TRUNEWS with Rick Wiles - Humanity Moves to Mars as the Robots Take Our Jobs
Episode Date: April 16, 2024Today's episode features Robotics, AI Updates, Chat GPT 5, Gemini 1.5 updates, and Elon Musk is moving to Mars.Paul Benson, Erick Rodriguez. Airdate 04/15/2024Join the leading community for Conservati...ve Christians!https://www.FaithandValues.comYou can partner with us by visiting https://www.TruNews.com/donate, calling 1-800-576-2116, or by mail at PO Box 399 Vero Beach, FL 32961.Now is the time to protect your assets with physical gold & silver. Contact Genesis Gold Today! https://www.TruNewsGold.comGet high-quality emergency preparedness food today from American Reserves!https://www.AmericanReserves.comIt’s the Final Day! The day Jesus Christ bursts into our dimension of time, space, and matter. Now available in eBook and audio formats! Order Final Day from Amazon today!https://www.amazon.com/Final-Day-Characteristics-Second-Coming/dp/0578260816/Apple users, you can download the audio version on Apple Books!https://books.apple.com/us/audiobook/final-day-10-characteristics-of-the-second-coming/id1687129858Purchase the 4-part DVD set or start streaming Sacrificing Liberty today.https://www.sacrificingliberty.com/watchThe Fauci Elf is a hilarious gift guaranteed to make your friends laugh! Order yours today!https://tru.news/faucielf
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Go to AmericanReserves.com. rick wiles here with true news i am traveling in the western united states this week attending
some very important meetings i'll be gone week, but I have something really special for
you this week. I am convinced you're going to like it. Here at Faith and Values, we are introducing
a new podcast. The podcast is called Next Tech News, and it will be co-hosted by our own Paul
Benson and Eric Rodriguez. You don't want to miss these podcasts. So make sure you watch every
day this week, and I'll be back next week. Here's Paul and Eric.
Welcome to Next Tech News. I'm your host, Paul Benson. On this podcast, we're going to be
covering the latest in artificial
intelligence, quantum computing, transhumanism, and the fourth industrial revolution. We'll also
be talking about companies like Apple, Tesla, SpaceX, D-Wave, and Sanctuary AI. Joining me today
is Eric Rodriguez. How's it going, Eric? Pretty good. How you doing, Paul? Doing well, doing well.
First off, we want to tell you that you can interact with us directly in the Next Tech News community on faithinvalues.com.
This is an area where you can share articles that you think would be interesting for us to
take a look at. And some of them might even end up being discussed here on the show.
Also, feel free to give us feedback on the show content. We'd love to get your feedback, Love to know what you think about the content. And, uh, so yeah, you can look for
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seven-day free trial if you'd like to look around. There's a lot of other good content on there.
So today's show, we're going to be highlighting robotics in the very beginning. Yesterday,
we ended up not having enough time to cover Sanctuary AI,
so I'm excited to get into that. We're going to go over a bunch of AI news, chat GPT. We could
probably send the whole show on how much chat GPT news there is. It's just overwhelming. We're
getting you caught up with everything going on. We're going to cover Gemini 1.5 update,
Elon Musk updates. He's in a number of things in the news lately.
If we have time, we'll cover moving mankind to Mars and how NVIDIA is building the next generation AI data center.
How's that for a show, Eric?
You ready for this?
It's full.
You got a lot of content here.
Let's go.
All right.
So we're starting this off with robotics.
When we started the pilot program for Next Tech News,
this is one of the topics that I've always kind of held on to.
I took some notes on this years ago when I first started researching quantum computing and D-Wave.
It sounds super nerdy and interesting.
But D-Wave essentially was the first quantum computing company, and they put their quantum computers in places like CERN, Google.
So the founder, Geordie Rose, started a company along with Suzanne Gildert called Sanctuary AI.
So Sanctuary AI, when I first found this website, it was this ominous staircase leading into a cement basement.
And it just left me with questions. And I knew what they were
capable of. And they were talking about it being a safe place for them to create AGI or artificial
general intelligence. They have radically updated this website and have been very active on their own podcast
and we wanted to introduce phoenix so this is this is their general purpose robot
and it features um the most interesting part of this for me is this Carbon TM, the human-like general intelligence that they have.
So this is essentially a robot that can mimic subsystems found in the human brain, such as memory, sight, sound, and touch.
Phoenix General Purpose robots, they have opportunities to take on about just any human
task so this is one of the first robots i've seen that has the uh they've tackled a number of the
main main problems like hand and dexterity the ability to pick things up and move them around. Um, the most interesting thing in my research with, with Phoenix is
actually how they're training the robot. Uh, so Eric, this is, this is, this is the way they do
it. They have this robot essentially in a manufacturing facility. And, um and there's a human that is using a computer to control the robot.
They're using virtual reality and they're doing tasks like, let's say, putting a product in a box
and then getting it ready for shipping and then moving on. So they'll do this
process and enable Phoenix and this carbon human-like general intelligence to be learning
what he's doing. So as they're going about it, then they let the robot take over and then the
robot will go through a round of the task and then the human will do it and the robot will learn from its mistakes.
So it's like teaching a child how to do basic tasks.
And every day these general purpose robots are getting smarter and smarter. Um, the, this company is positioned to, um, really have these, these robotics, uh,
in manufacturing facilities, shipment facilities. You know, I, I imagine places like Amazon are
going to have these dudes walking around. Um, so what do you, what do you think about this, Eric? I mean, we've seen, uh, you know,
the Boston robotics videos over the years of them doing flips and all this stuff. Um, you know,
I don't have a really cool, fancy video to show you of Phoenix today, but, um, I I'm interested
to see this in life in real life. I wonder if they'll ever have any of these at the conferences
we go to, uh, that would be slick. Yeah, that slick yeah that would be pretty cool but um what do you think about phoenix so far well
something when you first dropped this on you know today's for today's show when i was reading
through it you know my initial thought was like oh they're gonna be making these robots to like
basically just do kind of um like manufacturer type task um back in a previous
life of mine you know back in the day i used to work at caterpillar and we had robotic arms doing
welding and doing kind of machinery type work um for many reasons one you know robots don't need
a break they can just keep on welding keep oning, and they don't need to take a bathroom
break or a smoke break. There's no time off requests needed. It's just go, go, go, go, go.
And so when I first read this website, that's what my mind kind of shifted to was, okay,
I could see where these could be used for these just random tasks that could be done. But as you read further down, my mind then jumped over to the movie I, Robot,
where you have this humanoid living in your house
because there's one part here, it says here,
a tool for the expansion of human endeavors.
And underneath it, it says supervised by people
while using the robot's built-in carbon AI control system to observe, assess, and act on tasks.
So you could do some various things, but the way I read this, Paul, I could technically, I could have a robot.
I could own a Phoenix-like robot, and its task could be every week or whenever I choose to do it, I can say, hey, go outside and mow my yard.
And I'm just controlling it to go outside and mow my yard or cut forward to where they're doing these tasks that
you and i can do and it's learning from you is such an advancement that is i don't know once
again the idea around it's pretty cool uh sounding but all of a sudden you wake up you go outside
now you see a bunch of robots walking around like what what's that going to be like you know i know i i
i can't even imagine it and if we get the time today i uh on on yesterday's show uh we talked
about kind of this utope this video this animated film um i think we both have seen it but it's
talking about the future of what this would look like with drones and robots flying around and kind
of like a controlled neighborhood. If we get a chance to, I want to play a couple of minutes
from it. It's a long video. It's like 25 minutes long, but another thing just, there's so much
more I could go into sanctuary AI and I think I'll save it for like a deep dive episode. I'll kind of refresh on these founders.
They're very interesting people.
There's so much in there with quantum computing,
them searching for the artificial general intelligence,
which is essentially when AI is going to be more human-like or surpass that.
But the one other, I'll switch gears.
I'll leave that there for Sanctuary AI, but keep an eye on this company.
Definitely recommend checking out their website if this interests you.
They are on the bleeding edge of this technology.
Paul, real quick, would you buy a Phoenix robot?
I don't know, man. Uh, if, well, if I was, um, if I was head of a manufacturing facility,
you know, and, uh, this would be something I'd be looking at for sheer financial gain.
Or if we had a lot of employees working, just the idea of mixing robots in with real workers I think makes sense.
But I don't know, man.
The world's moving so fast.
You don't see yourself having a robot walking around your house with you?
No, I've already asked my wife about that.
She said, heck no.
Oh, okay.
All right.
I was like, okay.
I asked, but she's like, no.
So, all right, check this out.
This is one I just threw in.
I saw this on The Verge, and I couldn't believe, you know, that this is, this is already happening.
They have these gas stations where you can go, um, and order food and the robot will just make
some chicken wings like right, right there. And it's, um, the whole process is automated from
like dispensing the chicken from a freezer to tossing it around and putting it in the box
and then it's delivered to you um so this is like a robot fry cook powered gas station
um yeah you can even probably hit play on that um so these robots uh i don't think it's a drive-through gas station, but you can go there, you can watch the robots make the food and serve you.
And I think this article even talks about the element that these robots don't get tired, they don't need to take breaks, they never get sick. So, you know, you have workers that are essentially
probably maintaining and restocking. I mean, restocking could even be one day fully automated.
Yeah.
But this is interesting. And I mean, the reason why I wanted to bring this up is that
somehow this is right up the road, um, in Melbourne, Florida of all places, I don't even know,
um, how that came about, but, um, maybe, uh, we'll do a next tech news special and I'll,
yeah, I'll go up there and order some robot wings and do a food review.
So, yeah, this is just crazy.
This is an example of how robots are slowly taking over our jobs and leaving us to not have to work do you remember remember here a few years ago you
know the robot flippy right you know the burger flipping tool you know robot that was kind of you
know it was all over the tech websites for for a while then it kind of died down and i just looked
here real quick while you're talking about this but they're looking at actually mass expansion
they're going to be putting the flippy robot in more restaurants across the U S this year. So apparently they worked out the
kinks and the bugs and stuff on, on this robot to where it's, it's more likely just as efficient or
even more efficient than, than humans at their job. And they're looking at expanding it. So you're not going to be,
don't be shocked to see more robots popping up in fast food restaurants or gas stations and things
like that here the next year or two. Yeah. Only thing I can hope for looking at the positive
side, maybe they'll start using better ingredients if they don't have to pay for their workers.
So that's a good, that's a good thought. Yeah. Never know. So moving on from robotics, we're going to switch gears into our next topic covering AI news. There's a lot here. One of the articles that stood out to me, I was doing my research today, students are likely writing millions of papers with AI. So this article out of Wired features a service called
Turn It In, which is, it's a like software as a service that checks papers for plagiarism.
And they have a new detection tool that has found millions of papers that may have a significant amount of AI-generated content.
So it goes on to talk about students that have submitted more than 22 million papers.
They may have used generative AI in the past year.
Apparently, Turnitin says that its detector has a false positive rate of less than 1%.
And there are just a ton of students that are turning to AI to write their papers.
This is a real problem.
And this is like a sign of the times and these growing pains where these new things come out and they seem really cool and like, oh my gosh, this is so easy. And then it's good or bad or both.
It's this whole concept that I don't have to use my creative thought process to achieve a task.
I can just let AI do it. The fact that that thought is even in there, that's the first thought that creative people have to struggle against is, do I sit down and actually come up with the idea myself, like an original thought, original name for something? Do I actually do the work and create something original?
Or why wouldn't I throw something in chat GPT and at least get a start to something, right?
Like we do this all the time.
And right now it's very stale.
It's incredibly stale.
It's going to get better and smarter, but there's, you can tell when someone
has used chat GPT and responses. I mean, we laugh about this. Sometimes we get responses here at the
office from, from people and we're like, okay, thanks chat GPT. Like, you know, everything's
like listed in like bullet form. But then, you know know you could have an intelligent person that's just using
really amazing language and they'll they'll sound like they're using chat gpt so it's like almost
like if you sound intelligent you sound like you're just using some plagiarized or ai written content so what one skill that is starting to rise within this whole uh ai
you know world is the um the ability to learn how to write prompts better you're seeing a rise of
prompt engineering classes and courses and uh you know job posts and things like that, because the better you can work with the AI,
the more human-like it begins to sound.
But it takes practice.
It takes time.
And so it's interesting.
I'd be curious to see,
are these people writing these papers just writing,
hey, write paper on X, Y, and Z,
and then hit enter, and then they just copy and paste it and whatever?
Or are they actually trying to go through the process of, hey, write in this tone, write in this dynamic, and things like that?
You know, obviously, I'm not saying, hey, you should do this instead.
But, you know, if you are using ChatGPT or these other AIs, I mean, you're able to work with them in a way that becomes more your voice as you get better and better with it. But one thing I want to mention
real quick too, is that I think it was in this article that you pulled up where there was
concern from the teachers in schools about using AI, but yet they themselves are turning to AI to come up with more complex assignments
in order to force their students to use their brain to do the assignment.
So, I mean, we're in this world where, yeah, I mean, at any given point,
you can easily just turn to AI and now you have to open up a book.
But then, you know, on the flip side, you have the very same people who are kind of questioning it, using it as well.
So it is crazy to think that, you know, a year ago, we weren't really in this space.
We were thinking, oh, yeah, we need to beware.
But now we're here and now we're finding ourselves.
Do we use it? Do we not use it? I mean, one of their party articles said, too, that the school didn't even lock down on their Internet access to AI tools.
So it's readily available for their students to use in real time while they're in class.
So it's going to be interesting to see how schools, universities and things like that, are they going to adopt it? Or are we going to start
seeing more tools like this, turn it in coming out to help with plagiarism that, you know,
students could still utilize AI, but make it better or sound more human like.
Right. And I mean, even with colleges, like all the competition, you know, original thought is still going to be paramount.
But using tools like Grammarly to clean things up or ChatGPT to come up with a start to a concept or how to word a specific paragraph and then you rewrite it.
Like there's ways you can use AI tools and you're still building something amazing.
Right.
Hopefully, and I imagine it's going to depend on the professor and what they're doing.
I'm sure there will be assignments that will involve using chat GPT and AI.
And part of the directive is make it sound like it's in your own voice. And if you haven't convinced the professor of that, then, you know,
so just some thoughts around that, um, continuing with, with chat GPT news. So,
um, I want to cover a couple of things here.
Chat GPT-5.
So right now they recently rolled out GPT-4,
and they're always very secretive of the next release. And I went on Reddit today, on the Singularity Reddit,
trying to find any new information on this GPT-5. And the only thing I could find
was a Korean publication. And apparently in Korea, Sam Altman did an interview,
and this is out of Seoul Economic Daily. So kind of a cool find here. Uh, thanks to Reddit. Um,
so he was asked about GPT five performance and goes on to talk about how, um, every time they,
they develop a new model, uh, it is emphasized that they need new thinking
in various areas of daily life, as well as businesses and the inevitable replaced and disappear.
So this was interesting to me because they go into talking about artificial general intelligence.
And this is translated from that publication.
So but he says he made it clear that his and OpenAI's goal is to build artificial general intelligence
and that if a large amount of computational resources are invested to accelerate the arrival of AGI,
many problems in reality, such as the power shortage required for AI, can be easily solved. The other quote in here that stands out
further down the page, many startups assume that the development of GPT-5 will be slow because
they're happier with only a small development, since there are many business opportunities
rather than a major development. But I think it's a big mistake when this happens, as often happens, they will be steamrolled by the next generation model.
There are some kind of unconfirmed rumblings. They're definitely not there yet. I've seen that said like six to seven months away, possibly a year from really seeing AGI happen.
But I think I just have a hunch that GPT-5 will,
I mean, they just announced Sora
and I feel like GPT-5 is going to have some other wow factor.
I think they'll do things like doubling or tripling the amount of
computational power that it will have, plus adding the ability to upload documents at a very high data capacity. So what that would mean is something like uploading a movie script or
uploading a long legal paper, hundreds of pages of data, a ton of data you can give AI and have it
be able to look at the entire picture and give summarizations, extract data.
This has always been something, I mean, this is stuff you can do now, but
there's a certain cap on these types of data sets. So every time they update this,
it enhances or creates other business opportunities, other solutions that typically would require someone to sit there for days and days and days and comb through this and be an expert on it.
Now, these certain tasks are just going to be at the operator's fingertips.
So not a huge update with gpt5 they they keep it all very
close to the chest but um i wanted to mention it um i'm using a site called life architect where
it's tracking all the updates with gpt5 if we find out more we'll definitely bring it to you guys
that's this is one of the values of Next Tech News.
This is why we're doing this.
And I know some of this might seem mundane or even boring if you're not like geeky tech nerd type.
But there's little nuggets that we find in this.
And this gives you a heads up to not only what's coming in the few years ahead, but what the future is going to look like, right?
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back to the show. Last thing I want to cover here on generative AI is Google's Gemini can now hear. So this is a big step. Um, I've been kind of
waiting for this as the next, uh, step in this whole GPT world. Uh, there's a number of kind
of milestones they have to hit as they're getting closer to AGI. Right now we're using a text prompt.
And before we had Siri and we kind of thought we had this cool AI stuff.
Well, when it becomes the ability where I can have a conversation and I don't even have to type, I know that seems like a very simple step.
But when AI can talk back and I can talk to AI, that changes the game.
You're now having a conversation.
You're now able to easily start a human-like conversation with AI and interject and say, no, no, no, that's not what I wanted.
Can you please go find this? I mean, these are the types of conversations we're having now at GPT, but Google's Gemini can now hear. So this model can now listen
to uploaded audio files and churn out information. And you don't have to upload a written transcript.
So this is, again, baby steps toward that agi front all right
yes sir real quick before we move on i just want to put this in perspective to those who are
listening or watching this um you know paul's talking about here with the google gemini where
you know the whole idea of uh gemini 1.5 Pro says gives the model ears
so they're able to listen to things and translate things via audio.
Just think back.
I'm looking at right now, November 30th, 2022.
That's when ChatGPT launched.
So we're not even a full two years into this whole AI thing. And as you're watching
yesterday's show, you know, text to prompt video creation and how it looks so real to the point
where a major film producer is putting their large expansion on hold out of concerns because of AI
and Sora. Now we have this ability to be able to upload audio files
and be able to interpret what those files say.
2022 is when this all started,
and we're not even two years into this point yet,
and we're already talking about GPT-5 and even into 6.
Yeah, it's moving so fast fast it's moving so fast and I see now why
that he had all the big wicks come out here you know six to nine months ago calling for regulation
and hey we need to slow this down a little bit but I don't think I can't see it slowing down it based
off of the the amount of probably production that ai is giving businesses to generate new
revenue or even for people who are making new brand new revenue that have never thought they
could before with ai so i i see agi coming a whole lot sooner than what we probably think they
probably already know what day is going to come. They already have a deadline in mind. They're just kind of keeping it, you know, under the cover for right now. I know it. And I think,
I think we should skip to number six, cause this is a perfect transition. Um, you know,
Elon Musk has been predicting that AI will likely be smarter than all humans combined by 2029.
So we're still talking about AI, but we're going to get into the, this is the Elon segment.
He gets his own segment.
He's got enough news.
Crazy guy, but got to give him some credit. it. So this article from Fox Business, quoting Elon Musk on his Platform X, AI will probably
be smarter than any single human by next year, 2025. And by 2029, AI will probably be smarter
than all humans combined. So that is a change in the calendar and some of the predictions that we've
referenced before. And this article references
those predictions as well from Ray, none other than Rayzweil said that they would match any person by 2029
so he was anticipating back then uh around 2000 um that in 30 years,
that's a pretty close prediction
that AI would be able to match a single person.
So we're about four or five years early
if Elon Musk's predictions are true. And, you know, these guys are at the forefront of this technology.
They're in this technology, they're, they're creating it and they're having these types of
conversations with the engineers. Um, it's in within their own interest to kind of pump everyone up and put out all the next buzzwords.
But everyone in this game is saying that the exponential rate
in which AI is accelerating is far beyond what they had anticipated.
And it's just one of those things where it's getting faster
and faster and and this is this is the kind of technology that you want them to slow down on
you want them to think things through uh you don't want them to be reckless because that's when
mistakes are made and uh artificial intelligence is not an area where you want to
make mistakes you as this is being built i mean there's like that's what concerns me about this
is that there's so many different companies and different ceos with agendas and it's just this like controlled chaos as this as AI is being birthed into our universe.
This is it's it's scary.
And I still can't figure Elon Musk out because he talks about this and how scary it is, and yet he is building it, and he's a major proponent of it.
This is big stuff.
Next in the list here with Elon Musk, going to number five. So he's also been in the news, uh, for, uh, and I had to re I had to
reread this article title. So Elon Musk is platforming far right activists in Brazil,
defying court order. And this is the first time I'd actually seen platforming used as a verb.
And I thought it was a typo.
I was like, did they forget to put deplatforming in there?
Because I had just assumed before I knew about the story that all we see about is people being deplatformed.
But no, the whole story here is that he's re-platformed people that were
previously denied so um yeah this is this is interesting so a brazilian court has announced
that it will be opening an investigation into ex-owner elon mus Musk for obstruction of justice after Musk reactivated far right accounts
that the Brazilian government had flagged for removal. So governments have the ability to flag
users for removal. And Elon Musk just said he's not going to play that game.
I believe either in this article or in another one, they're, they're getting fined.
Was it like $19,740, like 20 grand a day for every day that these, uh, accounts are still online.
Um, it's just crazy. I mean, I still can't believe what has occurred ever since the first Trump campaign and what has happened on social media and people getting deplatformed. Um, you know, we're seeing this in the news is, um, just a reminder of the year that we're in
right now and wondering what this year is going to look like with all the various tech platforms
and, um, who's going to start getting de-platformed and, um, just amazing that they go right to the owners of these tech companies and demand that users not have free speech.
Now, I don't know anything about these accounts.
They could be promoting violence.
And, of course, that's bad.
I don't know enough about it.
But definitely interesting to see that in the news
get any thoughts on that eric no i mean when you you said something before and i was like oh that
sounds familiar because you know the government had its hand in selecting people to be removed
from a social media platform that's exactly what took place it here in the United States that we you know we learned a lot from the um the famous Twitter files that Elon started
trickling out uh once he gained ownership and we learned a lot about you know three-letter agencies
working with Twitter to manipulate and or remove or whatever you want to call it different people on on on that platform
um but since Elon's in control and you know he's the owner of it we're seeing this this surge of
people coming back to Twitter or X sorry and you know you're now you got these people calling for
different people to be censored and so far it seems like elon's kind of held his ground on the whole idea of free speech on the platform so yeah it's going
to be interesting to see um you know is brazil going to continue allowing x to operate in its
country or is it going to be a thing of like a geofence going to be implemented where everybody around Brazil has access to X, but not Brazil because of these people being replatformed?
Or I don't know. It's it's interesting to see, you know, we've got governments involved with platforms such as Twitter and just, you know, allowing people to, they're saying words. Yeah, I agree. If they are saying words that are very, they're violent,
obviously that's a whole different discussion.
But just because they don't agree with you on something
doesn't mean they have to be, hit the nuke button on them.
Well, yeah, one of the examples in this article
is talking about a right-wing YouTuber, Bruno Ayub known
as Monarch, who has over 1 million followers on X and, uh, has some definitely edgy, um,
ideologies. So, but a lot of followers. So, um, it's interesting. Um, again, we've been on the other side of being deplatformed.
And I'm like, I wish there was justice in the world.
And it's cool that Elon's like, no, you can't tell me what to do.
And I was reading this article wondering if he'd be like, well, fine, I'll just turn off Brazil.
What is he going to do?
Because he can literally do whatever he wants.
And I kind of like that he's just kind of standing there like, okay, you're going to
find me 20 grand a day.
I'm sure Brazil is bringing in more than 20 grand a day.
So those fines are probably not much right drop in the bucket
um but all right moving on with elon news one more topic uh we got about 15 minutes left
we're going to mars baby all right so um elon musk uh, this article is, if you're interested in going to Mars, I order for them to make the steps that they need to get closer to Mars.
So they are building larger and larger starships and testing them. Um, if anyone watching or listening to this program,
it hasn't seen it yet. Um, we're going to show you, um, I want to, let's skip down to number 10.
I want to watch the third flight test of starship. I'm sorry. This is the coolest thing
I've ever seen. Like this is you're geeking out. I'm geeking out.
This is ginormous, this rocket.
I wish I could have.
This would have been like
watching a skyscraper
just lift off from the ground.
Let's take a look.
This is the final go-no-go poll
for Flight 3 of Starship.
Levi 2? Go. Stage 1? Go. Stage 2? Go. This is the final go, no go poll for flight three of Starship. Levi, two.
Go.
Stage one.
Go.
Stage two.
Go.
Flight directors, go for launch.
We have liftoff. all right so as this thing is taking off um i don't know can Can you imagine? This looks so produced. It doesn't even look real. Yeah.
Like the,
you see the ripples of, of,
of,
um,
it's almost breaking like the fabric of space time continuum when this stuff is,
there's just so much energy pushing this thing up into the air.
Um,
that shot doesn't even look real.
Like it's Sora.
It's Sora.
It's Sora.
The thing is, what's so crazy about this is that there
there there are people that see this and think it's just hollywood right right they don't live
anywhere near texas um they live somewhere where they haven't seen any rockets go up in the air and it does look um it doesn't look real and uh i remember when they
launched the tesla roadster into space i will admit when i saw that video i was like this is
there's no way this is real like the i just about half the people probably watching that thought it
was just a stunt yeah it just was so crazy seeing that red car flying around in space.
So the last part of this video is when the reentry of Starship occurs. moderator was freaking out because they didn't expect the camera to last that long to actually
see starship, um, reentering the atmosphere. So, um, but these, these starships are just
massive and they're only going to get bigger and bigger. Um, I, you know, we are lucky enough to live in uh florida eric you've seen the rocket launches here
oh yeah um i've got to say like i remember i watched this one out with my kids one night
and it was one of the first re-entry missions where i mean mean, this just, it didn't, I'm watching with my own eyes and it was
just almost unbelievable watching this, this, the two components detach. And then, um, the,
the rocket booster or whatever it was, start to make little adjustments and you can see it like,
you can see it up in the air making um
these little um i don't know what they're called uh but you know making these adjustments so that
it's positioned right to enter back into the atmosphere and it was making these lot like big
plumes of of uh mist uh up in space and i and the lighting was just so perfect that you could see this happening. And it just, you know, it's just real.
And I remember, again, back to all the when the flat earthers were.
Remember when flat earth was like really buzzing and it was all over the Internet.
And there I remember reading comments.
They were literally everywhere of people saying, like imagine, imagine thinking that this rocket's
actually going out into space or something like people, people will watch these videos.
And I mean, I can't blame someone for, for seeing something that unbelievable and just
being convinced that none of this is true. Um, but, uh, it's happening. And so they're going to be building a new flight deck right now for the larger versions of Starship to actually launch from Florida.
So I cannot wait to go up there.
I've never actually been close to a rocket launch. I mean, here when they launch, if you're up north, like kind of near Melbourne, you can feel your house like will shake and tremble in the middle of the night for about five minutes.
It's just amazing.
But I've yet to go actually see something like this with my own eyes.
And I want to get up there close.
And whenever they do the Starship, maybe that's another special we'll do with Next Tech News.
There you go.
Next Tech News on the road.
Yeah, we'll bring a camera up there and get some good footage.
We've got about nine minutes left.
If you want to bring up number nine.
So I'll try to just summarize this whole Mars transport approach
and what they're trying to do. So why are they trying
to build larger and larger starships that can leave the atmosphere and come back in? That's so,
um, the larger that the transports are, um, the less stops they have to make, um,
in order to go to Mars and come back. So, um, there are a number of refueling stations. I believe there's
six on the way to Mars. And apparently, again, back to this ARS Technica article,
it talks about how when Elon Musk first was talking about this going to Mars, like how crazy everyone thought he was and how impossible this seems.
You know,
in that theology that human life will continue, um, that there was some kind of catastrophe.
Um, now that doesn't really fit into, uh, necessarily like a Christian narrative.
It's not like an endeavor that I think I would want to give my life towards because it,
um, you know, but, um, it is interesting. The man is sending these huge rockets up into space and
we're watching them happen. Um, and it's, it's amazing every time, uh, truly incredible. So I am going to continue to update, uh, you guys on Starship
news and, um, and Elon Musk as well. It's just an interesting guy. Got to keep up with them.
All right. I think we have enough time. Um, let's jump into this animated short film.
I want to play the first minute of this and then skip to the end around 22 minutes, 42 seconds.
Let's check this out.
This is Beyond the Reset, just a preview of the short film. To be continued... I don't know. so as as you might have guessed this is um you can keep this rolling um you might have guessed that this is the this is a quarantine facility So this was released shortly after COVID happened.
And this whole concept of quarantining people and the depression and unhappiness,
this is like quarantine reimagined.
So you got a QR code on top of the door there.
There's a lot of little details in this i
also noticed the 5g cell towers around everywhere um and it just goes into this guy's like miserable
existence for about 23 minutes and it it's it's an interesting story um i really appreciated it
um there's a there's a lot of like technology current technology and future
technology so you can go ahead and skip ahead to the end
here
he
at some point snaps and
loses it and
takes out vengeance
on the
on the drone
surveillance drone
and on the drone surveillance drone.
And so the ending of this short film is interesting to me.
And this is,
it definitely left an impact,
right? So as much as we like the idea of a utopia where everything is just kind of provided for us.
Whenever.
Yeah.
Non-compliant resident alert.
Right.
So.
This is.
I mean, I just think about this Chinese control.
And. My God, I hope this is not our future.
This is kind of like what the future will probably look like in China.
Well, we saw different videos coming out, whether they're propaganda or not.
You know, people, you know, robotic dogs walking down the street doing things and drones
doing different things and you know they're using security and technology to do things that we could
that we could only see in you know short videos like this so the idea is there some countries are
already using it or testing it out in different occasions. So, you know, even here in the States, we're already seeing drone services popping up where, you know, you can just get to have a drone deliver you your Amazon package.
So, you know, it's already you're already laying the foundation of getting used to the idea of seeing drones fly to you.
You know, I can order something today, have it within the next 30 minutes.
And hey, that sounds great. But what happens when you start seeing more and more drones
involved doing different things? Or what happens when you, you know, maybe you get a government
involved that is crossing the line into your, you know, your privacy or your own rights?
How are they going to use that technology against you? And, you know, obviously things, you know your privacy or your own rights how are they going to use that technology against
you and you know obviously things you know go sour pretty quickly absolutely we're we're giving
up our privacy and our rights slowly it's like you know the whole frog being boiled approach and
you know i'm sure it's going to solve some problems um i've seen these drones in in
various tech conferences where you know there's surveillance drones that are just going to be
patrolling recording patrolling um you know certainly that will hopefully lead to reduction of
gang-related violence um but it is a strange utopian future that we're yeah that we're
rubbing up against and yeah yeah, beyond the reset,
if you want to look up that video
and watch the whole thing, feel free.
It kind of tells an interesting story.
Again, it was kind of around the time of COVID,
but definitely left an impact on me.
Anytime we talk about, you know,
I hear Elon Musk or some of these other guys
talking about, you know, the future
and all of
the, uh, abundance, right. I just, there is that other side of it where I'm just thinking this
doesn't paint a happy picture for everyone. Um, you know, I know that video isn't real, but you
know, it's, you don't see kids playing outside. You know, I, uh. I gravitate more to working, blue-collar, farmer type, having some property and having a family there and just having space away from everything.
It's kind of refreshing.
Anyway, we're going to end it here.
Be sure to check out Faith and Values.
There are a number of different spaces within Faith and Values, a ton of content on their
exclusive content that's only available on Faith and Values. Of course, Next Tech News is there.
It's one of the new spaces. You can interact with us. If you find any interesting articles,
feel free to post them. Send them there.
Eric, thank you so much for joining me again today.
I've had so much fun doing these shows.
We'll see you back again tomorrow.
We've got one more show to do.
Yes, sir.
All right, man. Have a good night.
Appreciate you guys. Thank you so much.
God bless you. We'll see you soon. www.wcr.org You're listening to WWCR International Shortwave Radio. You can find True News on frequency 12.160 from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern
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