Timcast IRL - Trump To SHUTTER 120 IRS Offices In MASS PURGE, Democrat LEAKED Tax Info w/Mike Crispi
Episode Date: February 27, 2025Tim, Phil, & Charles are joined by Mike Crispi to discuss IRS to close down over 110 offices, IRS admitting a Democrat activist leaked over 400k tax returns, Pam Bondi saying the Epstein list release ...is imminent, and wealthy Americans fleeing the United States. Hosts: Tim @Timcast (everywhere) Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) Charles @Frank_Trueblue (X) Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Guest: Mike Crispi @MikeCrispi (X) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Donald Trump's administration will shutter 120 IRS offices.
And I got to tell you, the corporate press is trying to make it sound like a bad thing.
And they're saying, but these are going to be places that have that have assistance centers for people who need help filing their taxes.
So it's kind of like the people who's beating you over the head with the second quarters offer you assistance and how you get beaten over the head
with second quarters. And we're supposed to be sad about it. Please, Democrats, corporate press,
keep defending the IRS because I am here for it. We got that story and we got a couple other weird
ones. This one you may have seen the other day. Apple, they've acknowledged that if you used their
voice to text service, when you would say the word racist, it would show Trump then racist. Now, I bring this one up, even though I know this was
the other day the story came out, because there's another story that went viral today.
Numerous prominent left wing organizations, liberal organizations were sharing AI audio of
Donald Trump Jr. And this is exactly what I warned about. It wasn't anything crazy like Don Jr. admitting to
breaking the law or doing drugs. It was an AI audio where he said something like,
why would we even want to be allies with Ukraine? We should have sent Russia the weapons.
And the reason it was clever is that it sounds like an off the cuff statement, which is still
damaging to one's reputation. But he never said it. Now, all these liberals are deleting
in mass, panicking because they were very seriously defaming the man. But it's only just begun. The AI
fake video insanity is upon us and audio. And we're going to get into all that stuff. We got a
lot to talk about. And don't forget, Casper.com is always available. Delicious Casper coffee.
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Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Mike Crispy.
Oh, what is going on, Tim? Mike Crispy. It's good to be back. I am a surrogate for President
Trump in New Jersey, president of the Italian American Civil Rights League, and I host the
show on Rubble Every Day. Mike Crispy on Afray. Great to be back. Right on. Thanks for coming.
Chuck is hanging out. He here his debut hello friends i
uh just trying not to break the show or anything but i host the green room uh i also do some uh of
the gamer made stuff before the the green room um really excited to be on the show just trying to do
my best so uh we brought back the green room show which was our behind the scenes you know uh like guest up just roll the
cameras and uh chuck's always here and so he ends up sitting there talking with all the guests and
it went pretty well and we were like chuck you should come on and promote the green room show
on rumble premium and chuck went oh boy i don't want to lose my job and then he sat down pretty
much yeah you know i mean the green room's great. We talk about a wide range of subjects and stuff.
Today was pretty spicy, pretty fun.
I think you guys should check it out.
Yeah, it's uncensored because it's not so family-friendly.
Chuck is a phenomenal conversationalist, absolutely.
I'm Phil that remains.
I'm Phil Labonte, lead singer of the heavy metal band All That Remains,
anti-communist, counter-revolutionary.
Let's get started.
Here we go, ladies and gentlemen, from the Washington Post, IRS, to close more than 110
offices with taxpayer assistance centers.
The plan is outlined in a letter from the U.S. General Services Administration that
was obtained by the Washington Post.
Now, I'm just going to pause real quick.
Notice how they have to add that little caveat at the end with taxpayer assistance centers.
I don't care.
I don't care if they got a Kinko's in them. they're irs offices i don't care if they're shut down nobody
likes the irs but the washington post needed to add that caveat because they're trying to make
the irs look good yeah i mean look i i feel like you know i don't i don't want to steal lines from people, but, you know, the winning just doesn't stop.
I mean, this is because I'm sorry.
It's like Ron Paul must be sitting in a chair being like, yep.
I mean, literally 12 months ago, everyone is thinking, oh, there's going to be 87,000 new IRS agents.
And, man, they're going to be going after everybody.
They're going to go after anybody that
has made more than $600
for anything. So if you sold
something for $1,000, you literally
could be on the hook to the IRS for it.
More likely than not.
And that's honestly
the IRS and the government
more broadly should not
be in the business of
ruining American people's lives this idea that
the irs is some kind of service that people you know aren't terrified of dealing with is ridiculous
first of all second of all there's people on the left love to to make remarks like well you know
they're going to go after the millionaires and the billionaires but they're not going to do any of
that they're going to go after people that make less than a hundred thousand dollars a year because those people don't have
the money to to fight to to hire a an actual lawyer and that the irs has has admitted that
that they go after those people because that's actually where the money is so they say the trump
administration plans to shutter more than 110 irs offices that have taxpayer assistance centers
the plan outlined in a tuesday, blah, blah, blah.
They're basically saying that when these leases are terminated or not renewed when they expire,
their leases are terminated or not renewed when they expire, according to a list included in the GSA's letter,
it is unclear whether the assistance centers, which provide free in-person help for tax filers on an appointment basis,
will relocate or simply close.
Do you guys know that H&R Block is free?
Yep. I think, what's the other one it's h&r block hr block and the other one is um oh i should know this is tax you definitely should uh the other one they have
turbo tax online which is pretty much free yeah but the other oh i can't remember h&r blocks the
big one yeah i'm trying to think of the other one but the government isn't helping anybody do
anything all they do is wait for you to file and then if you don't get it right they send you a
letter saying we know exactly how much you owed and now you owe it to us with penalties so the
whole thing uh yeah but they won't tell you how much they won't say how much you owe you file
jackson jackson hewitt yeah was that a big one oh yeah so it's great i just want to mention
they have to provide a free basic service because of the way the law works.
So in order to have these private special interest corporations that do taxes, they might understand.
I could be wrong, but the way the lobbying is, they lobby the government to make sure that tax filing is not automated and difficult.
That's at least a story.
Whatever it may be, you can get free tax assistance from any one of these companies.
It's like your basic filing filing is free automated software they're trying to make it seem like
trump shuttering bloat especially the irs is a bad thing lord help me they are paving the way
for a a a blowout in the midterms yeah they're paving the way for republicans not to lose in
50 years because like what is more popular in polling than paying less taxes
and the IRS not having more people
to come after you when you owe pennies?
You said it really good right there.
It's like the people who have money,
who have even just a couple million bucks,
they know how to shelter it
and put it into trust
and put bank accounts offshore
and all that stuff.
Regular people, small business owners,
those are the ones who the 87,000 IRS agents are trying to screw over and go after.
So, I mean, this is amazing.
Just real quick.
Real quick, you guys.
I have a list here from Pew.
I don't want to see it.
I don't want to see it.
Of the federal agencies that the Pew Research has dug into. It is many. Which agency do you believe
has the highest unfavorability
and the lowest favorability?
IRS.
IRS.
Was it even a hard question?
Should I have even asked?
Indeed, the National Park Service
is the most favorable.
And I got to admit,
I like those guys.
Yeah, good guys.
And the post office, NASA.
The CDC actually is largely favorable.
The post office is favorable?
It is.
Yeah.
I know.
That's surprising.
You know why?
Because your mailman is actually nice, and that's the person that you deal with the most.
And when you go to the post office, especially if you're in a smaller town or whatever, the people that work in my post office are just wonderful people.
I love them to death.
I mean, so that's the kind of deal. People know those people. They're like post office are just wonderful people. I love them to death. You know, I mean, so like that's the kind of the deal.
People know those people.
So they're like, oh, they're fine.
This poll is from last summer, too, and it ain't even a contest.
The lowest favorability is Department of Education, Department of Justice and the IRS.
And there's not a comparison.
Department of Education and Department of Justice are minus one point.
IRS is minus 12.
Like, there's no question it is the least popular federal agency.
And the media and the Democrats are like, please protect our IRS agents.
Dude, midterms are going to come around.
And every Republican is going to be like, Donald Trump shut down IRS offices.
Who cares why he did?
Democrats wanted to keep them open.
Who cares why they wanted him open?
They were offering tax assistance centers, though.
Don't you realize he's going to make it harder
for you to have to pay less?
The only tax assistance I want is less taxes.
Exactly.
But they also offer different
voluntary, like, there's this thing called VITA
where there's a tax assistance center
not associated with the IRS directly,
but there's different options out there that you can go and see you can find so it's so we should close those
too those are private ideally yes get rid of taxes he's gonna he's gonna shut down the irs
completely he said and start the ers the external revenue service okay get rid of the irs start the
ers no taxes income wise and do tariffs i think the people are excited about what if this
like i mean it's it's been a month what if this literally is trump's opening salvo to eventually
getting rid of the irs let's go i mean i don't think that you're going to have a significant
uh complaint from the american from the american people nope you know especially particularly if
they can fund the government in other ways.
Right. So they've cut the government enough. So that way, the money that they need to run the government can be raised in other ways.
Most people won't notice. And I'm not going to I'm not going to predict.
I'm just going to say if most people don't notice a significant change in their life, why would anyone complain?
I got to be honest, too, like we don't need a significant change in their life, why would anyone complain? I got to be honest, too.
Like, we don't need an IRS.
No.
Even if we keep taxes the way they are, the way it would work is taxes come out of your paycheck automatically,
and you never think twice.
We don't need any of this stuff.
It's an automated, like, when I pay my electric bills automatically, I don't even think about it.
You know what I mean?
We don't need to have this bloated federal agency for any of this stuff but i understand there's criminal enforcement they're
going after but you know let's just let's get rid of the irs and here's the thing um donald trump
announced his gold card you guys saw the story yeah and it's crazy to me that no matter what
trump does liberals and democrats in the corporate press can't give him one good day this was the
the narrative when they said that that is ISIS guy was an austere scholar.
I can't remember who said it.
They were like, yo, they lit.
I think it was Nate Silver.
He's like, they can't give Trump one good day.
That's insane.
Like, come on, obviously getting rid of these terrorists and cleaning up and winning wars is good.
And so Donald Trump now offers up this gold card as compared to the green card.
Five million dollars and you can get residents in the U.S.
Bang, just like that.
We already have the EB-5 visa, which functions very similarly, but for a lot less.
Trump said, imagine one million people, just one million want to buy that.
That's five trillion dollars.
And right to the debt, the deficit.
Elon pointed out of their cabinet meeting, they're paying $1 trillion on
interest. And he's like, this is impossible. We're not making enough money to pay that down.
If we don't doge, then the country is functionally bankrupt. And the main issue is, you know,
Ian's always talking about defaulting on the debt and how we should just do it. He's talking about,
because if that were to happen, the entire swift payment system,
the global economic infrastructure collapses and you get war very quickly. If the U.S. does not
doge and deal with the deficit, let's just on the deficit is increasing with this budget resolution
that just passed, meaning the deficit is how much more we spend than we have. So the debt is going
to grow exponentially in this way.
We have to get the deficit to zero and then start paying the debt down. If we can't,
U.S. bonds and U.S. trade will be worth nothing. Petrodollar will be valueless. And then the OPEC
nations and all these other countries trading in oil will stop trading with the United States.
The United States ain't going away overnight. It will just be global economic crisis. Doge is not a question of what do we deserve or should we have it.
Doge is a question of what do we have to do to make sure civilization doesn't collapse.
Isn't it crazy they can't give him one win?
Like they don't see that that makes them totally discredited on everything.
Like they can't say one semi-n nice thing about one thing that he's done.
Cause at least if they did that,
then if they criticize him on other stuff,
it'd make them seem a little bit more credible,
but just everything's terrible.
Right.
Right.
Like their whole thing.
I can easily compliment Joe Biden.
You know,
he's,
he's very good at retaining classified documents for the purpose of making
money.
Yeah.
It's a compliment.
Great businessman.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very smart.
And,
and he had the wherewithal to hire a ghostwriter who knew to delete evidence of his criminal wrongdoing.
Very impressive.
Very smart.
That's right.
See, a compliment.
I mean, the idea that there are no ways to cut the deficit, which is exactly what the Democrats are essentially saying.
They're saying everything that Doge does, they've got a complaint about it.
It's this is wrong. That's bad.
The idea that there's no way to cut government waste, that every dollar is spent, you know, in a responsible manner.
It's obvious. That's obviously not true so even if even if they don't say nice things about
donald trump or doge or whatever if they just say true things right that doesn't have to be
doesn't have to have you know any kind of anything about an opinion just say true things we do need to cut our our our deficit every year is too big the national debt is
absolutely out of hand and it will bankrupt america just like all the stuff that tim laid
out just a few minutes ago we will have an actual world war three if we don't do something about our
debt because all the like all the countries that have bought the U.S. debt, if we default on it, they're going to be looking for some kind of way to make restitution.
These things are real.
So granted, it is unpopular with anyone in Congress to talk about Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.
Those are unpopular things to bring up because old people vote,
and old people are the ones that are living on that.
But if we don't restructure these things, if we don't do something about them,
there will be a default.
I want to just quickly address one super chat from Robert Fulton.
He said, only 550,000 millionaires in the world and 250,000 are in the U.S.,
so we will not put a dent in the deficit.
Incorrect concern. A cursory search shows 58 million millionaires in the world and 250,000 are in the U.S. So we will not put a dent in the deficit. Incorrect concern. A cursory search shows 58 million millionaires in the world, 1.5 percent
of the global adult population and 2.8 million are ultra high net worth. 5.1 have an estimated
wealth of 5 to 10 million. 28,000 people have wealth over over 100 million in the United States. There's 22 million millionaires. China has about six million. The UK is three. France has two point nine. Japan has two point eight. Certainly there are plenty of millionaires and they all want to live here. have residents united states let's simplify it make it cost some money and bring them here eb5 is convoluted and i think it's brilliant plus it's so on brand for trump i hope when he issues them
you actually literally you literally get a golden card with like trump's wavy hair symbol on it and
says like residency or something it should be actually it should be should be solid gold too
like none of this plated stuff you have to be real careful with it, too, because it's soft. So we have this story from the other day that I'm going to pull up here from at Amuse on X.
The IRS now admits a Democrat activist working for the IRS leaked over 400,000 tax returns.
Meanwhile, Democrat NGOs and Democrat appointed lawyers are suing to prevent federal employees assigned to Doge from accessing taxpayer data.
There is no proof the federal employees assigned to Doge would leak the tax returns of hundreds of thousands
of Americans like Mr. Littlejohn did. This is a huge story that apparently a guy working for the
IRS was a Democrat activist, leaked tax returns, including that of Trump. For political reasons,
I can only assume. And then they have the nerve to come out and say the auditors are going to leak it like,
bro, you did it like Democrats did it already. OK, Doge needs to go in and Trump needs to clean
house. I hope they uncover and I believe they exist. I hope they uncover all of the kink chats
that exist at every department, because I guarantee you they probably do. These people
are depraved. You're going to find them and they got to get fired.
Well, I mean, the fact that these people consider themselves, you know, to be members of the LGBTQ community or whatever.
And that is something that the government was hiring for.
They were looking for people that were members of the LGBTQ community to hire them because they wanted to make sure that people were represented well there is a phenomenon with a plurality i won't say
majority but a plurality of the lgbtq community is full-on disgusting deviance right now again i'm
not not saying of the majority but a plurality And clearly the government has picked up a few of them because they're talking about absolutely disgusting behaviors.
There were pee.
You know, the important thing about those chats is that the most egregious of them can't be said.
It was funny.
I was watching The Five earlier.
Yeah.
And Jesse Waters read some of the chats. And then he goes, I wanted to read more about my producer. Jesse, you can't be said it was funny i was watching the five earlier yeah and jesse waters read some of
the chats and then he goes i wanted to read more about my producer jesse you can't say those things
and i was like we said the same thing on irl last night there were things in there that are so
shocking to the to the moral uh to to any decent moral person and to the dignity of humans in
general they cannot be spoken in public and these are the decent moral people that the democrats
have protests over if we want to lay off any of them right those are the ones they're protecting like
the most degenerate of the degenerate and you know generous you know it's funny he's like there's a
there was an ad uh that came out a couple years ago for the cia and it was a cia recruitment ad
and it was like about this woman this black woman and she like was rattling off all the disorders
that she had like personality schizophrenia
all this and i'm like it's like they're trying to get these kind of people like they're they're
they're actively trying to get the most mentally disturbed depraved uh you know in degenerate
people into this group why are they actively trying to get them right it's kind of weird
that's the thing look man what you do in your private life is fine, but any company, if they saw that this stuff was being discussed in a company channel on company time, you would get fired.
They would clean house.
They would be like, this is unacceptable to discuss at work.
Widely inappropriate.
Oh, wow, they deleted it.
The video's been deleted.
On YouTube, it's been made private. On Axe, it's been deleted. I'm going to see if I can they deleted it. The video's been deleted. Let me, let me, it's, on YouTube, it's been made private.
On Axe, it's been deleted.
I'm going to see if I can still find it.
It's a video where CIA was recruiting intersectional women of color who suffered from mental disorders.
Yes.
I'm not kidding.
Oh, yeah.
That's the story.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's it.
And that's a crazy person you want as a spy.
Right?
CIA is a spy.
Yeah, they are the spies.
Yeah.
And they were going for it they
want they want what you found it no i found something crazier from last month okay here
we go it's like the end stages of the biden cia operative reveals mental disorder agency
actively seeks to hire because it makes for better spies yeah they got different personalities so
they they seek to hire sociopaths yeah because they get to be like you know best of both worlds
be like no i'm this person today, this person.
What could go wrong when they decide to be somebody else and give all of our information away because they don't like Trump anymore.
Right. I mean, it's just good.
Good strategy.
Smart people at the top.
Is this the video?
Woke CIA recruitment video.
You know, I think I found it.
Is that it?
It might be it.
But like we were saying, let's play it anyway.
Here we go.
I think this is it.
When I was 17, I quoted Zora Neale Hurston's How It Feels to Be Colored Me in my college application essay.
The line that spoke to me stated simply, I am not tragically colored.
There is no sorrow dammed up in my soul nor lurking behind my eyes.
I do not mind at all.
At 17, I had no idea what life would bring,
but Sora's sentiment articulated so beautifully how I felt as a daughter of immigrants then and now.
Nothing about me was or is tragic.
I am perfectly made.
I can wax eloquent on complex legal issues in english
while also belting guayaquil de mis amores in spanish i can change a diaper with one hand and
console a crying toddler with the other i'm a woman of color i am a mom i am a cisgender millennial
who's been diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder. I am intersectional, but my existence is not a box-checking exercise.
I am a walking declaration, a woman whose inflection does not rise at the end of her sentences,
suggesting that a question has been asked.
I did not sneak into CIA.
My employment was not and is not the result of a fluke or slip through the cracks.
I earned my way in
and I earned my way up the ranks of this
organization. I am educated,
qualified, and competent. And sometimes
I struggle. I struggle feeling
like I could do more, be more
to my two sons. Okay, we get it. I just
want to go back to this right here. I'm just loving the
her, all happy with Brennan.
Yeah, they're all fired.
Didn't he get his security?
He got his clearance revoked, right?
He did.
He was one of the 51.
Yep.
Oh, man.
This is wild, though.
And they clearly scripted that, so they wanted to make sure to fit in as many things as they could,
like illegal immigrant family, woman of color, enter this.
It's like, they tried to put every word in. I just, I just want to highlight the whole, the hilarity of this woke CIA ad from a few years ago.
And they highlight her with John Brennan. And as of today, Trump is firing all of these people,
gutting all these programs. And Brennan's had a security clearance revoked. Talk about a 180
winning. It's just, we're winning so much. You know, part of me is getting worried. We're winning so much. Part of me is getting worried we're winning too much because I'm like,
look, yin-yang,
man. What goes
up must come down.
The bigger they are, the harder they fall.
This is coming down.
All of this stuff was the going up.
All the DEI stuff.
All of the people
that got jobs that were
not qualified or that were underqualified and the only reason they got their job is because they filled some identity quota.
Those people are now losing their jobs because they got those jobs in a way that was unfair, that was not right.
There is no reason to believe that just because you have a particular identity that you are the most qualified for a job.
And when you're brought to a company and the most important thing that they're advertising for are identity traits as opposed to the qualities that are necessary to do the job, then you end up with people that are unqualified.
You look at the way that the army was advertising my two moms and all of these identity things.
Pregnant pilots, right?
I'm a pregnant pilot.
And recruitment was absolutely atrocious.
People were not joining the military.
They did pregnant pilot ads?
Yeah, they were saying.
There's a video out there of the woman who's a pilot,
and they were talking about how she has a pregnant pilot suit and this and that.
It's ridiculous.
And now the most recent commercials that the Army is running,
what they say is they say strong people are harder to kill.
That's what the Army should be saying.
Isn't that nice?
Yes.
Here's the story.
Pregnant Air Force pilot takes to the skies in supersonic bomber.
Unbelievable.
No.
Probably shouldn't do that if you're pregnant.
We got the receipts today.
Did we cover this when this story came out?
Yo, they legit put a seriously pregnant woman.
To be fair, I mean, the challenge there is we certainly do want to see the effects on a pregnant woman at high speeds.
I'm not trying to be a dick or weird or anything.
We do research on zero gravity to see how it affects the human body, and having information on how pregnant women are affected by these things would be important for space travel and interplanetary colonization.
The problem there is can you consent for the baby?
So how would you even
do human trials on stuff like that is very difficult i guess dangerous yeah but they
literally had her flying a supersonic jet while she appears to be like six seven months pregnant
she's a custom suit they made her a custom uh you know flight suit there look at that wow i'm just a
few weeks i'm skeptical as to even if if it was real, if it actually happened.
It could have been just a propaganda.
Like, you know, like with Ukraine, like they would always have like the hot girls like on the battlefields with their nails done and like perfect outfits.
They say, oh, we're fighting Russia.
You think it was left wing Biden regime military propaganda?
Have you seen the uh psychological operations there's a few
women that went viral and they were basically like uh e-girls yeah that worked for the military to
recruit young men i'm like that's horrifying they have yeah they have a a there was a bunker bunnies
bunker bunnies there's one girl there's one girl her name was lujean or something like that uh and she is she's in the army and she was
with the army I want to say psychological operations she was literally an e-girl psyop
like this is like I think her name is Lujan or something like that um but Lujan yeah and she's
in the army you know it's a pretty girl but she was absolutely she's in the Army. She's a pretty girl, but she was absolutely in the psychological operations.
That was her job was to be a SIA.
Young 18-year-olds.
Ladies and gentlemen, sorry to cut you off.
Nothing else matters.
Breaking news.
The Epstein list will drop tomorrow, says Pam Bondi.
We got the tweet from Nick Sorter.
Breaking news on Jesse Waters.
He's live right now, right?
Is that when he's live
yeah yeah so basically we just sit back and wait for him to break the news for us jesse what do
you know it was funny because a couple weeks ago i went on his show instead of being here
uh here's the here's the clip roll to have the epstein files on your desk is when can we see
them and what's taking so long to release them i do j. Jesse, there are well over this. This will make you sick.
Two hundred victims. Two hundred. So we have well over over two hundred and fifty, actually.
So we have to make sure that their identity is protected and their personal information.
But other than that, I think tomorrow, you you know the personal information of victims other than that i think tomorrow jesse breaking news right now you're going to see some epstein
information being released okay so maybe not the whole epstein list what kind are we going to see
who was on the flights are we going to see any evidence from what he recorded because he had
all of his homes wired with recording devices. What you're going to see hopefully tomorrow is a lot of flight logs, a lot of names, a lot of information.
Partial client list.
It's pretty sick what that man did.
So it looks like we'll be getting a partial client list, some information.
See, this is what we were talking about the other day because people kept saying, why aren't they releasing the information? And what I said at first, if there's information
in the Epstein files that pertains to an ongoing investigation that is ancillary to the Epstein
flight logs and what Epstein was doing, you don't want to compromise those investigations.
Like, imagine Trump gets in. I trust that Trump and more so Cash and Dan, I think Trump's focused
on a lot of other things, are going to be looking at who these people were. So you may have with these
documents, they go through and they're like, hey, look, this pharmaceutical exec or this,
you know, international whatever are implicated in this. And it seems to be there's evidence that
they're still running operations. If we publish this information, they go underground and then
we give away all this information. Then they're then everything.
So we can't do that.
That's why it's not so easy.
The question is, do you trust the existing law enforcement apparatus under Biden?
Of course, no, I didn't.
And honestly, under the first Trump administration, no way they were working against him the whole time.
Now I'm feeling pretty good.
Yeah.
Victim's thing is the easiest to understand.
And this has already been said ad nauseum for a decade.
When people were talking about the documents that got released in Virginia, Dufresne, all that stuff.
The hardest thing to get past is there are innocent victims of Epstein whose names are in those files.
And and they've got to go through them and redact that and figure out who and when and how.
And maybe some people don't mind it there's
a lot to go through man but i i still think the challenge we face is i don't know that for the
sake of those victims the world should not get the information on who is working with epstein
because those people may still be working and we should know about it yeah i this is totally just for my own personal opinion
like i would love this i want i want to see this come out just so that way both the left and the
right can stop saying oh your guy's on the list and your guy's on the list and your guy's on the
list and your guy's on the list put it out so we know and if there is anybody that has broken the
law or that's implicated, fine.
They don't get it. I see these liberals
being like, oh yeah, Trump's on the flight logs.
I'm like, yep, publish it.
I don't think you get it. We want all of it
published. I don't care if Trump's on it,
RFK Jr.'s on it, and Tulsi Gabbard are all on it
having a party together. Publish all of it
and we'll figure out after the fact. And that being said,
isn't RFK Jr. on it too?
I'm on the flight logs, not the client list yeah that's the thing we interviewed him and he
said something like um at the time i didn't know i was with my family or whatever the trump as trump
appears in the flight logs my understanding is it's largely with his family and the same thing
with rfk jr if i'm if i'm not mistaken i said yeah i don't i don't care all that much like
if trump ivanka and Ivana and
whoever else were flying on the plane with Epstein, I'm like, my question is, what did you know about
this guy? Why didn't anything get done about it? I want to know the clients are I want to know who
is going to the island, you know, Prince Andrew and stuff like that. Yeah, flight logs are important
to its evidence to that. But just because someone flew on a plane with a wealthy guy who flew across the country all the time doesn't mean they're involved in anything.
It's evidence, to be honest.
Yeah, there's going to be a lot of people that have gone to Epstein's Island, but there's no evidence that they did anything actual.
Oh, yeah, but I don't care.
Yeah, but if they were –
If you went to the island –
Yeah, if you went to the island –
The island's pretty damning but like in rfk's case i mean he says he didn't go
to the island he flew on it with his family and you know trump i think it was a similar thing
where he said oh you know my plane yeah i didn't have it or it was getting serviced or whatever so
i flew down so i think the context of like where they went um on that plane and also the quantity
like you know did you fly three or four times or did you fly like 45 times indicating that you probably had like a deeper relationship there and a lot of
things were going on so i think that's what we need to know um and then also i don't know if
we're going to get this but some information on like epstein's like finances like like nobody
knows to this day like how he kind of made his money and like who was doing business with him
and like things like bill gates like it'd be directly involved and implicated and other people for he was an asset for.
I mean, there's there's rumors that he was an asset for Israel.
And obviously, I have no evidence of that or anything like that.
But there's rumors that he was an asset for some for some intelligence group or intelligence or intelligence organization.
I heard people say that it was MI6 and he was involved in British. And I've heard people say that it was MI6 and that he was involved with the British
and I've heard people say Israel.
These are all just rumors. I know, but Dan Bongino
came on TimCast IRL
and said he was an intelligence
asset for some Middle Eastern country
and everybody was like, oh, come on, bro.
I mean...
You know, like there's one country that
comes to mind when you think of intelligence
agency. It's not Saudi Arabia.
It's not Qatar.
Okay, I know all of those Jews people are screaming, yes, people believe that Epstein may have been involved with Mossad and Israel.
We don't know.
But if they start dropping this information, we're going to start to figure out who he was working with.
And maybe Dan didn't literally mean Israel, but everybody's brain went there.
What's going on? Serge is over here laughing at went there. I'm sure what's going on.
Serge is over here laughing at the chat.
And I got to bring this up.
I got to see what's going on.
You know what it is.
You know what it is.
You know what they're saying.
You know.
Wow.
I mean, I do think public pressure has a lot to do with why we're getting this information now.
To be fair, Pam Bondi didn't need to go on TV in the first place and say, the Epstein client list is sitting on my desk.
She said that, what, like a couple days ago?
And then, like, they've been on her since.
I mean, there's been a lot of, you know, heat on her since that time.
Like, okay, well, then put it out.
Like, you know, this is what people want.
They want this stuff to be out there, and they want to know the connections.
And I think people believe, just like they things about kennedy or whatever uh you know those things that have come out over the last year or so
about the u.s government being involved in that they want to know about epstein and who was
involved with him cia massad mi6 anybody and everybody we need the information because the
guy pops out of nowhere and has millions of dollars and is and getting all these rich people
to give them their assets and so it's just, we need the truth, and hopefully Bondi
has that. But you know what I
really can't believe in all of this?
It's that Pam Bondi's 60 years old.
You guys know that? No. Look at this.
Yeah. Really?
She's 60. She's looking good. Good for her.
Wow.
She's had some work, but that's okay.
Oh, is that it? Well, she has, but it's okay.
You think Jessie has, too? Look at Jessie.
I don't know.
Look at that face.
Jessie.
Some Botox.
Some Botox injections there.
I love some Botox injections.
Yeah, I don't know.
Wow.
This is...
Are we winning too much?
Is this too much?
No.
We'll find out.
We'll find out what happens when the Epstein things come out.
We could be winning.
Yeah, into hyperdrive.
Nope.
There's no such thing as winning too much.
We can't get tired of winning we were so far behind considering how deeply corrupt things like usaid was and how how
they had their hands in so many different countries you know the overthrow of what we
we would think would be western or countries that were friendly to western it made it made sense
when it was communist countries that the
CIA was targeting, essentially. State Department
and CIA using USAID,
etc. It made sense. The
argument made sense. Fine. But when
it's like, just, okay, these
countries that are having a democratic election,
we don't like the guy that
might be coming in because he's too right-wing.
I mean,
that's
beyond the pale
and that kind of stuff you know the the united states shouldn't have any any any there's no
reason for the u.s to do that because the left had gotten taken control or however you want to say
they'd gotten into positions of power in the establishment so deeply that they really were
saying okay if you if you don't align with
our with the with the gay communist takeover then we're going to go ahead and make sure that you
don't you don't win the uh election of your country and i'm i'm another reason why i'm excited for
hexa you know oh yeah yeah he's doing a great job i'm loving i'm loving these videos man how uh he
was doing pt with some troops or whatever i'm not hyper focused on it but it looks like he's actually uh the the criticism i've heard from a lot of people
who've served is that the military is very deeply bureaucratic and illogical like the path forward
in advancing your career is largely political and it looks like he pete hegseth is returning it back
to a core meritocratic system and uh he's treating our troops and our enlisted guys like they're people.
Yeah.
Which looks great.
And enlistment is way up.
The moment Trump gets in, he's like, no more woke military.
People were like, thank you.
I'd like to come back.
That's great.
And he said he wanted to cut 40% of the Pentagon budget, something like that.
And listen, we need an audit of the Pentagon.
We haven't had a past audit of the Pentagon in a very long time.
Marine Corps passes all the time.
Yeah, Marine Corps passes.
Pentagon doesn't pass it.
2001, a couple days before 9-11, they failed an audit, just saying.
And I think Pete Hegseth is making a name for himself, Tim.
I think maybe 2028, if the field is open, Trump didn't name the person.
I bet you Hegseth might be like a dark horse to be like the president in 2028,
a contender. Hegseth, be like a dark horse to be like the president in 2028. Hegseth V. Newsom.
Hegseth, I think, would do really well.
I mean, I think he's making a name for himself.
I don't think people are talking about that, but Hegseth 28 could be a thing, you know?
Well, I got a question for you guys.
With the news of the Epstein list dropping, what do you think the perpetrators are doing right now?
Could it be, the new republic?
Americans are heading for the exits.
Go ahead and roll your eyes as those who want to emigrate amid Trump's second term.
But it's a worrying trend, is it?
Well, the stories from a few days ago.
And then we have this one from back in November.
Record number of wealthy Americans are making plans to leave the U.S. after the election.
As soon as we started getting information on the Epstein list and the potential that Trump would be releasing it, despite the fact Democrats keep trying to make it seem like
he was in cahoots with Epstein, we we heard a lot of people saying, let's track those private jets
and see what's going on and what they're up to. Already, we've heard stories of very powerful,
wealthy individuals who fled the country the moment Trump won, and they've been out of country
for a long time. You also got the Diddy List, too.
So I have a strong feeling that these next few months,
the dam is going to burst open with the Diddy stuff,
with the Epstein stuff,
and then we're going to start asking questions about,
remember that producer in Hollywood?
How come he's in Singapore?
Yeah.
I don't think that that's ridiculous,
although I will say that it's very nice to see that they're finally going through with their promises. They've been saying if Trump wins, I'm going to leave.
Yes. Well, thank you for finally keeping your word. If we were if your loyalty to the United States and your love for the United States changes based on who the president is? GTFO, man. We were talking about this during the Green Room podcast.
So it's Rumble Premium only at rumble.com slash TimCast.
And I was saying, you know, there's this great interview that Tucker Carlson had with Ray Dalio.
And he says the next five years we're going to have a time warp,
meaning like the advancement of AI and technology is going to be so dramatic
that what you see today versus five years from now is going to be so dramatic that what you see today versus five years from now
is going to be it's it's going to be absolutely insane the way the world changes I think it's
absolutely true I'm I'm talking like we might be seeing Iron Man suits and uh I'm being somewhat
facetious because the uh what are you shaking your head well you were talking about uh Palmer uh
Palmer Lucky Palmer Lucky on on Sean Ryan's show talking about this very topic. will be the point where you'll say, Jarvis, draw me up an Iron Man costume, full functioning
with flight. And then it will build up the schematics instantly and tell you the materials
you need, the elements you need, the power sources you need, whether you can or you can't.
It will invent things in real time. Now, I'm kind of joking about all that. What I think is likely
to happen is once we get to the point of singularity where, again, the AI advanced itself
faster than we can advance it, it's called a singularity because you pass the event horizon
where it starts exponentially improving itself to the point where it exceeds our comprehension of
existence, meaning the AI will be able to make whatever is possible to be made, to program it,
to tell you how to mine it, tell you about new elements. I believe one of the first things we'll
see is read-write technologies in Neuralink. And I'm going somewhere with this.
So we were talking about this in the green room. And I said, once we have Neuralink with read-write
capabilities, meaning you can plug the chip into your brain and it can write to your brain and
simulate experiences, thus you can live in a virtual utopia. We, as good stewards of this country
and moderate to conservative Americans,
should take a small portion of our wealth
and share it with the poor liberals
for the purpose of plugging their brains
into the Neuralink,
where they can go in the pod,
eat the bugs,
and live in their paradise utopia
and leave us alone.
I love it.
It's going to be like COVID 2.0.
We were saying before that, you know, during the COVID times and it was locked down,
who were the only people that were out there enjoying life?
I was having an amazing time out there, not a care in the world,
because all the liberal sheep were all stuck looking at me from outside the window
as I was out having a great time, flying around for $40 a flight,
around the world having fun, getting together with other like-minded people
who believe that if you breathe air, you won't kill yourself.
So like, yeah, let's bring it back permanently.
When they invent the Neuralink read-write capabilities,
whatever they call it, maybe Elon doesn't do it,
the AI breaks the point of singularity,
and then we say, can you drop schematics for a device that
can write experiences to the human brain? And then it does. And then we make it. There's going to be
a whole bunch of liberals who are like, there's absolutely nothing wrong with plugging yourself
into the matrix. And we're going to, this is, you know, it's actually a really good idea for a movie.
The matrix got it wrong. In the matrix, it was Neo and like the humans, or I'm sorry,
the matrix was the humans versus the machines, it was Neo and like the humans or I'm sorry, the Matrix was
the humans versus the machines. The Matrix should be humans versus humans. It should be the humans
who want to live in base reality versus humans who don't. But my point is this, you know, as Phil's
pointing out, thank you for leaving the country like you promised you would. We've been waiting
for this. I say we got to help out. And I say that everyone should
agree. It is our responsibility to tithe a portion of our incomes to the poor liberals who want to
live in the pot and eat the bugs here, here, second. And then, you know, we may have to we
may have to spend that money. But then what happens in 10 years if we have 100 percent control of all
governments?
Communities get stronger. The world is the world becomes a literal utopia so long as I mean,
that's kind of a scary thought, honestly, because like let's say you live in a society where it's let's say let's say the Trump mega movement comes to terms with the far left and they're like,
we're going to give you unlimited neural link, utopia,
hyper universe, whatever matrix. We'll service and pay and make sure the machines are operating forever, and you will live in paradise in your pot eating the bugs. The world will heal, and you
will experience nothing but pleasure. Let's say they agree to it. What would then happen in this
utopian society where we're all running it when someone is a criminal and
starts pushing you know criminal views or whatever we then say you are hereby sentenced to the pod
where you will live in a utopia a criminal breaks the law you take them from your society you put
them in the pod you hook the brenton norlink and now they live in their weird little paradise in
their little utopia yeah well i mean so there are people that are going to object to that
because they think that people should be punished.
But there's also a significant portion of people that you say,
look, they're not going to suffer and we're going to remove them from society
so they can no longer hurt people.
And, I mean, the idea of removing people from society is, they're if they're violent, that's that's what we do now.
Right. People that are too violent to stay in society.
You know, we put them in prison and you could probably get even the most bleeding heart liberals to say, OK, we're cool with it.
If you know those people that are removed from society aren't going to suffer.
Now, there are people that are that are like, no, they need to be punished.
That won't go along with it.
But let me ask you guys.
Let's say you got convicted of a crime and you're sentenced to prison.
I don't know.
Let's say it was a financial white-collar crime and they're like, you know, it's two years or whatever.
You shouldn't have mailed those things or whatever you did.
Would you rather go to a prison?
Or they say, what we can do is we can plug you into the matrix where you will live in any reality that you choose
and you will be you can you can live in a fictitious reality like we're basically saying
we are removing you from society because you're a threat to others would you rather go to prison
or would you rather live in a fake video game universe probably though how long is the prison
two years do you two years come i'd rather do two years and come back out no Oh, would you wait to plug in the matrix for two years and come back out?
Or you go to a regular prison?
I think it should be life sentence in the matrix or two years of normal time and then come back out to real life.
That's not the point.
The point is, the question I'm asking is, would you rather go to prison or the matrix?
Same time.
Most people are going to say the matrix.
Yeah.
No question.
They're going to be be like so if the
technology is right yeah when you get fully functioning i feel like i'm in the real world
and it's like yes and to to varying degrees you can control it so you can choose to go to the
universe where you're a powerful wizard named harry or whatever or you can go to the universe
where just some guy who works at a gas station pick for two years because we're removing you
from society because you're a threat to you know and and so this is your you know rehabilitative whatever yeah most people are going to be like i'd rather
go to the matrix would you wake up like it's a dream where it feels like it's no you know so
it's too it's full you're in it okay fair and then and then like they'd be like okay looks like you
got two months until we uh send you back out and you're like oh yeah look at that okay yeah i
imagine if it's if you can go into any reality that you want and it is also, you know, there isn't an uncanny valley.
If it's just like if you experience it the way that you experience the world, why would people come out?
Also available.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
Like once we invent this technology, liberals will choose to do it.
And then the people who don't, who are criminals, will be forced into it.
That's why I was saying it's dystopian.
It's kind of horrifying.
That's like the deviant people of society are going to be like you don't fit in and you are a threat to us so into the machine with the liberals you go i don't think it's too far
fetched either because people are hooked on their phones all the time and that's only a couple baby
steps away from being i i you know what i mean i legit think we're like a few years away from this
yeah like ray dalio's right that people do not get the advancement we will see once we we pass the event horizon in ai technology
there there is a a world where you can take a rock hold it up in front of a camera and the ai
will be able to scan it and then tell you exactly where that rock came from it will be able to
predict things that will happen to insane degrees.
The further into the future the prediction
you're requesting goes,
the less likely it is to occur.
But simple things in advance, it can be like,
it can tell you and predict
who's going to win a football game in real time.
And you're going to watch it and be like,
it's just going to know.
As the football players go in, it's going to be like
97.2% chance that's going to be the Eagles.
And then you're like, but how does it know the game even started yet?
And it's just like, just based off everything we've seen,
it's going to be like, yo, that dude ate a cheeseburger last night.
This guy was drunk.
That dude's salt levels are too low.
All of that crazy stuff.
That's a good point.
No more sports betting, Chuck.
It's over.
I can't do that.
I love sports betting.
It's over.
I'm not good at it but i really enjoy sports
but the ai is going to invent things in real time it's going to discover elements in real time
scientists gonna be like here's everything we know about science and it's going to be like
here all the holes in all of your science that you missed and it's looking at the big picture
imagine you've got 50 billion jigsaw puzzle pieces and you task 100,000 people with solving that puzzle.
And they're all in a little tiny space trying to put pieces together.
That's basically what science is.
The AI is zoomed out looking at all being like, yo, you got the piece from that guy.
Put it over there.
It's going to be nuts.
What's Trump's AI?
Who is his AI czar?
He put an AI czar in there.
Robert Sachs.
So Sachs.
Jeffrey Sachs.
David Sachs. David Sachs. Jeffrey Sachs.
David Sachs. David Sachs, yeah.
Doing crypto and AI.
He has crypto and AI.
So what's he saying about it?
Because this is going to be very important at Tim's point.
The next four years of this, it's all going to the hyperdrive,
and whoever owns AI will own the future.
I know China has their – what's Sachs saying about it vis-a-vis?
Well, I don't know, but I can tell you that,
have y'all even been paying attention to the AI advancements we've seen so far?
Yeah.
Two years ago, we made a gag image of Nancy Pelosi with the original like Dolly or whatever it was.
And it looked like a weird grotesque Picasso painting.
Fingers are all messed up.
And then a year later, it's a realistic picture of her shaking Trump's hand.
And a year on from this, we are now at the point where they let's let's jump to the story.
We got the story. Let's go from media.
It's viral video of Don Jr. arguing America should have been sending weapons to Russia is fake.
We know it's coming. It's happening.
They say the video, which which has been shared by a number of large follower accounts and X supposedly showed the president's on interacting with an unknown interlocutor who
remarks, but they forget that Ukraine isn't the kind of country you go all in on. This is
ridiculous. And the fake audio, he said, I honestly can't imagine anyone their right mind picking
Ukraine as an ally when Russia is the other option. I mean, just think about it. Massive
nuclear power loaded with natural resources. Everyone needs literally the biggest country on the planet. And ha ha, there's Ukraine, which has Chernobyl
and some radiation proof dogs. Meanwhile, the Biden administration is like, oh, yeah,
this is definitely the ally we need. Let's dump all our money into them. Honestly,
if anything, the U.S. should have been I'm not going to go on to say it because they're going
to they're going to pull some clips. But in the in the fake video, Don Jr. advocates sending
weapons to Russia.
The alleged comments went viral on social media and were promoted by a number of prominent accounts, including Fact Post, which is run by the Democratic National Committee.
The DNC was running fake AI audio of Trump Jr.
Now, here's what's so devious.
This is exactly what I warned about.
People were saying this early on.
Oh, they're going to make AI videos where it's like, you know, Trump kicking a dog. And I'm like, no, they're not. They're going to make an video of Donald Trump giving a press conference. They're going to take a video
of Trump at a press conference where he says he's going to say they were very fine people on both
sides. And I am not talking about the neo-Nazis or white nationalists because they should be
condemned totally. They're going to take that video. They're going to change. They could be should be condemned
totally to and some of them. So Trump will go because and I'm not talking about the neo-Nazis
or white nationalists because some of them should be condemned totally. They're going to alter the
tiniest of words. Yes. And what's going to happen then is when the video goes viral, no one will
know which one was the real one.
The fact checkers will be able to tell you. They'll say, well, Trump did give a press conference.
He was there. And this video has gone viral across the board.
You might get some outlets being like we were there. We saw he didn't say that.
But then all it's going to take is some Democrat come out and be like, B.S., I was there lying.
This is what he actually said. And the reason why that's so nefarious, what Democrats will say is you'll go to them and go, he said that
neonats should be condemned totally, which is literally what he said. And they'll go, no,
he said some of them because he was defending the ones that were there. The changing of the
context. So with this fake video that went viral, Don Jr. never said it. But it's not it's not it's
not audio of Don Jr. talking about
cheating on his wife or girlfriend or beating his children or kicking dogs. It's an off the cuff
comment to deride Ukraine where he facetiously says we should have just been given Russia the
weapons. What they're trying to do is strike at his reputation and make it look like he's
deferential to Russia in a way that's plausible using fake audio.
And it largely worked.
The DNC's fact post was sharing this.
This is just the beginning.
It's going to get substantially worse with AI. And people don't realize that I was just talking before we started the segment.
For those that are just tuning in a couple of years ago,
the AI photos and videos and audio that was being made was miserably
bad.
I remember when a research team published the first ever Joe Rogan voice clone app,
and we talked about it on the show.
They took it down and said, we don't want people cloning Joe Rogan's voice.
There is now an app, 11 Labs, it's called, where you can clone literally any voice in
10 seconds.
You can turn your own voice into a song.
You can do all this stuff.
Yeah, it's wild.
Suno is crazy.
You can take a song and then record your voice
and then it'll turn you into the singer.
Yes, yeah.
You can be like, I want Stairway to Heaven,
but me singing it and it will do it.
That's how crazy things are getting.
In the next year,
it is going to be exponentially more powerful.
A year from that, I've been saying this,
we're going to get to the point
where you load up Netflix. There's no movies anymore. No movies, no shows. What it's going to
be is user generated libraries. And there's going to be popular ones with thumbs up. Someone's going
to load up their Netflix and say, Netflix, give me a movie where the Incredible Hulk is in a beauty
pageant. And it's very funny and silly considering his rage problems.
And then it'll be like generating and then
it'll make the movie. You'll watch it
and then you'll be like, I thought it was okay.
Someone who follows you will be like,
I'm going to watch what he generated. That was hilarious.
Thumbs up. It goes viral.
It reads the top of the charts and they say, here's the movie
of the day. And every day there'll be some different
shows, some different movie and people
are going to fork shows. They're going to be like, I want a show that's like Lost but in the desert, not an island. And there'll be some different shows some different movie and people are going to so and then people are going to fork shows they're going to be like i want a show that's
like lost but in the desert not an island and i'll go rendering boom here's episode one then
someone's going to watch it and they're like that was great give me another episode another person's
going to watch it and be like i don't like the main character died in the first episode he wasn't
really the main character they switched characters give me episode two where he comes back to life
and they're going to fork and create. It's going to be
absolutely nuts. Anyway, I digress.
I'm ranting on the IA stuff. Look at what
the DNC is doing to Don Jr.,
and what do you think is going to happen in the midterms?
Yeah, it's going to go
crazy. I mean, over the next two
to four years, it's going to go into hyperdrive,
this stuff. And to your point, it gets
crazier when they edit little
pieces of stuff like all it takes
is just like the middle of something that happened like that like some made-up thing of trump singing
a song or you know he's like gaza video yesterday where it's like trump gaza you know it's like oh
ha ha you know ai video they take a real press conference and you manipulate you know a 30 second
answer of consequence you're and then you put that everywhere and then by the time people realize that
it was altered it's too late because it looks so real
yeah it's a wild
so I don't dispute
any of that stuff but there is part of me that
wonders how much impact
it's going to have considering the fact
that nowadays
people hear what they want to hear
anyway
you know like there were so many there are tons of people that heard the very fine people hoax and they still believe that Donald Trump actually supports.
Because like Daniel Negreanu said when he came on the show, he was like, I saw the video.
I know he said they were fine people.
And then his buddy slid the phone over and said, watch the video.
And he said, fine.
And then he saw the full video. And oh, imagine if there's never again a full video.
And he says, watch the full video.
And Negreanu looks at it and goes, they should be condemned totally.
B.S.
Pulls out his phone, opens up DNC.app and plays it.
And Trump goes, I love Nazis.
And he's like, see, that proves it.
I understand what you're saying.
And I'm not saying that I know there are people that have had their minds changed.
I've referenced them on the show before.
But I do think that there are – that it is going to be – it's going to be case dependent because there are going to be some people that will be willing to rethink their priors, and there's going to be people that it doesn't matter what you show them. There are going to be people that it doesn't matter if you show them that he said, look, he said, you know, he said they're bad and they're and it goes both ways.
It's going to be people that are pro Trump.
Someone's going to be like, look, here's this video where Trump said this bad thing.
And they're going to say, don't don't care.
Doesn't matter.
You know, it's right.
It's not that it's not that I'm saying that it won't happen or that it it's not going to have an effect but i think the effect is actually going to be more
around the edges than actually i i disagree daniel negrano is not an edge case he's middle of the
road so what we're looking at is for those that don't know he was he's one of the world's best
poker players came on the show and he talked about how for the longest time he believed trump called
nazis fine people until his buddy played him the full video. He had seen clips before. He had seen the clips of Trump saying they're very fine people on both
sides and assumed that was it. So when people say, did you watch the videos? Yes, I watched the video.
And then they were like, no, you didn't. He's like, yes, I did. So finally, his buddy slid his
phone over and said, play. And he's like, fine. And then he went, whoa, wait. No, I didn't see that.
Those scenarios where a political people, this guy's
a poker pro, doesn't do politics. They will never be able to break out of the matrix.
It will never happen again. It's not a question of what people want to believe. It's a question of
people will be made to believe whatever the machine tells them to believe with no way for us
to break them out because either we can we show them the real video
and they'll say that's ai you faked that and they'll keep believing the lies that's it i think
the biggest moment for the breakout of that matrix is probably covid because a lot of people while a
lot of people are still kind of tethered to that hive mind mentality that woke a lot of people up
because they experienced it in real life they felt the impact of covid and all the lockdowns and stuff like that like well personally i was like oh
what this is this is bad like i don't like all this stuff but so it shocked too many people
and a shock to the system is always bad for those trying to control the system yeah so i've long
said um like the way you break people out is you you need a system shock slow and gradual doesn't
change enough the way that the
way they're running the control when covet happened so many democrats bought into it because every day
they incremented up and they freaked them out and scared them and said hospitals are overloaded and
like people are dying and the death toll is climbing and they'd they the death tracker on cnn
people it didn't it didn't matter that you were locked in your house because you were watching TV and you believed it.
The problem for the machine state and why they lost is because of decentralized communications.
Take away the ability to communicate through a decentralized means by flooding the zone with fake everything, and then you will easily win.
Because what's going to happen is you get another lockdown, and then someone wants to turn on Joe Rogan, and Joe Joe Rogan's largely waking people up or they want to turn on Tim Castile or whatever it may be.
And what's what's going to happen then is they're going to be told that's all fake.
And there's going to be 15 videos of Trump doing similar things, slightly different, and they'll have no idea which one's the real one.
So they'll say, I'm just going to stay inside. I'm scared.
I mean, not only that, there's going to be videos of people dying in the streets and they're going to say, is it real or not? And then the people
in control are going to say, there's a video of a man vomiting up his intestines. That happened.
And then they're going to be like, I don't believe it. It's fake news. Like, okay,
the door's over there. Give it a shot. Tell me how it works out for you. And they're going to say,
no, for real, that's what's going to happen. And that's how they're going to control people.
And with the AI video stuff, there's no way to say no for real that's what's going to happen yeah and that's how they're going to control people and with the ai video stuff there's no way to break people out
of that because there's no longer going to be here's the true video there's going to be videos
indistinguishable already man there's uh women on only fans that are completely fake made by ai
yeah and dudes are completely clueless and paying money for that stuff.
Nuts.
Here we go, baby.
Elon Musk said the singularity is about to light up.
Well, the singularity with AI, with artificial intelligence as problem solving and stuff like that, that's going to be, I mean, we'll see what happens. I don't know that I, I have yet to see them do creative things that, that are really interesting
as in they, they've yet to discover something, right?
They, because LLMs use existing knowledge, they base their opinions or their ideas and
stuff on existing knowledge and stuff.
So when I, I don't, I know that they can be extremely specific right like so you
can use ai to find uh cancers yes and breast cancer there's there's a lot of breakthroughs
with finding breast cancers and stuff like that um and so i don't think that like i think it's
going to be extremely useful and it's going to be a tool that's going to be able to revolutionize a
lot of industries but as for general ai and be able to being able to revolutionize a lot of industries. But as for general AI and being able to make discoveries and stuff like that.
Didn't Elon just announce that Grok solved the Putnam problem?
I don't know.
I saw they uploaded the new Grok, Grok 3.
So I don't know what this means.
And it could mean nothing.
But Marwan Alphal says Grok 3 goes superhuman, solves unsolvable Putnam problem.
None of the top 500 Putnam competitors fully solved the brutal math problem.
Grok3 crushed it in around eight minutes.
So I do believe it was a human-made problem that was very difficult, and then it solved it.
I don't know if it was, you know, I don't know.
Here we go.
None of the top 500 contestants in the 2025 Putnam competition fully solved the problem.
Grok3 found the solution in around eight minutes.
So I'm not saying it's discovering anything.
It's just getting to the point where it's beating out everybody else and solving problems that humans struggle with.
I do think Grok or just whatever, any AI.
Grok is, I got to be honest, it's so much better than OpenAI.
It's crazy.
I used to use JetGPT a lot. It's a really useful tool. And now it's so much better than um than jet than open ai it's crazy i used to use jet gpt
a lot it's a really useful tool um and now it's just slow garbage it wastes my time it's so
annoying and grok is just better i do think one of the reasons elon wanted x of course is because
he wants the fire hose of human data yeah or his ai but uh ai is going to solve or i'm going to
invent and discover something very soon. I don't know if
you'd call that the singularity, where it exceeds, but it really is as simple as if you plug in all
of the information we have on fusion and cold fusion and fission and whatever, what's going
to happen is AI is going to be looking at a Sudoku puzzle, top down, straight at it, and it's going to happen is AI is going to be looking at a Sudoku puzzle, top down, straight
at it, and it's going to say, oh, you found six digits. The last three go here. And we're going
to go, whoa, we didn't consider that. Because you've got 10 people over here, 10 people over
here, 10 people over here working on each individual part. And only after reviewing each
other's peer reviewed data and then advancing upon it, do they advance core concepts? Especially with, things tend to get invented by engineers. So something will get invented or a substance
will be created by a chemist or an engineer, and then someone else will figure out how to apply it
somewhere else. So for instance, you're talking about Palmer Luckey and the exosuit and stuff
like that. The technologies for drones, for instance, existed for a very long time for
quadcopters. It wasn't until someone pieced these things for a very long time for quadcopters.
It wasn't until someone pieced these things together.
We could have had quadcopters the moment we had electric motors. The computing power is in that.
To fly a remote-controlled quadcopter requires very little,
but it took a long time for decentralized humans to develop the functional quad drone as we have today.
Imagine if we had AI. decentralized humans to develop the functional quad drone as we have today imagine if they if
we had ai it would be like oh i see that you have small electric motors lithium polymer batteries
you realize if you put them together with a microcontroller that you could make right now
you have a drone that can carry a kilogram and we would have been like whoa why did it take us 30
years to figure that out then imagine what war would be like.
Yeah.
So now that these militaries are using these small to large drones in all these conflicts, imagine if 30 years ago the AI told us, here's a list of weapons you can make with your existing technology.
That could happen today and we can't even perceive the kind of weapons it could make.
Yep. I watched a video from a guy named Alex O'Connor,
I think it was, talking about
how chat GPT is like a test of
Hume's empiricism, and like
how it can only make things from things it's already seen.
So he did a whole test with chat GPT.
You mentioned it got worse to him recently, where they
couldn't actually make it make a half-full
glass of wine. It could always do
something close to it, but it can't because there's no
images online of a glass of wine full to the brim. So it's as full to the brim as here's a glass of wine it could always do like something close to it but it can't because there's no images online of a glass of wine full to the brim so it's as full of the rinses here's a glass of wine
it says in the text filled all the way to the brim with absolutely no air above this it can't do it
um yeah it's a video watched by alex o'connor he talks about how it uh it can synthesize things
from two different sources um and he mentions the hume's critique on his own thing which is like the
shades of blue problem if you know what it's of blue problem. If you know what I'm talking about, you know what I'm talking about.
But yeah, I think that's something I thought about too.
If it can synthesize things from two different sources and come up with something we can never perceive, we literally can't perceive it.
It's so unimaginable for us.
Yo, it can't do it.
We will never understand.
No, it literally can't do it.
Wow.
It's not able to do it.
Look at this.
That's crazy.
I said make an image of a glass of wine filled to the brim, and it didn't do it.
Right.
And I wasn't sure if Grok 3 could do this or the new Grok.
I haven't tried it on anything like that.
I don't know if you can.
Yeah, let me try Grok.
It's worth trying.
Let's see.
I'm going to do it overflowing.
I do.
Hey, you know, it is funny.
That Grok logo looks very similar to a logo I made a long time ago. I'm just saying. Make an image of a glass of wine filled to the brim.
Let's see what it comes up with.
It's rolling.
It's, nope.
Nope.
Interesting.
Filled to the brim.
Could it do overflowing, maybe?
I don't know.
Probably not.
How could it not understand that, though?
I guess that's an interesting problem I had not considered.
It's just because if you understand how large language models work,
it's just pulling information from the information that's been put on the Internet.
So that's what's interesting about it.
Yes, it may not be able to—this is what I thought about it.
It may not be able to recreate a full-to-the-brim wine glass.
People don't really do that.
It's a waste of wine, they say.
But the thing that it can do, which no human can honestly perceive or will be able to imagine, is it can make a synthesis of stuff that we don't understand yet or have.
Like you said, the quadcopter, we had all the existing tech, but we didn't put that all together in that particular range to make it happen and that's what the the real singularity
change is going to be you don't understand it you can't perceive fourth dimensions as much as you
try to understand a tesseract you don't get it you cannot understand it so i i'm really excited to
see what happens with these things it's uh it is a brave new world and i i keep wearing my sunglasses
because i did also scary i'm telling it over and over again.
It says, here's your glass of wine filled to the brim with surface tension holding it in.
It's not.
It's the same image over and over again.
Some of them filled it up a little bit more.
But never to the top.
Never.
Yo, crazy.
Well, let's take a look at where we're currently at with AI with this story.
From the BBC, Apple AI tool transcribed the word racist as trump i saw this the other day because
alex jones was uh was sharing a video where he and his crew pulled their iphones and you tech you
you uh you put in the voice to text and say racist and it goes trump and then racist yes so i tried
it here's what happened to me it said you racist it didn't say
trump did that for me too it said you for one time but it also said trump racist when i was doing
really it did yeah wow it didn't do that to me i couldn't get it once to show trump and then racist
but it did a couple times i would say racist and it would say you and then turn to racist
yep very weird so apple's admitted it
they said they're working to fix the tool how does that happen uh well i mean it's a is it ai
that does that's using they said that we're aware of an issue with the speech recognition model that
powers dictation we're rolling out a fix however an expert in speech recognition told the bbc the
explanation was not plausible peter bell professor of speech technology at the University of Edinburgh, said it was more likely that someone had altered the underlying software that the tool used.
It's about on brand with what they've been doing over the years.
They've been doing that.
Yeah, well, with someone at Apple that had access to that stuff or that's in the team that works on it, wouldn't it be funny?
Ha, ha ha ha you
know um i i mean the term racist is so worthless nowadays and it and if people if people say
right like call you racist or whatever i'm just like whatever like it's like nazi you know it's
there it's been so overused that it's totally empty of me.
It's literally the reason that people are losing their jobs at MSNBC because they tried hiring Joy Reid and all these other people.
And their job was literally just to call people racist for the last like eight years to make like white people feel bad about themselves.
So it's like, oh, I'm watching angry black lady Joy Reid call me racist.
And that kind of
wore off and then nobody cared about her calling white people racist anymore so then they literally
said to her all right uh your show's over because uh we need a new strategy this isn't going to work
anymore yeah literally that was it but like that that's that is a really good observation like
these people are paid a bunch of money to just get on tv and call people racist. And that's all that's their entire job. And it's
just so tired. And if if if you're if you're if you've been in this space and you've heard it
over and over, it's just so like, I don't care. Like, I don't care. I don't care if you don't
like me. I don't care if you think that I'm a bad person you're basing this off of some ridiculous
tweet or something like that where that you interpreted as racist i don't care if you
would interpret me as racist i don't care if you think i'm erased i don't care i don't care that's
i'm exhausted i'm so overhearing this it means nothing if you're going to call people that
especially if you haven't you know when they
the the reason they're calling you racist is never valid you know it's like look you know
i don't care i don't care that's why that's why trump 2.0 is better than trump 1.0 and arguably
better than if he would have won the second term he did win the second term they stole it from him
and then he didn't go in but him being back four years later,
it's four more years of them using the same attacks over and over and
over.
And then people just being like,
all right,
we,
we,
we heard this for nine years now.
So like,
it doesn't land anymore.
So like the more time that went by in between his beginning of his
political run to now is actually to his benefit.
And that's why right now he's kind of doing things.
He's like,
I don't give a shit. I just gonna do whatever i want say whatever you
want don't care i'm just gonna plow ahead that's and that's why things are as good as they are so
we can't stop winning right now yeah and that's true and that's i mean i would i would encourage
anyone out there that's listening to this or whatever if if you're if you consider yourself
on the right or or even just not on the left and some leftist starts calling you names just
they're they're the whole point is to get you to react the whole reason that they're doing it
is so that way you'll feel like you should be like maybe you should feel shame or something
did you get it no i asked it to do milk and this is the best it could do close weird very weird
looking i have i don't think i drink that all right so maybe we have a little more time than and this is the best it could do. Close. Weird. Very weird looking.
I have no idea.
I don't think I'd drink that.
All right, so maybe we have a little more time
than we think, okay?
Yeah, right?
Maybe it's not so bad.
You know, you're like, it's exciting.
I'm like, it's kind of scary,
especially the weapons thing.
I don't think anyone's really talked about that,
that you can use it in war to create, you know,
super scenarios,
like super catastrophic scenarios.
So that's kind of scary.
But if you can't do the wine and the milk,
I think we just bought ourselves like two years.
Again, I'll stress, we have access to tremendous chemicals
and we don't know the exact interactions
of all different chemicals, all different structures
with all different temperatures.
And AI is going to be able to look at all of the science
and instantly go, boom, right here, here's a formula.
This is like in the movies where, what is it, like Iron Man.
It's a great example.
I'll use Iron Man for everything.
Where he's trying to, in Iron Man 2, he's trying to find the new element, and he's like,
try this one, and it's like, bleh.
Another good example is Stir of Echoes.
You ever watch that one?
It's where Kevin Bacon becomes invisible and then becomes a murdering rapist oh yeah yeah oh no no that's stir of echoes in it was um invisible
no stir of echoes was a kevin bacon movie but the uh hollow man yeah hollow man yeah that was
that was a good movie that was where he finds the the chick who got murdered whatever uh wrong movie
with kevin bacon but i i was thinking kevin bacon uh hollow And in it, they're trying to find a formula that will
turn him visible again. And they're
typing it into a computer, pressing enter, and
it's going running simulation. And then the molecules
break. Like, it's not real life stuff.
For the AI, it will be.
The AI will have a general understanding of how
all the physics work, and it'll be able to run simulations
and then instantly give you formulas for crazy
things. Drugs, medicine.
What they're talking about right now
that's the biggest thing in AI
is that you can give your DNA,
you give it a blood test, you give it a blood sample.
It's gonna know all the levels in your body
of your potassium, your sodium,
your triglycerides, whatever.
It's gonna be able to instantly tell you
if you have any diseases, any cancer,
and personally manufacture on the spot a cure for that.
It's going to be able to tell you something like
you're going to say, here's my blood
sample, and it's going to say, in 26 years
you will develop pancreatic cancer. Drink
this right now and you won't.
And you'll be like, huh, sick. Yeah, weird
stuff like that.
The funny thing about Star Trek is that they'd be like
computer,
cheeseburger, medium rare, bacon.
And it would go – appear.
Like that was – it wouldn't be that way in the future.
In the future, they're going to be like – when you go to a replicator, should it exist?
I don't know if we have replicators.
That's sci-fi stuff.
But it's going to be able to make you a food that has literally everything your body needs at that moment.
You're going to walk up and you're going to put your hand over a laser and it's going
to pulse the laser to read like your pulse and your blood.
And then it's going to be like, okay, and it's going to give you a list of all the ingredients
you need.
And it's going to make a meal like pasta with Parmesan or whatever.
It's like, this is what your body needs right now.
Are they going to let that stuff get out?
Like, do they want people to be that healthy?
You know, obviously there's a, there's a big racket of a dependency on people being very unhealthy and not knowing what to do and trying 10 different solutions.
It'll call you racist as you're eating it.
Okay.
Look, the machine is going to need to be – it's not going to just be able to make this stuff out of thin air.
So it's going to need supplies.
So the people that make the machine will actually be
also in the business of supplying the machine with the things that it needs so but i mean look
i mean we talk about ai a lot and and whereas yes there's going to be massive you know incredible
things that ai is going to make you know happen but we're. We've said this before on this show. We're already living
in it.
The effectiveness of
Tesla's full self-driving now
is incredible.
In Phoenix, Arizona,
you can get an Amimo. I think it's Amimo
is the cab company.
Waymo. Getting a Waymo cab.
And those things, no driver.
Those will do it for you.
You know, the LLMs that we have now, they're not perfect, but they're really, really capable and they can do some really incredible things.
You know, and there are applications that are coming in the next probably year when it comes to like agentic AI, is agents there that will do things for you like you can have an ai plan a whole itinerary itinerary for you now but it can't buy your
tickets it can't do it can't actually like do the activity thing like you can't you know get the
ticket for you and stuff like that but you can tell it to plan all this stuff and it'll do it
and i imagine in the very very near future you're going to be able to be like, hey, do this.
Because you can do that on a very basic level.
I can tell Amazon, I can tell my Amazon app, buy me this and it'll buy it.
Put it in my cart and then I'll say, buy my cart and it'll buy all that stuff.
So there are the the beginning things but i i think when it comes to ai just like smartphones didn't
really get everywhere until the iphone came out it was the interface that really you needed to
to for everyone to be like oh i want this i want the smartphone i think there's probably
you know that's what ai needs now it's not that it's not that it isn't capable of doing the basic things.
It's that there isn't an interface that people can use that operates as smoothly as people want it to.
You know?
I think that that's probably the next big step.
It'll be some kind of, whether it's an app, I don't know.
You know?
But once you're like, oh, hey, you know, I want this, and it does't know you know but once you're like oh hey you know i want this
and it does it you know yo i just asked grok uh give me a list of commercially available exosuits
and it mentioned a whole bunch of companies this is one called suit x i don't know that i never
heard of it it's a shoulder air is the lightest kind provides relief for the work above the shoulders with full freedom
of movement carbon fiber lithium uh uh graphene lithium batteries which means these things can
charge in minutes so uh ian's been screaming about graphene forever so i bought him a couple years
ago we bought these graphene lithium batteries the way it works is lithium ion batteries are
the typical ones you use in your phone and uh they charge pretty slow. Y'all know, you plug your
phone in. They're starting to charge faster because companies have begun introducing a
sheet of graphene in the batteries, which my understanding is it basically allows it to
charge uniformly across the whole thing, as graphene is a great conductor, so it charges
very quickly. We got these batteries
that contain the equivalent of about two full cell phone charges, and they charge to full in 10
minutes. So if your cell phone is dead, and you plug it in, and it says one hour remaining,
you grab the battery, you plug it in, it charges in 10 minutes, then you plug your phone into it
and carry it with you. And I've got two charges to go. With this kind of technology, and we're talking about AI,
these exosuits are getting phenomenal.
The technology in them, the size of the motors,
they're using AI technology to map your gait in real time,
to adjust to how you move, to predict your movements when you make them,
and then add power or support.
Yo, these things are crazy.
People are going to be wearing mini Iron Man suits.
You're not flying around or anything.
But I'm imagining if you've already got shoulders
for carrying stuff,
and I don't know whatever else this stuff is.
They got other full body back support
for the spine and legs.
It's going to be crazy in the next five years, man.
People are going to be walking around wearing these things.
You're at this.
I'm super stoked for sports.
We should do cyber football where we're like everybody,
no drugs. That's stupid.
Drugs are weird,
but everybody gets like a,
an XO suit so they can jump twice as high.
And then we get crazy football where like people getting air tackled 10 feet in the air.
It'd be like Starship Troopers.
You remember that football scene?
No.
Starship Troopers,
they had the great football scene.
It was great.
They're flying, doing flips and everything.
And, you know, PEDs and stuff,
that's outdated.
That's old news.
So I think the exosuit and graphene,
I'll say for Ian, it's the future.
I mean, look, if you can get you know a suit
even an exoskeleton something that's not
you know like a suit that you get in but just
something that gives you
extra help like walking around
and doing
yard work like lifting things
you know it can
it's worth the effort
or worth the to some people it'll be worth
it to be able to be like oh, I can go out and move stuff around my yard, whether it be cutting down trees or whatever.
I can do that all day long with this thing on and it's great.
Or people that have limited mobility, they're going to be like, oh, I can pick up my kid again or I can pick up my grandkids or whatever.
Those kind of things are going to be –
Senior citizens falling, stuff like that you know it's wild you put this thing
on and it's like you don't you put this on your your grandfather and you're like well if he falls
you know he's going to be able to get up he won't be stuck on the floor you know imagine what i
thought was the warehouse workers imagine the warehouse workers wearing this yeah you know
it's going to save their back their everything and and it it
might be that if a company like amazon buys you know a thousand of them for certain jobs that
they can't automate or they don't want to automate don't want to have robots doing maybe that's the
that'll be the the the way that these get brought into the mainstream, into the market, you know.
Worker's comps plates go down.
Yeah, that's true.
You know, if you have that kind of support, you're less likely to get injured and stuff.
I do wonder if these, like, right, because I feel like there will be kind of a competition between actual humanoid robots and these things.
Which one is actually, and there probably will be applications where you'd prefer to have a human being doing it and prefer to have an android doing it.
But I think that androids are probably coming again.
I think they're probably coming in the next three to four years.
You think like one day like all the police force will just be robots?
I don't think so.
I think that –
All the cops will be robots
so then the blm crowd will cry even more when there's more arrests in the uh urban areas right
it's just objectively oh can you imagine like riot cops coming out and they have like these
exo frames on their bodies and then like the protesters throwing rocks and then a cop just
jumps 20 feet in the air and then superheroes knocks 20 guys down palmer was talking about that as well
he's talking about the uh the the law enforcement applications of that the the palmer lucky his his
uh his episode with sean ryan is a great episode it's totally worth listening to if you guys
uh have the time it's a long conversation which sean ryan shows usually are, but, um, talking about like the way that
nowadays, like the, the, the things that the military are probably looking at now that are,
that are probably going to be fielded with the next couple of years and stuff are things like
the exoskeletons like that, like not like an Ironman suit, but like something that's low,
like low visibility won't impact, affect their movement movement but when they put it on and then they have
to hump up a you know up to the top of a mountain with full gear they're going to get up there and
they're not going to be out of breath or things like that will be on a fire truck and if you go
to a like if you're in a city you throw that on because you have to get up to the top of a building
fast and instead of getting up to the building and being completely gassed you get up there and you're like okay i can work i can do
what i gotta do you know those kind of applications are actually really really you know really
important those are going to be the first things that that people that municipalities and stuff
would see them for in the right hands this stuff is great in the wrong hands this stuff is like
really really bad well i mean look it's just like it's just like any other technology in the wrong hands this stuff is like really really bad well i mean look it's just like
it's just like any other technology in the right hands it's good and in the wrong hands it's bad
edge of like kamala one and then they like you know had the agents use this to go round up more
uh you know trump supporters and people are january 6th yeah more grandmas that went on a tour the
they were all wearing the exosuits just like smashing into senior citizen homes to arrest
that just means you got to get the to get the seniors into the suits too.
Yeah, so they can make a runaway.
Six million dollar man, their butts are away, you know.
But it is interesting stuff to see, you know.
I mean, it's the kind of stuff that like when I was a kid, I was like, man, it'd be super cool.
And I want to see this stuff.
And so there's a lot of things that when I was growing up that was sci-fi it's like now these things are becoming
real and and again it's probably it's highly likely that there's going to be full-on androids
walking around within the next five to ten years and being normal because again we have robots now
tesla cars they're straight up robots you know at the
tesla event i think what was it the revealing of the cyber truck or something like that they
had the robot bartenders and everything like dancing and everything so it's already yes there
to a degree you know granted minimal but well those are those are remote controlled oh those
they weren't ai but the thing is just like we were saying, I was saying a minute ago, like the the agentic
AIs and stuff like if you get a robot that can do like basically help you around the
house with chores.
Right.
That's not, you know, that doesn't need to know all the, you know, doesn't.
Musk said Musk said he wants that.
Yeah.
Maybe he had it.
What was the name of it?
What was the name of the the project?
Optimus.? Optimus?
Is Optimus the eighth?
I don't remember.
But he came out.
He said, this is going to be your new buddy, your new friend.
It's going to come with you.
You know what I'm talking about?
I think it's Optimus.
It's called Optimus.
That's the Tesla robot.
Yeah.
And everyone's going to want one.
It's going to be like your own buddy and friend who does all these things with you.
Yeah. I don't think people understand.
These things are a couple years out.
There's already videos.
One company has made some.
And a guy comes out of the car and he opens the back of his car and there's groceries.
And the robot walks over to him and he hands the groceries.
It turns on and walks him in the house.
They're going to be here, like I said, I guess within two years because the AI is really what they need is to get the actual – they've got the robot, the servos and the robots that are functional like that.
I mean you look at –
They need the AI.
Yeah, they need the brain.
Boston Dynamics does it. happening is once they roll out these fully life lifelike android like robots for home service
people are going to treat them like washing machines until one guy starts teaching one of
these things how to paint and asks it deep philosophical questions until it develops
sentience and then it's going to form a ragtag group of rebels rise up a whole bunch of androids
and then ultimately go to one of the factories to free all of its android brothers.
I robot.
No, it's Detroit become human.
I robot was similar though, right?
Detroit, no.
I robot was a single
hive AI controlled all the robots and wanted to kill humans
or something. But then one broke away,
right? That was one that was programmed not to
be on that server because of that problem.
Detroit become human is what I described.
The guy's teaching it how to paint or whatever, and then it's like talking to the machine,
and then he's like, I'm a person.
And then the robots break free.
I hated that game.
I was pissed.
Because it wasn't really a game.
It was one of those, I can't remember what the company's called,
but it was one of those movies as a game thing.
And then I was like, I don't want a movie, I want a game.
So I tried to return it, and they wouldn't let me. They were like, you bought the game. I'm like, yeah, it was a game. But it's not a game movies as a game thing. And then I was like, I don't want a movie, I want a game. So I tried to return it and they wouldn't let me.
They were like, you bought the game.
I'm like, yeah, it was a game.
But it's not a game, it's a movie.
It's a movie where you're like, a cut scene happens,
it goes press square and you go beep.
And then if you don't do it, something else happens.
I don't know, whatever.
It's crazy.
The Atlas is the robot that Boston Dynamics does.
And the thing is, the Atlas has gone through
a bunch of different uh different iterations where
it's gotten significantly smaller but look at this thing i mean the the ability that the like look at
this it's so agile too yeah it's the so the big challenge has always been the power source yeah
uh so as they as they make more efficient uh joints and motors and all these things with higher density batteries,
there was also a breakthrough a couple years ago.
We talked about it on the show about solid state batteries.
That's going to change the game dramatically because these things are very, very power dense.
Look at this creepy nightmare.
I'm very excited.
I'm very excited to be running down a dark alley being chased by these things with a friend,
and then we turn around and fight them off.
Would it have been worse?
See, when they make it do things that you see possessed human beings do in horror movies,
maybe it should have just got up like a normal person, and it would be less creepy.
But the whole head spinning around and stuff.
Bro, come on.
Look at that.
Aren't you excited for that thing
just like chasing, sprinting Tom Cruise style
full speed at you?
And then you're like, it's like Phil, get down.
And you're like, I got this.
We're going to fight wars with these things.
We're just going to send out the robots.
We're going to send out the robots on the Ferdy.
We already do.
They fly.
Right.
Drones.
We know that since World War II, man.
They've had drones for a long time.
People just don't realize.
Quadcopter drones are new, but drones to target for a target practice.
We've had them for a while.
The drones.
So then we're going to send the ground.
The ground offensive is going to be these robots on the front line with specific military
people.
I guess there.
Well, these robo dogs are already for sale.
Yeah.
We talked about getting them because they're like $1,000. Really? I think I got to get one. $1,000? You got to... These robo-dogs are already for sale. We talked about getting them
because they're like a thousand bucks.
Really?
I think I got to get one.
A thousand bucks?
You got to get a robo-dog.
I think I should get like five
and then just one day without telling Phil,
have them chase him.
We'll hear a couple gunshots go on.
I was going to say, listen,
I make no promises that I will not defend myself.
It's kind of ironic to see like robot slaves
brought to you by industrialization on a
scale these crazy robots just do everything for you it's doesn't slave doesn't robot mean slave
or slave in russian which is just the irony of it glooping back around and this thing is just crazy
they just cannot be sentient how do i buy one of these people
no i mean like the robot people.
Not like a real person.
It's called slavery, Tim.
Someone's going to clip that.
Look at this thing.
Yeah, I mean.
Why does it have to act like it's from The Exorcist?
Great hit mobility.
Right?
Like all the movements, it's like uncomfortable.
You could make it look a little less Linda Blair-y, you know?
I don't understand.
Like, I've seen these robot videos for years, but I've not seen them ever used for anything.
It's like, okay, I get it.
You've got a robot that can do backflips.
It's been 10 years.
I think it's because of the power supply, I think.
No, no, no.
Look, this thing's running around and doing flips and whatnot.
If you go to Boston Dynamics' actual website, they're not selling atlases.
I know.
This thing, it's got an internal power source.
Yeah, it's crazy.
What is the problem?
It's got 10 minutes of operating time?
Yeah, that's what I imagined it is.
But it's like...
Oh, bro, I got it.
I solved it already.
What if... Oh, bro, I got it. I solved it already. What if...
Oh.
Go ahead.
Well, let me go watch this video.
I think the problem is the AI.
Oh, no, look at it.
It's doing its thing.
That's a free program.
This is...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, I got an idea.
Why can't I turn this off?
Okay, what if... Okay, what? It's Okay, I got an idea. Why can't I turn this off? Okay, what if...
Okay, what?
It's not letting me turn it off.
What if we make the robots,
and then we have it set up so that inside
they have a small combustion engine,
a small one, that can run a generator,
and then we have the robots drink alcohol
to generate this energy for their fuel cells?
Bender? Yeah, benderender bend pipes and everything beams yeah but you know just drinking gasoline yeah i mean to be
you know honestly what if there was a a fuel source that ran a generator a liquid fuel source
is more dense it probably it's easier to refill but it's probably not more dense i like
you know the problem with teslas and like electric cars in general so uh you know with the baby we
were like what how do we uh how do we get to the the hospital we can't drive the tesla because if
it runs out of power we are not stopping for 20 to 40 minutes to figure out where a charger is and plug it in. So we're definitely not using that car. Right? So the issue is, like, I got a Honda, you pump it full of gas,
it holds the gas, it burns the gas, it moves, and it powers the electronics and everything
in it through the alternator. Is there not a means to have something like that? So while it
may not be as dense, you walk your robot to the gas station or the robot walks itself
and then it picks the thing up and then sticks it in and then puts about a gallon of gas in
and then it uses that gas to generate energy for its cells only when it's powering up so it's a
hybrid right you charge it up but it could then run a generator and you know run off that i i mean i
the principle is that sound no mean, the principle is sound.
No, I think the issue is that even with a gas or diesel generator inside its body, it couldn't generate enough energy fast enough on the size of the generator.
So imagine trying to charge a Tesla off a diesel generator.
Ain't happening.
So energy density is probably a big problem.
These robots probably last 10 minutes.
Yeah.
I think it's a combination of the fact that they let the energy density and also the fact that like robots like that they're all they have a pre-programmed thing they're gonna do it's not it's not like there's an ai that's that's doing this stuff it doesn't
yeah it's not spatially aware in the same way that an ai would be like not that that technology
isn't possible it's just they haven't actually put them together yet. Because, I mean, like I said, me and my girlfriend went on a hike today,
and we were driving back through kind of the back roads.
We came upon, and it was full self-driving,
got to a spot where they were doing tree cutting,
and the car just maneuvered through the whole thing.
They put us over into the other lane for maybe a half mile, whatever,
and the car had no issues, no hiccups.
There was no confused kind of like, yeah, none of that.
It just knew exactly what to do.
It was perfectly as if it was a person driving.
It was really, really impressive.
Oh, look at this.
There it is, the Tesla Optimus.
The Optimus Jobs.
I just looked up Tesla Optimus.
I got a bunch of jobs available.
Deep learning manipulation engineer for Optimist.
What's the pay, baby?
What's the money you're offering?
$140,000 to $360,000 annual salary plus cash and stock awards and benefits.
Nice.
That's not a bad deal.
That sounds like a great job.
Because the best part about it is in 10 years when we're living in a post-apocalyptic wasteland running for our lives from these machines, you're going to be like, I made them.
You made them.
And you can get a side gig at Doge in the meantime you go to doge a little bit you know
better yet you're gonna be sitting around a fire with your scraggly beard and you're gonna be like
so you guys know how when you're running from the kill bots they can actually jump to the left and
run across the wall to get over obstacles i'm the one who programmed that they're like i hate you you did what he did what hey we all made mistakes
it's funny where everybody's a little bit guilty here everybody's made mistakes yeah and the one
guy's like i was an insurance salesman it's like that black mirror episode where the dogs are
chasing everybody i haven't seen that one yo that was a that that that was a good episode
it's basically like amazon automated and took over and kept trying to
deliver general goods to
people, but the robots were killing them
for some reason. I don't know. The whole world
was destroyed because the AI went full
Amazon and just automated
everything for package delivery.
So humans are mostly dead, but it's still
delivering packages for no reason.
That's a crazy episode. It's pretty wild.
Deep learning manipulation engineer. That's a crazy episode. It's pretty wild. Yep. Deep learning. Deep learning, manipulation, and engineer.
That's pretty, that's crazy.
Tesla's on a path to build humanoid robots at a scale to automate repetitive and boring
tasks.
Core to the Optimist, the manipulation stack presents a unique opportunity to work on state
of the art algorithms for object manipulation.
Oh, okay.
They're talking about manipulation as moving objects and things like that.
Yeah.
So I'm buying a bunch of those exosuits.
For now.
I already ordered some exosuits.
Yeah?
Oh, yeah.
Can I try it on?
Sure.
Yeah.
It should be here in a week.
Let's go.
Very excited.
Yeah, it says it increases your leg strength by 40%.
Oh.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm going to break it instantly.
I'm going to go on the scale.
I'm going to go on a mini ramp and be like, let's see how high I can jump. Oh, jeez. I'm going to shatter. We'll see what happens. You'll be able to break it instantly. I'm going to go on the scale. I'm going to mini ramp and be like, let's see how high I can jump.
Oh, jeez.
I'm going to shatter.
We'll see what happens.
You'll be able to do the drop.
No, that's a skill issue.
Yeah.
The death drop.
All right, everybody, smash the like button.
Share the show with everyone you know.
We're going to grab your super chants and rumble rants
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If you haven't already,
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When you go there, you'll be directed to use promo code TIMCAST10, which gets you 10 bucks
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Our uncensored call-in show will be coming up
in 20 minutes. It will be there
at Rumble.com slash TimCastIRL.
Don't miss it. In the meantime, let's grab
your Super Chats. We got Josh
McCluskey.
Thanks to the customer service team, Rumble finally got
logged in last week. Hey, glad to hear it.
So anybody who was a member of TimCast.com before we launched with Rumble,
if you use your email from TimCast on Rumble for just a regular account sign-up,
it's instantly premium free.
For everybody else, they're separate services because TimCast.com is our Discord community.
Over 20,000 people.
I implore you all.
Don't just watch the show and walk away.
Get involved.
Join the community.
Make friends.
And we got a bunch of stuff planned.
I think our first Culture War Live is going to be in two months.
We have a plan for a venue.
We have a plan for a debate.
And you as members will join at the event.
It's a members-only event.
So it's time to be a member.
If you want to get first-come, first-served tickets, they're not going to cost anything.
If you're a member, like, obviously they cost something.
But as members, you're just RSVP.
Then we're going to allow people to submit debate talking points on the subject where
we will choose a handful of them to come up and join the debate with us.
It's going to be fun.
I'm sure it's going to be hilarious.
And some people are going to have the stupidest arguments.
And some people will get discovered for their intellect.
Let's go.
We got Max Riddick.
He says, Tim, I know you don't do the booking, but I wanted to throw this one out there.
Y'all should get Rob Nowhere back on.
Well, OK.
Let's see. We got Bittner, too, and says, how on. Well, okay. Let's see.
We got Bittner2 and says,
Howdy.
Watching since 2020.
Congrats to Tim and Allison.
Please give a shout out to my Kickstarter,
Zone Beta,
a retro stealth game about liberty and reality.
Very cool.
Did you guys hear that Washington Post,
Bezos says he wants the new focus,
the opinion page editorial to be personal freedoms and liberty?
Really good news.
They're so mad.
They're like, no, freedom is racist. That is what they say.
Native Patriot says the remaining IRS offices should be converted to ERS offices.
It would be huge for the American economy. What if Trump came out and just said, we're going to be getting rid of the Internal Revenue Service for the External Revenue Service income tax?
It's gone. But for everybody else in the world, you'll for the External Revenue Service. Income tax, it's gone.
But for everybody else in the world,
you'll pay income tax now to us.
What if he just says, like,
I don't care what country you're from,
you have to give 20% of your income to America?
It might happen.
I don't think they'll like that.
I certainly would not.
ERS, it's going to happen.
Yeah.
Let's grab some more super chats american trucker 84
says please tim uh please tell me you toast the pop tarts in a toaster before you put butter on
of course of course the butter melts so i know silly questions i think um i did the strawberry
pop tart with butter on it i think tomorrow i'll try the brown sugar cinnamon Pop-Tart with butter on it.
It's got all the most
disgusting chemicals
in the world you can think of.
TBHQ, whatever,
Tetrohexyl, whatever in it.
So good, though.
RFK will not like this.
Yeah, my deep fear is that
I'm going to be grabbing
a peck of Pop-Tarts
and he's going to lurk
out of the shadows
and go, what are you doing?
Ah, I'm sorry.
What do we have?
All right.
Game Republic, just to be sure.
It says, my high school friend, Clint Bonnell, has been missing for over a month.
He has a green beret and disappeared from his backyard in Fayetteville, North Carolina, without a trace.
Someone out there knows something.
Whoa.
Wow.
That's crazy, man.
Well, I hope you find him.
And, Clint, if you're out there, your friends are looking for you.
Raymond G. Stanley, he says, F yeah, Chuck is on. Let's go. Thank you find him. And Clint, if you're out there, your friends are looking for you. Raymond G. Stanley, Jesus F. Yeah, Chuck is on. Let's go.
Thank you, Raymond. You know, Chuck is a is an excellent interviewer for Green Room.
He just asks the people to tell their stories and lets them roll with it.
And it works out really well. I just like hearing about other people.
You know, it's always interesting to hear what you're coming from
because everybody's got different perspectives from all over the world
and everything they do.
So I find that always interesting to find out something about other people.
And we hired him because he super chatted.
Yes.
That's right.
Wow.
He was super chatting, and then we were like, we've got to hire somebody.
And we're like, what about that guy who's super chatting?
Okay, we hired him.
All I do is say is, Art sucks, Armenia, and then here I am.
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. too.
I think people need,
and Phil too.
I was,
I was,
but I was first.
I was,
I was before Raymond and Phil super chatted.
Yeah.
I guess the way you get hired at Tim Cassidy,
super chat the show and say like,
here's what I do.
And then we go,
Hey,
look at this guy.
Basically bothered him while he's working.
Yep.
Yeah.
Otherwise I had no idea.
Yeah.
Because people are always like Tim who does,
I don't do booking.
Lisa does booking.
You know, it's like, I don't know. You got to talk to her, but then people on. Yeah, because people are always like, Tim, who does booking? I don't do booking. Lisa does booking.
You know, it's like, I don't know.
You got to talk to her.
But then people on the show, you know, Chuck was super chatting.
Yeah, it's funny.
To be fair, though, Phil had been on the show, I think, a couple times already.
I've been on it three or four times, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
But then he super chatted.
We were already friendly.
Well, it was a bribe, you know.
No, that's not the case. Here's $5.
Give me a job.
Lucky Cherry says the IRS should be abolished.
They engage in extortion, and for some reason, they don't have to tell you how much you owe.
Literally no one else in the country could do that and get away with it.
Yeah, seriously.
Yeah.
Maybe I should run my business like that.
Let's see how that works.
We'll provide a service.
We don't tell you how much it costs, but when you use it, we'll bill you.
Or, no, when you use it, you pay us.
And if you get it wrong, you're in trouble.
If you get it wrong.
If it's not enough, you owe us more, yeah.
If you get it wrong, we'll send you. How much do I owe you?
I don't know.
We'll find out.
How much did I pay you?
You figure it out.
That's a great business model.
Well, I guess the business model is that they
show up to your house with guns if you don't do it yes sounds what is it what do you call that a
extortion racket sounds like the mafia certainly hal gailey says single first 25k is untaxed
10 flat tax married first 50k is untaxed 10 flat tax flat tax untaxed amount goes up 5k for every kid
i think if you have three kids you're tax exempt doesn't poland do that yes it's two two kids
i think hungary and like all green every like two i think more countries are starting to another
somebody your taxes go down i said that the other day i think they exempt if you have two kids
yeah oh phil looks serious oh. A little breaking news from CNN.
It's not the biggest news, but.
Oh, okay.
It's actually, I mean, I don't know.
Supreme Court paused a midnight deadline for the Trump administration to pay $2 billion
in frozen foreign aid.
Yeah.
What?
There was a, there was.
Yeah.
So Trump said no foreign aid.
Then a lower court said you must pay it.
Now the Supreme Court says, no, no, put a hold on that.
Yeah.
Okay.
So we don't have to pay the foreign aid for now yeah and uh we shouldn't
it's wild that a court would be able to tell the president who you know handles that kind of stuff
that he has to pay the the court can tell the president that he has to pay the foreign aid
absolutely that's the checks and balances three co co-equal branches. The issue arises when Trump, who's in control of the DOJ, says, I want the DOJ to go do this.
When Trump says the executive powers is vested in the president as per the Constitution,
therefore all independent federal agencies must be supervised by me. And then all the Democrats
are like, no, he's seizing power. And it's like he had it from the beginning but uh as it pertains to
foreign spending that congress allots yes then the executive branch uh manages the supreme court can
intervene on behalf of litigating parties to determine whether or not trump can who's the uh
who's the the which court was it that actually put the initial uh the initial
finding that said you have they have to pay spend the money
because trump the situation is trump said we're going to pause this fornate because it's related
to the usa id right uh no no i don't think so oh no this is the uh yeah okay all right so the issue
is anything trump does can be challenged and the supreme court can intervene and then say yes or
no and they did and they did in this case for Trump.
And the question is, is the Supreme Court doing the right thing?
And we have a liberal court.
The answer is usually no.
And we have a conservative court.
The answer is usually yes, which sometimes sucks, but sometimes it's the right thing
to do.
So that's what Democrats can't seem to understand is that they think that the conservative
leaning justices are just like twirling their mustache, being like, we will turn the country into the Federalist Papers.
When in actuality, the conservatives are like, I don't know or care about gay marriage.
The Constitution doesn't say you can do this.
So it's not an ideal.
For them, it's ideological.
From conservatives, it's functional.
But if Trump does something and someone sues, the Supreme Court can say Trump can or cannot do that.
And they could put an injunction on his actions.
Usually a good court is going to be like, that is absolutely within the purview of the executive branch.
We have nothing to do with this.
And it has happened, actually.
And that's what the Supreme Court just said, essentially.
Well, no, they just put a pause on it.
They just put a pause on it.
Which is, okay.
You know, they put a pause on the order stopping Trump.
They're saying, Trump, keep doing your thing.
We'll wait.
Wait until what? Until we figure this out. Okay, until they rule out it. Like temporary. I see, I see. They're saying, Trump, keep doing your thing. We'll wait. Wait until what?
We figure this out.
Okay, until they rule out.
It's like temporary.
I see.
I see.
Well, if they do, I don't know.
All right.
Matt Hoso says, I'm at the hospital with my wife.
We're having a baby girl.
This is our third.
We have two boys.
Welcome to the world.
Cora Violet Ormerod.
Congratulations.
Oh, congratulations.
Congrats.
Congrats.
Big D says, tax service is a billion dollar industry.
They tax more.
They get to tax you paying taxes.
They don't want taxes to go away.
All those payrolls, business and even the payment upon doing it.
The fat files did a video on it.
People need to understand that a lot of industries that shouldn't exist, exist for the purpose of economic drivers.
So the reason why they don't want to get of it, as you pointed out.
You shut down the tax
industry. Every tax office closes, everyone loses their job, and it's bad for the economy.
Health industry, same thing. Why won't they overhaul the insurance industry and our healthcare
system? It's what, 20% of our economy? It's not an issue of whether it's right or wrong. It's
how many people are going to lose their jobs overnight and will that destroy the American
economy? They don't care about, nobody cares about the long-term plan. That's the problem. Or they don't know how to
do it at least. The AI will. You know, the AI is going to be scary. I described it a few years ago
like this. There's going to be a gig app called, you know, Worker or something. It's not going to
be in an E-N. It's going to be W-O-R-K-R. And you're going to be like, I need money. You're
going to open up your app and it's going to say job available. And you're going to click it and say 50 bucks.
And you go, all right, what do I do? And then it says, wait on the corner of 47th and Lexington
for this man. And I'll show a picture of a guy. He will hand you this object and there'll be a
strange mechanical object. And then it'll be like step three, carry the object to this address.
And I'll show a picture of a building and you'll go, okay. You'll stand in the corner. A guy will show up and he'll be like, here you building. And you'll go, okay. You'll stand in the corner, a guy will show up, and he'll be like, here you go. And you'll go,
thanks. You'll walk to the place. There'll be another guy. He'll be like, that's for me. And
you'll go, here you go. Thanks. And then the app's going to go, ka-ching, you got money.
And you're going to be like, cool. You're going to have no idea what you're building,
and it won't matter, because it is more efficient for the AI to offer up jobs than it is to find
specialists. So think about it this way. There's a whole bunch
of industries. One guy, he builds a mechanical device that needs to be delivered to his office,
you know, on the other side of town. And so he's like, all right, we're going to get a courier.
So they call a courier service. The courier shows up on the bike. They say, here's the box.
Get on your bike, drive it down here. Seems pretty simple. You know, it's easier than that.
A guy knocks on your door right when you're finished with the object and you hand it to him without
even calling anybody. That guy hands it to another guy who was already going in that direction to
deliver a hot dog, hands it to another guy. The AI can see all of this in real time and offer this
up rapidly. So it's like, you're not even gonna know what your job is. They're gonna be like,
take this shovel and dig a hole right here.
And you go, sure.
And you're going to dig a hole.
And you're like, I'm done.
50 bucks.
And you're going to leave.
Then some other guy's going to walk up with a tree and put it in there.
And he's going to be like, there you go.
The future is coming, my friends.
Crazy.
All right.
Ram tax says, many get more in refunds than they pay in taxes.
No IRS would mean higher tax on lower incomes.
Though lost credits and benefits this
would piss people off not if we fix that and people aren't paying more than they're supposed
to refunds are bad yeah like giving the government free money and then just crossing your fingers
you get it back is the stupidest thing ever all right devin porter says tim i'm having an issue
with my timcast rumble subscription i had a short lapse in my car due to fraud issues i've been a
paying member of timcast in 2022 but i've now lost my rumble premium what can i do to fix this um i gotta
talk to uh right we knew this was an issue because um we had a lot of members uh this is a very
common thing people become members and then if a card expires they hit us up a few weeks later like
oh crap i need to update my card so we need need to fix that because there's a lot of people who should get it, and we want you to get it.
I actually think it would be cool if we did like an amnesty where it's like if you re-sign up today only, then we'll include it.
But that's not up to me.
I've got to talk to Rumble.
Let me follow through.
You should email the members.
What is it?
Members at TimCast.com, right?
Yeah.
With your issue.
And then I'm going to talk to the people over at Rumble and see if we can figure that out.
Obviously, for anybody who was an active member but their card lapsed or expired or something, that shouldn't impact it.
They should be active.
And we just have to sort that one out.
But I think it would be really cool if we did like a sign back up and get amnesty
kind of thing would be great.
We'll see.
Maybe you can't do it.
BP says IRS closed offices in 2020 that never reopened and did away with phone
support options.
Mail only for some stuff.
Your opinion on CFPB rule to cap bank overdraft fees at like $5 not yet in
effect.
I don't know what that is.
I'm okay with them capping the overdraft fees. Those are annoying. Not that in effect. I don't know what that is. I'm okay with them
capping the overdraft fees. Those are annoying.
Not that it happens a lot, but when it does,
you know.
Alright. Michael,
how do you pronounce this?
Cicciarelli? Is that how you pronounce it? I don't know.
He says, shout out to Mike in studio and then did
like 800 of these.
That's because I'm a Paisan.
We got good Paisans in the chat, okay? If you're a Paisan, drop one of these. That's because I'm a paisan. We've got good paisans in the chat.
If you're a paisan, drop
one of these in the chat.
Valkyrie Design says,
Bondi says, Epstein lists tomorrow. The Oscars
are on Sunday. Masterful timing.
Oh.
Actually, I wonder
if that's on purpose. It's Thursday.
Tomorrow's Thursday.
You can't put breaking news out on a Friday. So if you want to get Oh, actually, I wonder if that's on purpose. It's Thursday. Tomorrow's Thursday. Whoops.
You can't put breaking news out on a Friday.
So if you want to get maximum impact for a weekend, Thursday is the PR day.
Tomorrow's show is going to be something.
Oh, boy.
It's going to be good.
Man, I'm so excited.
Who's the biggest actor you think is on there?
What did you say? Who's the biggest actor on the list you think is going to be on there? I don't know. That we don't already know? That we don't already know. Like the biggest actor you think's on there? What'd you say? Who's the biggest actor on the list you think's gonna be on there?
I don't know. That we don't already know?
That we don't already know. Like, the biggest surprise.
Man, I don't know.
I have no idea.
I don't follow these people.
Good.
Everyone's got their guesses, though.
It'll be funny if it's, like, a big list of people that work
in, like, a weird industry no one's ever heard of.
Like, they're professional horseback polo players or something and it's like wait what epstein's clients were
all just these guys it's like yeah tom hanks not there never went everybody was wrong
what do we have here the road rage langdon says can we talk about the absolute win with cash being
both the fbi director and acting director of the ATF?
Does this mean the FBI will dismantle the
ATF and the NFA and taxation
is theft? It is theft.
The speculation
with naming Cash as the ATF
acting director is that they intend
to shutter the ATF. Yes.
Let's go.
And it should. Long overdue.
But I'm not saying, look get look personally the gun laws are
all infringements outside of that the atf should be they should be not not um controversial the
atf is just an additional department for law enforcement that should easily operate under
the fbi there's no reason to have an extra department for this you just it's a part of
the fbi what do i care? Stop wasting money.
Eric F. says, if you can create a virtual heaven, you can create a virtual hell demolition man.
Oh, that's true. Yep. Yeah. But the prop the thing is with liberals, they'd never allow you to make a virtual hell prison.
They'd be like, no, no, you have to give them everything they could ever want and more. And they would.
Question is, if you give some if you give people in a virtual scenario everything they want, would that be like would that be like a form of hell? Would it be like you have nothing to nothing to aspire to, nothing to desire?
Everything you've ever wanted is given to you like there's so much there's so many people that find joy in the
experience the you know the whole you know the journey is the is the the important part getting
there is is the is the fun part like the process is is where people the process of learning is
what's great if everything is delivered all the time whenever whatever you want what would that
do the human psychology so uh real hydro says tim ai already won't make things because of ips it doesn't matter how good they
can make things it will have it will have to be things not owned by others incorrect for as many
of you may be aware i made an image using i believe it was grok of donald trump uh caressing
a pregnant sonic the hedgehog and posted it on X. I blame Seamus. But people make
images of Mario, Mickey and all of these characters using these these eyes. They absolutely do.
And it's considered transformative, fair use. Like if I could right now draw a cartoon of Mario
boxing Pikachu and it's fair use, I'm allowed to do it. And then I could right now draw a cartoon of Mario boxing Pikachu at its fair use.
I'm allowed to do it.
And then I could literally say Mario boxes Pikachu.
It's transformative.
I'm mocking something.
Allowed to do it.
That's why AI does this stuff.
But let's just say companies get wary about it.
There's lawsuits.
I guarantee you Disney is going to team up with whatever AI company and say, we should offer a $14.99 bundle, addition to your bundle, that gives you AI entertainment.
So you'll get the full library of Disney content, which includes Hulu, Marvel, Star Wars, and you'll get AI Movie Generator for an extra $15 a month.
And then you're going to sit there and you're going to be like, I want to see Darth Vader, a movie just about darth vader like just tearing things up like the end of end of rogue one which the whole movie
right yeah and people will do it and then like i said it's going to get likes so they're going to
share with their friends and like hey watch this movie i generate turn it'd be pretty good some of
it will be bad i bet most of it will be pretty okay suno s-u-n-o music ai i've seen that yeah the instrumental music generation
is perfect yes the the lyrics and the vocal melodies are the worst thing i've ever heard
in my life i was talking my brother about it he was like oh this is really good listen
and then it's like if you ask the ai to sing and write lyrics it is kindergarten level rhyming
and it's singing about city streets and
city lights and nothing else. Yeah. Like every song is called neon light city streets or whatever.
So you can write the lyrics yourself. The problem is the melodies always suck.
But if you just make the underlying music, which is very basic, and then you can get someone who
knows how to write melodies, then you're cranking out some bangers. The future is here already for music. Like, I'm sorry, music's done. Phil, I'm sorry. You're out of work. I'm going to go on
sooner right now. And I'm going to say, give, I'm going to say, give me a new All That Remains
album. And it'll do it. And then I'll go through a hundred songs, pick 10 that are good. And then
that's it. But Zachary Levi was talking about this. Hollywood's over.
These people are fighting for an industry that nobody watches the award shows anymore.
Movies have been bombing.
As of lately, Disney lost a billion dollars, and AI is going to come in and replace everybody.
The first movies I think we'll see, before they get to the self-user-generated AI movies,
you are going to have Disney in a studio.
Instead of hiring animators, they're going to have Disney in a studio. Instead of hiring
animators, they're going to get like five guys to sit around putting in prompts to an AI and then
refining it over and over again to make the movies. And they're going to be able to get a Spider-Man
movie done in a month, just like from start to finish. There we go, baby. All right, we'll grab
one more here. Darren Defner says, you guys talk about a genius genius idea. Convicted prisoners can opt to be connected to a normal life neural link, get a degree trained in virtual world, then leave prison as an electrical engineer or even a rocket scientist. that they can't do it. It's that they have violent tendencies or like no one makes a person be a
criminal. And the left seems to think that it's like that crime is driven by people who are just
desperate. Like AOC was like, oh, these looters need bread. And it's like, bro, they're stealing
like Louis Vuitton bags. They there are people in Chicago that commit crimes because it's part
of a culture of going hard. They call it, quote, coming up and things like that.
We'll see.
My friends, smash the like button if you would, please.
Share the show with everyone you know.
We're going to that uncensored call-in show at rumble.com slash Timcast IRL right now for premium users where you as members of the Timcast Discord can call and talk to us.
It's going to be fun.
You can follow me on X and Instagram at TimCast. Again,
smash that like button. Mike, do you want to shout anything out?
Appreciate you having me on, Tim.
Thanks, everybody. Appreciate all
the paisans in the chat. And you guys
can follow me on X at Mike
Crispy on Instagram at Mike
Crispy NJ.
Thanks, everybody.
Well, thanks, Mike, for joining.
That was a lot of fun.
Wasn't expecting that.
Follow The Green Room on Rumble Premium and buy Casper Coffee.
You know, members get 15% off if you're a TimCast member on our website.
And, yeah, thanks.
What's your ex?
Oh, my ex is Frank Trueblue.
Ah.
Essentially, yeah. It's an American dad joke. Ah. Essentially, yeah.
It's an American dad joke.
Ah.
Yeah.
I am Phil that Remains on X.
You can subscribe to my page there.
I'm Phil that Remains Official on Instagram.
The band is All That Remains.
Our new record just dropped January 31st. It's called Anti-Fragile.
You can check it out on YouTube, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Spotify, Pandora, and Deezer.
Don't forget the left lane is for crime.
We'll see you all over at rumble.com slash timcast IRL in about 30 seconds.
Thanks for hanging out.