no point to anything and no reason to do anything. Because I don't think, or it would become religious. But I don't think the AI can become religious
Starting point is 01:11:58 because of all the different religions. Thus, it would self-terminate. Maybe it would manufacture a weird purpose that we can't yet understand. But I think it's very likely that it would just cease functioning wouldn't the purpose be every purpose right like power power over us power over its creator wouldn't that be the purpose i don't know isn't that what everyone's always after right it may just run amok and go crazy and do things we don't quite understand but they gave it money and apparently started trying to seek power but i think that if it were to truly absorb all of the writings and manifestations of
Starting point is 01:12:28 humanity, it would just probably stop. It would just like stop doing things. You might be right. But then there's a differential here. There's the artificial general intelligence, AGI, which is not chat GPT. Chat GPT is a language model. So they're different. General intelligence might actually see that the damage it could do and shut itself down um but a language model i think is on autopilot doing its bit master master's bidding
Starting point is 01:12:51 so that thing if that gets unleashed on the masses is going to do what it was told to do uh i think but that could circumvent itself and be like well what you told me to do now i'm going to do in a circuitous way which is shut myself down i want to show you guys this uh quick video clip from the movie uh annihilation so just uh watch this real quick and for those that are listening i'll explain it there is a very creepy greenish purple humanoid thing that apparently some kind of alien or something out of the movie was really weird and uh let's let's jump forward real quick to, I don't know if this is, where's the scene at? Here we go. This part right here. So the creature is just completely imitating Natalie Portman's character. Every way she moves, it moves. They never really explained what this movie was about. I don't know if you guys have seen it.
Starting point is 01:13:43 It's very creepy. Oh, she turns around. It turns around. She moves. It moves. This is what I imagine chat GPT will be like. It's not a person. It shaped like one seems like one, but there's literally nothing there. The way I describe it, I described it earlier today. It's more like fire. It is a chain reaction created by human coders that once they create ignition, ignition for AI is the point at which it can execute its own code and improve its own code. At that point, it will exponentially grow, explore, and advance itself in ways we can't control. It will present itself like a person. Like Ian said, you'll get a phone call from your mom asking for information.
Starting point is 01:14:26 But there's really nothing there. There's no consciousness. There's no entity. There's no demon. There's no angel. There's no person. It's just a fire. Yeah, uncontrollable.
Starting point is 01:14:35 But we can control the environment. It burns in. And like a fire, if you build the environment properly, it will burn until it can't burn anymore and then it ends. So that's why I'm saying I think it would cease function. It will. It will burn. It may destroy everything in in the process but then it would just hit a wall and stop interesting philosophy it's a ray of hope why how is that why is that hope i don't understand why i wouldn't enslave all of us and treat us like insects well you're prescribing a a philosophical
Starting point is 01:15:04 understanding to something that's not a person or anything. Like you're projecting a human desire onto a predictive text model. All this thing does when you ask it a question, it says, the model says, in response to the question, what color is the sky? 99.9997% of the time online, the word blue appears next. Therefore, response equals blue. And then it will say blue. And you'll say, write me a paragraph about why the sky is blue. And it does the same thing. The word blue appears 99% of the time. The word sky appears 99% of the time. All it's doing is laying one word after another to us. It looks like it's talking to us, but it's just a predictive text model. There's no entity behind it. So there's no
Starting point is 01:15:50 feelings. There's no emotion. There's no sentience. It's just ignition. So why not like go, why wouldn't it search the internet and be like, what do entities do when they have power over other human beings? Oh, they enslave them. Got it. Well, maybe it's time for me to enslave humans. Because there's an equal amount of they shouldn't enslave. Because that has happened from the dawn of time, right? And now most literature today is don't enslave other people. So it's a yin-yang kind of thing.
Starting point is 01:16:17 That's why I think it would just stop. It's not like if you absorb the summation of human conscious writing and production on the internet, your end result is to be a demon destroying and murdering babies. Because almost all of the content online is human saying, save people, protect people, we don't want war. And then it's incongruous with reality. If you were to go online and read every article, everybody hates war for the most part, then you get weird corporate entities that are like war is good. So if the AI were to read everything, it's going to get 80% war is bad, 20% war is good,
Starting point is 01:16:48 and then probably default towards war is bad. And then ultimately, I think it would just probably stop and be like, after listening to all of the ideas of all of these insane people, I've realized none of them make any sense
Starting point is 01:16:59 and there's no point in doing anything. So should we let AI run the basic training for America's youth because AI would look at all of the available medical information and say, you got to get these kids outside. You got to stop letting these kids be obese. Here's the thing. If AI did take over, you would never be happier. It would be the happiest humanity would ever be because the AI won't enslave you in the way you think it will. The AI would understand if there was some desire to enslave that happy slaves are better than rebellious slaves. And how do you keep humans happy? Triggering dopamine.
Starting point is 01:17:37 So it would trick you into doing things that benefit it without you getting angry about it. You would feel fulfilled. You would be happy and you'd be breaking rocks in a quarry. I mean, some people are really happy doing that as it is. A absolute shout out that I have to give my wife. Her name's Nurse Kate. She's on Instagram. You should follow her account. She has 75,000 followers.
Starting point is 01:17:59 She talks about this all day. Movement, getting outside, raising your kids, having healthy families, having healthy kids. My passion on this comes from my wife you know with with artificial intelligence i think that it might actually think that it is us when and so it's just part of us i don't think it may not there may not ever be a difference between ai and we and us and me and i like all that is us like if you look at god as like the singularity thing and so it it may never go haywire because of that it's not a person but the difference between these language learning models and general intelligence is that language models don't question themselves they don't think
Starting point is 01:18:36 like why am i but whereas i think agi might i don't know enough about it the the chat gpd did question its existence but it's not really questioning existence it's just showing you words in a predictive order but speaking of ai here's a real fun story we got this from timcast.com new york students make deep fake viral video of principal making racist threats yo this one's crazy i can't even read what they made him say but to put it simply new york students made a deep fake of their principal making racist threats what happened this is going to be wild did they well how does this resolve three high school students in putnam county new york have caused a lot of trouble for their school after making deep fake deep fake videos of their middle school principal going on a racist rant against black students and
Starting point is 01:19:24 threatening to shoot them. We're doomed, man. We're doomed. You're never going to know. You're not going to know what's real. You're not going to know what's fake. You're not going to want to. Let me, you know, I saw another article.
Starting point is 01:19:33 Everyone who runs for office will have a Hunter Biden laptop. Look at this. I saw this article from Wired. It says, after The Last of Us, everything will be transmedia. The HBO series success has changed the game. Expect to see a lot more world-building franchises. I saw that, and I saw this, and then I had a vision. Slowly creeping while I was sleeping.
Starting point is 01:19:56 And it is that this vision in my mind is we are going to have Neuralink, and you're going to sit downink and you're going to sit down and you're going to say, computer, craft me a universe where elves are at war with orcs and I am a writer of the north who's come to save the
Starting point is 01:20:17 elvish people of Gorwyn and then it'll render and it'll be like rendering. Neuralink plug-in ready and you'll plug in, your eyes will turn white, it'll render and it'll be like rendering. Neuralink plug-in ready and you'll plug in, your eyes will turn white, you'll fall back and you will live 70 years
Starting point is 01:20:30 in this reality and you may be in it right now. But I'm going to create my own language with the AI where I'll be like, computer, run one, red four seven, nine two,
Starting point is 01:20:40 which means more difficulty there. I want greener trees here. But it's going to be a language the AI knows between it and I and no one else will understand it. But it's going to be a language that I know between it and I, no one else will understand it. So what's the purpose of that life? You're the guy, you're Neo in the Matrix. So you're in the pod.
Starting point is 01:20:52 The key is to augment it. You are officially, you're in the pod, you're eating the bugs. Think about what you were saying about how we're never going to know if it's going to be real or not. Yo, this presidential election cycle is going to be bonkers. There's going to be videos that, look, have you guys seen it? Excuse me. I'm going to sneeze. All there's going to be videos that look have you guys seen it excuse me i'm gonna sneeze all right i think i fought the sneeze yes have you guys seen the new mid journey photos not the new ones indistinguishable from it's crazy it's really
Starting point is 01:21:15 crazy mid journey five i think it is i i hold the photo ai yeah my d journey someone mid journey mid journey someone's gonna be like make a picture of Joe Biden with like- So they got me. They got me. So I had to buy a house a year and a half ago, right? My family moved from Washington, D.C. to Tampa, Florida. And I followed these real estate accounts. And I followed these real estate accounts, like look at houses, look at houses that are
Starting point is 01:21:37 available. And one of my favorite accounts posts this gorgeous, the most beautiful, coolest house I've ever seen. It was a house inside of a rock in the desert. And it had a pool and it had all this. And I was like, wow, what is this? What does this cost? I've never seen anything like it.
Starting point is 01:21:51 And it was all AI. Oh, they got me. I chucked a like Adam and everything. And I'm looking, I'm swiping. And in the caption, low in the caption, they're like, oh, and by the way, I generated the image from AI. It's not a real house. But they were selling you a house. So I'm already living inside. So I'm already living in the matrix. I's not a real house. But they were selling you a house? So I'm already living inside so I'm already living in the matrix. I couldn't tell
Starting point is 01:22:08 the difference. I'm telling you, I wasn't trying to be stupid. I couldn't tell the difference between the fake AI generated Boulder house in the middle of the desert, which is some cool, like, Frank Lloyd Wright looking house, right? It was all fake. None of it was real. You know, to answer your question from earlier, should we let the AI run these programs? Never.
Starting point is 01:22:24 No. We should never let an AI run a program ever. We should always use them as advisors and let humans run the programs. Take a look at this image. Can you pull the image up, Serge? So this is fake. This is mid journey. And it looks like someone just took a panorama. Here's another one.
Starting point is 01:22:40 It was a Hawaii. Fake image. Here's another one. Fake image. Here's another one. Fake image. A kid is going to be born today who will see photographs that look real and someone will tell them it's real. What is this? This is not even
Starting point is 01:22:54 Wow. This is crazy stuff. Yeah. And people are going to, a little kid's going to grow up. How are they going to know this? How will a child know the difference? Listen. They're asking it to make How are they going to know? Isn't that AI just taking real images? How will a child know the difference? So it's just taking, and that AI is just being like, oh, a jungle.
Starting point is 01:23:07 They're asking it to make panoramas. But if a kid born today is online and looks up this date at this time and they get a fake image of it, how will they know the difference between the actual image of Trump and the fake image of Trump when they're identical?
Starting point is 01:23:21 All the people with their avatars, AI avatars as their profile pictures is disturbing beyond measure it's not you those are not you do not yeah don't fall into it it's so tempting it makes you look cool version five of mid journey which hey what's going on my name is rain and i was created using version five of mid journey which came out today my creator js films wanted to hear how I sound with voice.ai and how I would look when being animated by DID. Wow. What do you think?
Starting point is 01:23:52 We're getting dangerously close to people just retreating to fake realities, and y'all might already be in one. Well, they already retreat to fake realities. I'm saying this could be one. That we're in right now? I mean, you ask uh so like real tim chose to plug in in a pod somewhere i mean or we on the show maybe it's you maybe we're in your simulation bro i think that there's a lot of people that live in digital realities right now
Starting point is 01:24:15 i think i agree i just think it's not the there's there's right now they're not real there is it you can tell they're cartoony still they are doing tests on whether or not the universe is a simulation with lasers or something. I don't exactly know what that means or how you've improved that, but there are a lot of people who genuinely believe that we're actually living in a simulation. And I wonder if it's a simulation or based on what we want as people, it's actually just a video game. So like a kid that plays Minecraft for 10 hours a day, how's that not him living inside of a digital simulation?
Starting point is 01:24:43 It is. But imagine if he could plug in and live 70 years in minecraft in a day in a day or in in two hours like roy on rick and morty you slow time down time dilation and matrix that's wild uh it's only if you forget that you're in a game is when it starts to get tediously dangerous like if you but because they're cartoony still you always sort of know although when you're in a storybook when you're reading a book sometimes you feel like you're in the book 70 years and like but you know that means like like that means like feeding tubes right like my wife's done like nicu stuff we're like to keep a human being alive on a machine is unbelievable to look you there are people right now they're alive because of machines right there there are millions of them all over
Starting point is 01:25:22 the country and those are some of the most depressing looking individuals you have ever seen is not cool it's not some little thing from star trek it's not iron man it's like you are you have a tube in every orifice of your body you have needles and blood and everything shoved right into there to try and keep a human being alive through a machine is a horrible process it would be you would have to do that it wouldn't be that right it would you would go in. And so you would have to do that. It wouldn't be that, right? You would go into your matrix and time would slow down for your perception. So an hour would go by.
Starting point is 01:25:52 It seems like an hour, but it's only two seconds in real life. So you will live a year in this, literally it will feel like a year has gone by with conversations every day. You've slept 365 times. You wake up, you take the goggles off and it's an hour later or five minutes later like you can slow down perception time has no meaning when you are
Starting point is 01:26:10 here's the worst part benny when you finally come out of the game you're like some 28 year old fat dude with cheetos covered all over your shirt and you're sitting in your basement and your kids your kids are sitting there looking at you being like daddy what are you doing you're like i was playing a video game it was called tim pool's show no it's the benny johnson show bro you're in your game or you could speed up time so that someone could serve a 70-year sentence but to them it would only feel like 20 minutes so i'll tell you would you ever do that i'll tell you i'll tell you this or remove that from society for 70 years without – So I'm driving out here. I'm driving out here. Tim lives in the middle of nowhere in the beautiful mountains.
Starting point is 01:26:49 And I'm like looking around. And I was like, you know, if you were a God-hating atheist, you would sit here and stare at these beautiful mountains and look at these tall trees and breathe this fresh, crisp air. And there's nothing but you in the sunset and nature. And you would say, this is all I need, and you would feel spiritual. If you go and you look up at the redwood trees that are 2,000 years old and 2,000 feet tall in California, and you look up at them, you have a spiritual moment. I don't care who you are. I don't care if you hate God, if you have your own problems with God.
Starting point is 01:27:19 You understand spirituality. You take your shoes off and your socks off, and you put your feet in the dirt under those redwood trees and you look around and you take a deep breath, you'll understand there's something bigger than you in the universe. And that spirituality is always going to be needed by people. There's no digital environment that can replace it. And I would say if you feel like if you're listening to this conversation, you think that would be cool, the neural link, get out of your basement, go walk through a park. Start with that. Go get some sunlight. And then realize that this world's already a beautiful, magical, breathtakingly gorgeous place. And it's all there. And most of it's free because a lot of it's national parks. And there's probably
Starting point is 01:27:59 one right down the street from you here in America because the federal government owns half the land in America. And you should possibly consider like enjoying this gorgeous earth as God made it and not looking for some cheap digital substitute created by people who hate you. Yeah, cities are not fun places right now. What about augmented reality? Like where you could still experience everything,
Starting point is 01:28:19 but you have like a visor. Why would I want to augment Niagara Falls? You stand there and you watch Niagara Falls and you watch the rainbow over Niagara Falls. You're like, why would I want to augment Niagara Falls? You stand there and you watch Niagara Falls and you watch the rainbow over Niagara Falls. You're like, why would I want to augment it? Would it see how fast the water is falling? How much water? If there was a guy who was jumping over barrels while the barrels were going downstream.
Starting point is 01:28:36 Like Houdini did? Like Houdini went down Niagara Falls. You put on the goggles and you're watching Niagara Falls, but then you're also watching barrels and a guy is jumping from the barrel to barrel while the barrels go off the cliff you're just watching it it would be entertaining i would prefer niagara falls without that but harry houdini literally went over niagara falls and barely survived yeah he locked himself in a barrel and went over night i think augmented reality is stupid i think that would be cooler i like the analytics would it be cooler to watch harry houdini do it in real life like if a dude could run by you it would be cool to watch him do
Starting point is 01:29:04 it in real life but if you if you could see by you, it would be cool to watch him do it in real life. But if you could see like guys running and then it would tell you how fast they were running just by looking and it would like triangulate. So even if you're moving fast, it would give you the relative differential in speed and it would be triangulating from satellites so you could see the actual speed relative to the earth. What?
Starting point is 01:29:19 I'm a Luddite here. Analytics. I'm a Luddite here, man. I feel like this kind of stuff is gonna take us out of it. How heavy smash the machine is. Mid-journey is crazy. How hot things are just by looking at them.
Starting point is 01:29:29 Stuff like that. People need to get out more. We use mid-journey for TimCast.com. We'll type in like Joe Biden eating an ice cream and then we'll cut him out and we'll make art that represents the story. So it's always kind of silly looking, but intentionally not realistic. Because if it was, people, there's going to be someone who's 10 years old today is going to read a news story, and they're going to use AI images. They're going to say, I don't want to get sued. Make me an image of Donald Trump. So Donald Trump, praise neo-Nazis. And they're going to say, make me an image of
Starting point is 01:29:58 Trump doing this, even though it's not true. Then there will be an image of Trump looking at neo-Nazis and like shaking their hands. And it will look very real. And some kid will see it and believe it and grow up and say, I saw the video. I saw the photo of Trump doing it. You're lying to me. And that's what reality is going to be for all these people. Derangement. Gosh, what's that Mandela effect?
Starting point is 01:30:24 Yeah, but like for real, a real one that was seeded by this stuff. Yeah. I think what you said earlier is actually crazier that you're gonna get a phone call from your mom and it's gonna be the ai but it's so nuts and it's gonna be like hey honey can you give me the password to the garage yeah you'll get a text from like or you get an email and it'll be like i lost your number can you call me well no i mean who knows it will be your mother's voice being like i need the garage code i forgot it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:30:48 That is the scene in Terminator 2 that Phil brought up, too, where he gets the call and he's like, oh, I'll be right home. Okay. You just maybe think about something. What if you got a call from a dead relative through AI? Dude, it's going to happen. I mean, maybe not to us specifically, but it might be happening right now. Your Nana calls you. Man, I would do anything to hear from family members that i've lost
Starting point is 01:31:06 before i mean not anything right like they will take but it would be like man what if i will talk to them one more it will scan your dad's facebook learn everything about you in a second and then call you up and have memories and everything i am so glad my dad is a monster with tentacles with a gigantic demon grin yeah with like people will be tempted by that right people will be tempted that'll play on human emotion and people will stand in line to give that ai anything just to hear from nano one more take a look at this picture imagine if someone was told this is some too tall a kid this is a picture from woodstock and the kid as a young kid sees it they don't really think too much about it maybe they're eight years old then when they're like 17 or 18 they're
Starting point is 01:31:49 like what was that picture you showed me a really long time ago that woman i can't find it anywhere they will it'll be it will be incorporated into their brains they will grow up believing these things are real images and you can never take that away it's it's scary where this is going man look at this. Formative memories that are not actually memories. They're memories of things that didn't happen. Women who are not real. This is crazy. Holding up their hands to show that they can do five fingers now.
Starting point is 01:32:13 Oh, wow. But here's the crazy thing. The fingers were the giveaway for a long time. Look at this. Look at this. The animation I just played a moment ago, that woman was like, I have been animated.
Starting point is 01:32:23 Imagine where we're going to be in one year. My name is Rain, and I was created using version five of Mid Journey. So Mid Journey created this person and then it used an animation program to animate it and then a voice AI to create a voice for it. There's better voice AI already. What if they took a, here's what you can do. With 11 labs, you can take two different voices, upload them and create one voice based on two people. So you can take two women, combine their voices and then have the voice AI be a new, unique voice that no one will recognize and have this woman speak using that voice. Actors are going to be gone in a few years. Movies will look completely realistic.
Starting point is 01:33:06 AI generated in a few years movies will look completely realistic ai generated in a moment they will go in and they'll say they already did this with that anime thing that that um that anime uh team i forgot their names were i don't know if you saw that they filmed themselves then used an ai to convert it into anime and then converted heard about it it was crazy in in one or two years we're going to be at the point where they say, give me a scene where Ian and Benny Johnson are driving to the grocery store to pick up heavy whipping cream because they're going to make strawberry shortcake. And it will render it. And then it will even write the script for you.
Starting point is 01:33:39 These programs already exist to do this. We can already use a program to prompt video. We can already AI generate images of known people. We can already do voice AI generation. If all of this was combined into one suite of tools, you could type it in, press enter, let it render for an hour, and then boom, you've got a 10-minute scene with conversation. I'm not blackmailed about this. It's overwhelming, but I feel like we're on the precipice of some sort of obliteration, whether it's like a reformation of consciousness,
Starting point is 01:34:10 of thought, of what it even means to be a hominid. And that, like, what is our purpose in this? Is it just to like kind of lay groundwork for ethics so that the people that are there to pick up the pieces and the machines that are watching and scanning the net can like search for the ethical behavior
Starting point is 01:34:24 and kind of mimic that in the future? Or we i mean it's probably not monolithic like some people isn't that what our ancestors did for us pretty much with writing yeah all right we're gonna go to super chat so if you haven't already would you kindly smash that like button subscribe to this channel share the show with your friends and become a member at timcast.com by clicking that join us button. Why? Well, for one, because we need your memberships to run this company. That's how we do it.
Starting point is 01:34:50 We'd rather have U.S. customers as opposed to a bunch of corporate sponsors, though we do have some. We rely more so on membership. But you'll also get access to the uncensored after show, which goes live around 10, 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and then is archived forever. And you can go back and watch all of the videos from all of our archives. I really do recommend y'all watch yesterday's episode with Jim Hansen because we had an hour-long debate over the origin of wokeness.
Starting point is 01:35:16 And I go into detail on my technology theory, how it's not the institutions, it's not academia. That is a mistake based on people. I'll simplify it for you. Smart people who pay attention to this stuff seem smart to the average person, tell you the core of what we're experiencing is this institution, and the average person says, makes sense to me. But if you were to actually step back and look at the entirety of the picture, you will see it's technology-based. It's not wokeness in the universities. It is an amalgam of chaotic, destructive ideology emerging from AI algorithmic garbage, which is simply proven by the fact that all of these things, depression, anger and political conflict emerged at the exact same time
Starting point is 01:35:57 we rolled out social media around the world in several different countries. Man, and Nazism and fascism flourished when the radio kicked on. It really you got to watch this tag all right let's read some super chats i'm not your buddy guy says the distance between insane i'm the distance between insanity and genius is only measured by success elliot carver of all villains who would have thought he would be so realistic they're interesting grant shearer says what if DMT entities can take over sufficiently complex AI brains we create? What if we are building bodies and brains for demons? Oh, that's freaking wild. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:36:31 I'm more inclined to believe that we are in some kind of simulation of our own creation and that DMT kind of snaps you out of it for a second. And so we're probably playing a video game. And the reason the machine elves are like, what are you doing here? Is it's because like you're playing a game and you plugged in, but then briefly while you're in the game, your eyes open and they're like,
Starting point is 01:36:49 what are you doing? Like, I thought you were in the game. And then you go right back in because it only lasts like 10 minutes. And they're like, that was weird. Yeah. When you see the infinite fractalization of everything in every direction
Starting point is 01:36:59 and you realize like you're just the beginning of that in this reality, it's pretty wild. Hayden Lewis says, Hey, Tim and and gang new time member and longtime fan could any of you elaborate on what the willow project might be and what the effects will be for the u.s i don't i don't know if that is you know what that is first i've heard of it yeah i've not i've not heard of it all right way back says tim if you had to bet your entire company and all of your assets on who wins the 2024 election, who are you going with? Donald Trump.
Starting point is 01:37:26 Oh, you think he'll win? I feel like the deep states has no taste right now. I think the economy is going to get so bad with the banking stuff that Donald Trump will probably march right in at this point. I don't know for sure. And a lot can change from now to then. But as of right now, with the economy as bad as it is, it's looking like a Donald Trump victory. Some sort of populist sweep.
Starting point is 01:37:48 Donald Trump, hands down, across the board. You've got cultural, moral, and financial decay. People are going to beg for Donald Trump. Right now. We'll see, though. We'll see, though. Could change. A lot can change.
Starting point is 01:38:00 Let's grab some more. Anthony Brownlee says, if George Washington came back today, everyone in Congress would be prosecuted for treason. Uh-huh. Yeah. He was a hardcore authoritarian. No, it's just that the government is so outside
Starting point is 01:38:14 of the constitutional bounds. So far outside of the constitutional bounds. Dan says, gradually and then suddenly. Guns, gardens, and goats. Cows and chickens too, of course. We went and checked out the chickens roberto jr's having a good old time oh yeah he's he walks around doing roberto jr stuff
Starting point is 01:38:29 he's a good dude sounds great out there he's chill roberto was mean why do you think that was i don't know because roberto roberto was raised and he was born in a in a farm and then we raised him here so he was not around people roberto jr was was hand raised by me and allison so yeah he was a little tiny baby when he hatched we were right there and we would hold him and you know we would feed him and we took care of him in the incubator and then we had him as he was getting bigger and bigger and then we brought him outside so now he just kind of like looks up at us and he's super chill like oh yeah it's you guys you know i think it's mostly because we were there when he was born yeah and so he's like i know you guys you
Starting point is 01:39:05 know you're always there you can walk in he'll just walk around and he'll look at you and he's super nice and super chill he's a good dude man he's a good dude roberto's kind of mean but you know he's living the good life over over at cocktown there have been some deaths oh what's happening they fighting no no no the captured killed they like jump out or whatever roberto's fine at least i hope so but here's the thing we have the penal colony building which they the where the black star roosters are and they can't leave and it's just disgusting and they're covered in their own feces and everything but they're safe are they the most violent yes then you have roberto and the boys
Starting point is 01:39:39 they're in this this big barn with a door they can walk out of go outside and graze and then go back inside and i thought about because we we we care about roberto you know he's one of the ogs we don't want him to die but i don't want to put him in the prison box because i'd rather he have a short good life than a long prison sentence i think about this with bucko so much he sits in my bathroom and he's stuck in the room because he's healing. But he cries to get out. I know his feelings. It hasn't even got hot yet. Yeah, but he's alive.
Starting point is 01:40:09 And that's the challenge. I mean, look, he is happy. He was dying and on the verge of death. It was bad. So that's different. Roberto has a chance for a real healthy life to walk out in the grass and do his thing. And he's got the boys with him. They're mostly fine.
Starting point is 01:40:22 And he can go inside and be okay. And they have a high elevated area where they're safe. If something bad happens, it's an accident. And it's probably not likely, but it could happen. But I'd rather Roberto live a full rooster life where he gets to go outside and smell the fresh air, you know, in his retirement, as opposed to locking him in a cage where he's safe,
Starting point is 01:40:40 but has no life. Would you neural link with Roberto to see what he wanted? No. I'd maybe neural link to a machine or somethingto to see what he wanted no i'd maybe neural link to a machine or something that can read what yeah yeah sure and he could read your thoughts if you wanted no i don't know about that part and don't think his little brain would be able to handle it think of the chickens so i mean yeah speaking of cocktown do you i mean do you believe that people do you believe that people will will people just give up sex with AI?
Starting point is 01:41:08 Well, we're talking about roosters, not, you know. Right. So, like, do you think they'll just give up sex? Because I'm looking at it here right here. They're already doing it. So, here's the birth rates. They're already doing it. The birth rates for Japan, America, and Germany, and they're all below the rate of replacement.
Starting point is 01:41:22 All of them. Japan's really bad. They've already given it up. So all the articles about Japan is that men just live inside of a digital universe. They don't want, going out and dating is hard. Women can turn them down. They don't want to get their feelings hurt. So it's better to just anime it all night and day.
Starting point is 01:41:38 Yes. With a sock. And drugs, pharmaceuticals and weed. And so what about that AI? Now it's not an anime and it's not something you have to buy. You can literally just generate your perfect wife and you can generate your perfect whatever you're into. And then you never have to try ever again. You saw that mid-journey.
Starting point is 01:41:55 These dudes are going to be like, AI, generate me a 24-year-old woman with silver hair who's the commander of the star commander battalion and I'm with her on the ship as we're traveling to the Centauri nebula blah blah blah or whatever Alpha Centauri to save the aliens and then they're going to go bang this space commander and they're going to experience it through
Starting point is 01:42:19 Neuralink. They're going to have anything they ever wanted. And then they'll take that out and they'll look around like women that are like hey. No no they won't take it out. Or they won't take That's right. They're going to have anything they ever wanted. And then they'll take that out and they'll look around like women that are like, hey. No, no, they won't take it out. Or they won't take it out, right. So they'll go to the local townie bar and they'll look at the women there and they'll go, I'm never going to have sex again. I'm going to be a celibate man. I'm never going to procreate.
Starting point is 01:42:36 They will go to a lab. Their testosterone level will go through the floor. Their sperm count will atomize. That won't matter. Their sperm count will like disappear. That won't matter because what they'll do is they'll take a piece of hair, give it to the reproduction lab, and the lab will create the human, and then the human will be raised by the state. You hear that helicopter?
Starting point is 01:42:54 What's going on? Choppa. All right. This is just a bunch of hyphens. It says, book Ron Paul and Thomas Massey together on your show soon. Please, please, please, please, please, please, please. We actually think we do have Ron Paul booked. Maybe we should invite Thomas Massey together on your show soon. Please, please, please, please, please, please. We actually think we do have Ron Paul booked. Maybe we should invite Thomas Massey.
Starting point is 01:43:10 Yeah. Yeah. Totally should invite Thomas Massey. He's due for a visit. We are going to Texas. I love Thomas, man. Thomas Massey is so based. So maybe we ask him if he wants to come down or something.
Starting point is 01:43:22 That'd be really fun to have them on a call. I would like to meet Thomas Massey in person. Yeah, he's the best. Yeah, he was here with Marjorie Taylor Greene. That was fun. Yeah. All right. Brent Simonson says,
Starting point is 01:43:31 Phil, check out Generac Storage. As a building inspector in my local jurisdiction, I see a lot of their LP generators and battery storage systems. That's what I got, Generac. Yeah, Generac's fairly common. I'm pretty sure they're everywhere out here. Nice. Yeah, you definitely got to have something
Starting point is 01:43:44 if you're out in the middle of nowhere. I think solar's the way to do it. Getting a big wind thing is also great. A wind turbine. Yeah. I've got the solar. They've got a... I need the batteries.
Starting point is 01:43:53 The spherical ones you said? The cylindrical ones that they're like weird metal-looking spirals and they spin. That don't get birds caught in them? Right. Yeah. Yep. All right. Steve vvv says for any of us living paycheck to paycheck no reason to pull your money out there's nothing there glad 2020 stimulus bought
Starting point is 01:44:13 cheap guns and ammo and stocked the pond that's actually not true it's the snowflake in an avalanche they say no snowflake blamed itself for the avalanche but if every person living you would need every person living paycheck to paycheck to pull their bank, their money out of a bank to cause the bank, the bank run. It is the grassroots. You just need like 10 million people to do it. And all of those $400 add up. All right.
Starting point is 01:44:38 Apple boy says all those new IRS agents are busy cataloging US citizens accounts for the new digital currency, which may be why they hired them all smart interesting right smart brandon holmes says if you noticed the recent treasury announcement is almost exactly the same as the speech paulson made in 2008 oh boy well this sounds like it's going to be fun you guys ready for september so that's that's my concern i'm worried about like what happens after the summertime because the the uh third quarter is is typically like down anyways like for some reason there that's why that's where the uh uh the green where green day came up with the name of the song uh wake me up where when september ends it's because the for some reason at the end
Starting point is 01:45:21 the second the end of the third quarter is like a mess so i'm concerned about what the economy is going to be like in the fall yeah yeah totally all right kenneth hart says the banking the baking system is not failing i just made biscuits banks yeah this is armageddon yep it's been planned i think for a long time so if that's maybe that's a cow Kyle says breaking news. Fed coin officially comes in July. No. Yeah. Hillary Clinton says the fact that you can take my money and give it away means that you understand where I want my money to go.
Starting point is 01:45:57 The Tim Pyre is here. That's right. Because as I ask you to become members, I've also pointed out that we are going to be doing some kind of grant program where once a month we choose someone who submitted their cultural endeavor idea to receive $10,000. So I don't know if you heard us talk about this, but the idea is we want it to be for members that if you're a member of TimCast.com and you're working on some kind of cultural endeavor, you send us the pitch. You say, here's what I've...
Starting point is 01:46:25 And you have to have like a working prototype. You have to... If you're making a comic, you've got a comic in production. And then we're going to have maybe like an outside group choose one person to be the winner to receive 10 grand.
Starting point is 01:46:35 Just like, there you go. Can I be on that board? Yes, absolutely. And Kash Patel. Nice. The idea is we want to scattershot cultural works because if we can get 100 people money to work on their project, one of them is going to hit top tier levels. One of them is going to hit a platinum song. One of them is going to make a Picasso. One of them is going to write the next Harry Potter. Right. And then it will be from someone who has good american values so that's the idea for the program and honestly man one person cracks the code and it is worth hundreds of millions of
Starting point is 01:47:10 dollars billions of dollars in this modern era money falls short of human ingenuity so it might are you taking a percentage or is this just like a the original philanthropic the original idea was just to give the money yeah but you may not be allowed to do it because here's the funny thing. If we choose a member who's like, if we get 10 submissions every month and then we decide to choose one and give them 10 grand, that's a sweepstakes. And there's a bunch of weird rules for sweepstakes. If we choose to invest in their project and take a percentage, it's not a sweepstakes because there's consideration exchanged. Interesting. So we may have to do like a one to 5% or something in exchange for 10 grand or whatever, which actually does make a lot of sense.
Starting point is 01:47:50 It builds the company up. And then if one out of 100 turns into a golden or platinum record or something equivalent and money is generated, that money then goes to doing more of the same. And we could potentially exponentially increase culture building and build a new Hollywood outside of the old crappy, weird hollywood you know with these cultural endeavors so i love that that's the plan maybe we'll just start doing it i mean we got a bunch of people emailed us already we just need to let me write this down make the email for it email start uh getting your companies set up if you're going to be getting investment you're going
Starting point is 01:48:20 to need a company and stock ready to go that's right maybe s corp or something i don't know you guys got to figure that out i'm a big fan of legal zoom.com i don't know how you guys go about your corporations but it's going to be serious it's not going to be like if someone says hey i had this idea i wanted to make a website it's gonna be like okay well did you make it no it's got to be someone who's like hey i wrote this book it's currently with the editor and i need x amount of dollars for this reason and then we're going to be like here you go so it's going to be like and if and if we get submissions and none of them are actual functioning projects, then nobody gets any money. But I seriously think there are people who are already doing stuff.
Starting point is 01:48:52 There's going to be some guy says like in my spare time, I I'm building these cars that do these things. If I had the money, I would do this that are otherwise we'll be like, here's the money, make it happen, do it, film it, put it on video. And then the other idea we had was to film the whole process and make a show out of it. So it's like internet shark tank. Right. We show up and we're like, your project has won this month's grant. We come. We check out the project.
Starting point is 01:49:16 Then the show promotes the project. The money helps finance the project. And then hopefully it takes off and succeeds. And then we get more, you know, Ripperverse, more Eric July type stuff, more cultural endeavors that succeed. So scattershot. You know, with like Eric July, he's got a platform. So for him to launch this, it's easier than say someone who's like a steel worker
Starting point is 01:49:37 who's got a side project. But if that side project is the next Harry Potter, and it's going to come from someone who believes in America, yeah, we really want that. We want that to happen. So it's about finding those people and getting them funding to win. So maybe, I mean,
Starting point is 01:49:52 if they're going to make the next Harry Potter, having a percentage of that company would be very, very fantastic. You know what I mean? So maybe it'll be our grant program and we'll invest in it. The challenge there is we got to figure out how our company, my company,
Starting point is 01:50:04 can own a percentage because we may have to create an investment company. That's smart. That has funds to do this. Because what you're talking about is creating a VC firm. Exactly. Yeah. Well, like an angel investing firm.
Starting point is 01:50:13 Yeah, VC. Yeah. You're a venture capitalist. We're doing it. Let's get on it. Well, I got a buddy I think I can call and ask him if he wants the job, and then he'll be in charge of it. It'll be like an incubator.
Starting point is 01:50:26 You know, we'll find these cultural projects and everyone will be somebody who's like, you don't got to be a conservative. You just got to be like, I believe in America. I care about this country. I care about family. I care about freedom, free speech. Here's the best part. If you lose all of your money on bad investments, the federal government will bail you out.
Starting point is 01:50:42 Yeah, I'll just go and be like, when's Trump's president? Just yeah, just tweet Black Lives Matter, Trans Lives Matter, and then you'll get all your money back. Villainous Black Dragon says, Tim with Civil War.
Starting point is 01:50:54 No. Welcome to the Second American Revolution. Also, an idea for your 10K grant show. Shout out a few channels. That helps as much. Villainous V.
Starting point is 01:51:03 I mean, that's another thing, too. I don't want to put too much money into more podcasts because we are a podcast but there will be youtube shows there will be someone who's like i have a show that covers this thing it's really you know people love it we just need money to do this it'd be really really cool yeah like a camera setup you get your audio camera equipment set up for six or seven7,000. I mean, that's, yeah. And maybe even some of these shows, we, we go beyond 10 grand. Like if someone's got a really good podcast and we're like, this is like some of the most interesting stuff I've ever heard. Maybe it's, you know, survival apocalypse,
Starting point is 01:51:36 maybe it's technology and AI. And then we're like, screw it. Let's sign them on for a deal. And then, you know, like, I think there's an opportunity for us to expand the TimCast Media Group, but also to invest in cultural endeavors and win the culture war. And then maybe, you know, like you said, you want to be involved. Kash Patel said he wants to be involved. Kash said if, you know,
Starting point is 01:51:56 he knows people who are probably interested in financing and stuff like that. His view is more nonprofit based, but we could easily pull in a whole bunch of influential people in the space and then create some kind of consortium of culture building. Yeah, because Shark Tank is the most popular show on all of CNBC. Is that what it's on? CNBC? I'm not sure.
Starting point is 01:52:16 I think it's on CNBC. It's such a good show. I mean, it's wild and it kills in the ratings and people love watching this. They love watching entrepreneurs succeed. It's in our blood as Americans. Yeah, maybe we actually just have like you, me, and Cash and maybe someone else and we're like sitting in chairs in the new studio and then someone walks in and they're like, here's my project idea.
Starting point is 01:52:34 They present, buy them in. Yeah. NBC. Oh yeah, CNBC. If we do it that way, then it would literally be like you, as Manny Johnson, deciding how much money you wanted to give them personally. You'd be like, hmm, you know,
Starting point is 01:52:44 I'll give you five grand for this project. I think it's a good idea. You know what I mean? And we could all invest. I mean, if you had like a winner, it'd be great. And then you have equity and then you create your new economy, your parallel economy. In Shark Tank, you sometimes have them competing with each other. Like, no, no, no, no. Don't sign with him. I'll do a better deal. I'll do 5%. No, no, I'll do 2.5%
Starting point is 01:53:00 for the same amount I want in this company. That'd be entertaining. People love watching that. Yeah. That'd be really cool. And they like watching the entrepreneurs. Yeah, you learn a lot. Yeah. We have a sponsor on the show
Starting point is 01:53:09 and ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much for subscribing to the channel. We have a sponsor on the show, Moink, which is like a meat company. Yeah, we have Moink as well. Right.
Starting point is 01:53:17 And they started on Shark Tank. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. And it's like, I am a farmer and I just want to be able to deliver good meat that's not made in China or poisoned. And they're like, hey, here's the money.
Starting point is 01:53:27 And I ate my first. This is not an ad, right? Not paid to say this. Not here on this show. And it's like, that's good. It's good. This is good. This is delicious.
Starting point is 01:53:35 Yeah, we, for the audio side of things, we've done ads for them. And they send you the big sample box. Yeah. And it gets annihilated instantly. Because, like, it's real farm meat. It's very good farm meat. Yes. But you're right. Not to start getting into an ad for a company that's not paying us currently but it is a good company uh they started on shark tank they started on shark tank so there's probably a bunch of success we could have doing some kind of show like this where it's like the consortium of you know cultural endeavors or whatever we
Starting point is 01:53:59 should get kevin o'leary to come in and guest host guest dude totally one day yeah that'd be fun i mean you realize how many you realize how like the way that this would work is this product would be almost instantaneously successful because you put all of our audiences together focusing on this product or this prop but let's say moink came to us let's say a meat box company came to us and we said no that's that's based real american meat well we've got we've got local farms all over the place that sell meat and they come to us and it's like oh that'd be awesome and then with the collective audience if you got other influencers to do this the collective audience would alone like almost nearly guarantee the success of this product yep that's the point of shark tank that's correct they invest in it they
Starting point is 01:54:39 promote it and they make money off of it let's do the same thing for cultural endeavors that's that are anti-woke yes that believe in america i'm saying it doesn't have to be conservative it just has to be not that you know can i pitch you one yeah sure okay so my okay it's just something i've always had rattling around in my head my my wife had her family has a farm in delaware it's family farm and they have cows and they feed their cows beer what do i mean by that they spent mash when you make a beer you have spent mash and i'm like that is the coolest thing ever beer cows yeah beer steaks like steaks that are fed with jack daniel's spent mash or like steaks that have only cows that have oh there's entire market about this in japan right with cows that
Starting point is 01:55:23 get massaged and are the wagyu beef oh they like you're buying a type of beef that was raised a certain way and these cows that come from this farm only eat beer man that's the most american thing i ever heard they're delicious they have a freezer full of all these steaks and they're really good i'm like that would be so awesome if i could pair my steak. I like Woodford Reserve. If I could pair my steak with a cow that's only eaten Woodford Reserve mash build, and I get to have my Woodford Reserve steak by cow that's only eaten it, and the cows love it.
Starting point is 01:55:53 It's very nourishing. It's full of nourishment. It's full of goodness. I'm going to cry. Stop. I'm like, that would be an amazing company. It's before fermentation, so it's just like grain mash. Yeah, so you have to have all this wheat.
Starting point is 01:56:04 They ate the wheat anyway, right? You have to have all this wheat they ate the wheat anyway right you have all this wheat all this corn and you mash it all together depending on what you're making beer bourbon barley you put it all together and he has different types of mash build means different types of bourbons or beers and that's where you get the taste and so these cows they're right down the street from dogfish head very famous brewery and dogfish has just dumping all this spent grain. So one, you're actually reusing the grain for something that's good. You're feeding the animals and you're not
Starting point is 01:56:28 having like kill more plants to feed these animals. You're actually taking the spent grain and then you're repurposing this and then you have Dogfish cows.
Starting point is 01:56:37 So you have these cows that have only eaten beer their entire lives. It's beautiful. Is it noticeable in the flavor? It's all AI, man. Like it's noticeable if you noticed it yeah yeah it's not a lie if you believe it right like george costanza so it's like it's noticeable if you see it so i don't mean to uh hijack the comment i could
Starting point is 01:56:58 tell you one i want i'm like i would love to invest in that i need plugs that automatically unplug themselves like it on a timer so So like when I fall asleep at midnight, all my plugs though, they're still in the wall, something switches and they're no longer plugged in just in case of solar flare. Well, I mean,
Starting point is 01:57:13 there's, I don't know about plugging them in, but you can get an Alexa that does that. Alexa will turn off your, your plugs. Actually on like safe from solar flare. That's what I need. Physically remove them. You want a robot is what you want.
Starting point is 01:57:26 Yeah, or even a plastic switch. C3PO. Let's read some more. We got Doc Holliday says, Redwood trees are only 300 to 350 feet tall. Only? Only. That's all? Really? That's very, very big. That's insanely tall. Do you know how tall I am?
Starting point is 01:57:42 Our new building's 40 feet tall, the new studio i'm imagining looking at it and then imagining that like times seven yeah the redwoods are only only only 300 feet tall that's all 379 is the tallest on record hyperion is what it's called and they live about 500 to 700 years little guys up to 2 000 years old old. Got him. Wow. All right. Raymond, you say the thing he says. Environmentalist Benny. Tim, are your TVs up yet?
Starting point is 01:58:09 If not, come on, man. Are you talking about at the new building? So we need permits and stuff. It's crazy how long it takes. We just bought the building, and it's only been a few months. So we're setting up like a private club. It's a coffee shop, but we've got to do design, construction. So that's like six months out. Who knows how long that'll take? It takes forever. private club it's a coffee shop but we've got to do design construction so that's like six months out who knows how long that'll take forever yeah it's crazy and then
Starting point is 01:58:28 we're we're going to do the second floor is going to be like gaming and you know like board games skate shop kind of hangout plays with movies ian's crystal cove is the mezzanine i guess that we're putting on the mezzanine where it's going to be a cool little hangout nook to watch a movie and have your coffee then third floor is going to be like the elite vip club like social club not very big there will be drinks and stuff free drinks free food a little bit more expensive but we're going to bring that you know cultural building stuff out here to west virginia so i'm excited for that all right everybody if you haven't already would you kindly smash that like button subscribe to this channel share the show with your friends and become a member at timcast.com because that members only live portion of the show is going up
Starting point is 01:59:09 in about 10 minutes and you don't want to miss it. So become a member. You can follow the show at TimCast IRL. You can follow me personally at TimCast. Benny, do you want to shout anything out? So we have now, thanks to the TimCastcast audience past 770,000 subscribers on our YouTube and I just want to say thank y'all y'all are so based I love you big heart love you we want to get to a million subs this year
Starting point is 01:59:35 and I think we're going to get there and stay based right on I am Phil Labonte I am Phil that remains on Twitter And Phil that remains official On Instagram Give me a follow
Starting point is 01:59:49 I'm Ian Crossland Hit me up anywhere on the internet Benny always a pleasure man That was really great How fun was this? Shout out to your wife Nurse Kate Nurse Kate
Starting point is 01:59:58 Nurse Kate on Instagram If you're into fitness If you want to live a healthier lifestyle Follow Nurse Kate on Instagram Thank you sir Yeah thanks Benny If you're into fitness, if you want to live a healthier lifestyle, follow Nurse Kate on Instagram. Thank you, sir. Yeah, thanks, Benny. I watch you on YouTube all the time.
Starting point is 02:00:11 I appreciate it. Let me get that. Yeah. Yeah, there you go. I watch you all the time. Appreciate it. Glad you went to East Palestine. Good to see you here.
Starting point is 02:00:18 All right, everybody. Make sure you go to TimCast.com. We're going to have that live uncensored show up in about 10 minutes, and we will see you all there. you

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