2:45:45

INSOMNIA STREAM: 1999 EDITION.mp3

03/12/2021
Devon
00:01:25 All right, that song is painfully long.
00:01:11 And I.
00:01:13 So what happens when you don't listen to the song before?
00:01:16 You load it up.
00:01:22 I never actually knew that the.
00:01:25 The man who sold the world was some 70s song that a chick sing.
00:01:30 But apparently it was.
00:01:32 So I guess not everything from the 70s is.
00:01:35 Total garbage but.
00:01:38 Microphones working.
00:01:39 I didn't do anything I well, I rebooted.
00:01:41 I guess that that did something.
00:01:44 I'll probably have to adjust my levels.
Speaker 2
00:01:46 A little quiet.
00:01:46 Let me see here.
00:01:47 Boom, boom, boom.
Devon
00:01:48 Hello test 121212 test.
00:01:51 Sibilance, sibilance, sibilance.
00:01:54 Whatever this will work OK.
00:01:59 Hope you're having a good Tuesday or Wednesday depending on where you are.
00:02:01 On the International date line.
00:02:05 I have.
00:02:08 Managed to get through all the emails.
00:02:12 All the emails released on the evil Hillary emails.
00:02:15 I've got through.
00:02:16 OK, get out of here.
00:02:19 You cannot be in front of the microphone right now.
00:02:22 Have not have not gone after the the rope movie emails yet because, well, I'm I I just haven't even checked that e-mail address yet and there were so many on the evil Hillary I barely got through it all today.
00:02:39 So uh, now I have uh, I've managed to get through all that and responded to I I pretty sure I responded to everybody if I didn't.
00:02:48 Respond to you.
00:02:51 Send me another e-mail, but I'm pretty sure I got to everybody.
00:02:56 Jesus the cat. Just.
00:02:58 Really wants to be all up in my business.
00:03:03 OK, hopefully hopefully that.
00:03:05 Doesn't become a new habit.
00:03:12 Don't really have.
Speaker 2
00:03:12 A plan because.
00:03:15 Didn't get a.
Devon
00:03:15 Lot of sleep I I just answered emails for.
00:03:18 Like a day.
00:03:20 And had you know, we usually have really strong winds in the desert.
00:03:26 That's not like an unusual thing, no matter where you are, if there's a desert.
00:03:31 In fact, I think I've told this story before.
00:03:33 When I first moved to the desert.
00:03:35 From California as a kid.
00:03:38 We had the drive in these airport shuttles to our house, was wasn't finished.
00:03:45 Yeah. So my dad's company was putting us up in a well. It's kind of like a hotel, slash condos.
00:03:54 But it was like a like a residence inn.
00:03:56 I think it was.
00:03:58 And so I had no idea what I was getting myself into.
00:04:02 I'd never even been to a desert, really.
00:04:03 I mean, we'd, we'd driven across Nevada.
00:04:06 A few times and I'd seen some desert in Utah and it just looked like a wasteland.
00:04:13 And I I was like, why are we moving to a wasteland?
00:04:17 And uh, I still remember just by luck.
00:04:21 We happened to land during a sandstorm.
00:04:26 And my first impression of my new home was my face.
00:04:31 Pressed up against the glass of the airplane or the airport shuttle.
00:04:38 And watching as tumbleweeds.
00:04:43 Lots of tumbleweeds, like a cartoon level of tumbleweeds.
00:04:47 Blasted across the freeway and thinking, what is this?
00:04:51 What? What? What is this?
00:04:53 So it's not an unusual thing.
00:04:56 But my God, this year has just been.
00:04:59 It's been a little out of hand.
00:05:01 It's been a little bit out of hand and so my fence parts of my fence got blown over.
00:05:06 Today, my greenhouse is just getting shredded.
00:05:10 It hasn't like, I keep thinking it's going to lift off like a like a balloon, you know, cause it's it's not exactly the sturdy.
00:05:17 I mean it's it's made of plastic.
00:05:19 It's basically a balloon.
00:05:20 And uh, I guess thankfully it's getting shredded instead, so I don't have to go chase it through the desert.
00:05:28 But I don't think it's going to survive much longer.
00:05:31 So hey, get out.
Speaker 2
00:05:32 Of here, what do you what is your deal today?
00:05:35 Go away.
00:05:36 No, you can't be there.
00:05:37 You're gonna knock the stream offline.
Devon
00:05:39 Is what you're going to do.
00:05:42 What is your?
00:05:43 You're so clingy today?
00:05:46 Maybe the wind has frightened classified cat.
00:05:50 All right.
00:05:52 Anyway, we do have a video to take a look at that.
00:05:55 I was talking about last stream.
00:05:59 That was a view of really.
00:06:03 All right, this is.
00:06:04 I'm starting to wish I.
00:06:05 Had a tranquilizer dart at.
Speaker 2
00:06:06 This point, no, you can't.
00:06:08 You don't even fit there.
00:06:09 Stop going there.
00:06:11 Go away.
00:06:12 Go away.
00:06:15 All right.
Devon
00:06:16 Well, if if audio.
00:06:18 Stops working now it's going to because classified cat wants to.
Speaker 2
00:06:22 Rummage around while sneezing.
00:06:25 In my cables.
00:06:27 All right.
00:06:27 This is great anyway.
Devon
00:06:30 I have to a good start.
00:06:31 Thanks a.
00:06:31 Lot classified cat.
00:06:32 You're really helping out.
00:06:35 So we take a look at that.
00:06:35 Video I do have my coffee, actually.
00:06:39 It's a little different.
00:06:40 It's not the ****** Maxwell House.
00:06:41 No, you can't be there.
00:06:42 You cannot be.
Speaker 2
00:06:44 Go away.
00:06:45 Go away.
00:06:46 Go away.
Devon
00:06:49 Oh, good Lord. Ah, it's.
Speaker 2
00:06:55 Ohh man.
00:06:58 Anyway it's.
Devon
00:07:01 It's Folgers this time.
00:07:03 I wanna just.
00:07:04 I wanna just I wanna start over.
Speaker 2
00:07:06 Want to start the stream over?
00:07:10 Ohh boy.
Speaker
00:07:15 Yeah. All right, so.
Devon
00:07:17 My train of thoughts all screwed up though.
00:07:18 I was going.
00:07:19 To talk about some of your suggestions.
00:07:21 A lot of people suggested using matrix instead of discord, but I have like a a a very long page of alt tech that I need to test, drive and try.
00:07:33 Out over the next.
00:07:35 A week and see what works.
00:07:37 There's a lot of stuff I've I've just.
00:07:38 I have no idea.
00:07:40 I've never used it.
00:07:41 I don't know how well it works.
00:07:43 I don't know how user friendly it is.
00:07:45 We have to find a good balance between usability and security and all that sort of a thing.
00:07:52 There's someone who wanted to run an IRC server, and I know there's security concerns about that, but you know what?
00:07:58 It might still just be fun to have an IRC server.
00:08:01 You know it doesn't have to be.
Speaker 2
00:08:02 Like the main place, but it could be like a cool.
Devon
00:08:05 Cool Retro chat hangout.
00:08:08 I don't know.
00:08:08 So or or it could be a place where we discuss things like.
00:08:13 You know things like ham radio or you know something that's that no one cares about security when it comes to what we're going to be discussing another another thing that a lot of people asked about is, you know, we, well, we got to have like a point to what we're, you know, what?
00:08:29 What's the point?
00:08:29 What's the mission statement, if you will, of the community.
00:08:33 And uh I.
00:08:34 Think like I said before the I guess like AG.
00:08:41 Way to try this out is we work on the the the movie, the DOTR film together, and that's a good way to like that way.
00:08:49 There's like an actual goal.
00:08:51 We'll have deadlines.
00:08:53 People have different tasks that they've got to do and and in doing that, we'll we'll probably build some relationships between people.
00:09:01 We'll be able to see who's good at what.
00:09:03 And it'll be a good starting point, because we're just going to all jump in and start working on this thing and.
00:09:10 It'll it'll also see.
00:09:12 OK well, because there's going to be file sharing involved.
00:09:15 There's going to be, you know.
00:09:17 Audio files, video files, images.
00:09:20 And like I said, there's nothing fetty about it.
00:09:23 So we don't have to worry about that.
00:09:26 So it's it's a, it's a good project, I think to bring everyone together.
00:09:30 And familiarize ourselves with the community and and get going.
00:09:36 UM and try out all this alt tech stuff that and see if it works. So anyway, that's going to be the focus for I think the the first project down the.
00:09:48 Road more what I'm thinking is more and more.
00:09:53 Just as a necessity, I think people are going to have to disconnect from the in the larger society.
00:10:00 You know, in terms of I don't mean like become a hermit, but I mean in terms of creating redundancies and creating.
00:10:10 Becoming antifragile, if you will becoming immune.
00:10:14 To the system.
00:10:15 Now I guess not disconnecting to the system so much as becoming immune to what the system can.
00:10:20 Do to you.
00:10:22 When it tries to punish people for wrong thing and that sort of.
00:10:25 A thing and that process is a long.
00:10:30 Difficult process, especially if you've never.
00:10:34 I mean, if you've always been connected to the system like it's an umbilical cord.
00:10:38 You know that's that's not an easy thing to do.
00:10:41 So there's all kinds of stuff we could we could focus on.
00:10:44 I think another important thing, especially now and and well, I mean it's already begun. I've noticed that a lot of stuff that I was able to easily find back in like say 2016, you know just a.
00:10:58 Lot of these older.
00:11:00 Videos these old interviews, even stuff like you.
Speaker 2
00:11:03 Know just you.
Devon
00:11:03 Know like Bill Cooper, type stuff, you know, like old videos, old talks from people.
00:11:09 You know Ted Gunderson videos.
00:11:11 What was that, Kay?
00:11:12 Uh, forget it doesn't matter but that.
00:11:16 But there's just a lot of old stuff like that, that it's becoming increasingly harder to find.
00:11:21 And so having archiving stuff like that both online and and and offline having.
00:11:28 Maybe coordinating some kind of maybe like even like an odyssey channel that becomes like a library for that sort of a thing, something that's blockchain driven, where it's going to be harder to censor.
00:11:41 UM books. You know, articles, you know, things, things that will be erased from the Internet if we don't preserve them somewhere.
00:11:54 And we could also do stuff like there's a lot of times things haven't been.
00:12:00 I mean, just in the case.
00:12:01 And this is kind of.
00:12:02 You know, maybe not the best example, but just in the case of some of the VHS stuff that I found at Carla's house, you know, digitizing stuff that's never.
00:12:11 Been on the Internet.
00:12:13 And making that available in a way that.
00:12:14 Can't be censored.
00:12:17 So just I think stuff like that would be important top, you know, talking about different ways we can help each other with our gardens different ways we can help each other use alternative funding methods.
00:12:31 You know whether it's crypto or or whatever, just all I mean there's there's so many different.
00:12:37 Things that the system is relied upon for that, if you're planning on protecting yourself from either a system failure or what I think is more likely a system that becomes hostile.
00:12:54 There's just a lot of infrastructure and logistical things that you've got to.
00:12:58 Think about and.
00:12:59 I think we in the audience out there, we've got a lot of experts and a lot of people that.
00:13:02 Have a lot of good information to share and.
00:13:05 And I think that's, I think that these are the sorts.
00:13:07 Of things that we.
00:13:09 Would focus on.
00:13:10 That's just my.
00:13:12 That's my vision of it right now and also keep working on projects.
00:13:17 You know that it doesn't have to just stop if we make the day of the rope film, it doesn't have to just stop it there and especially if it's a success which come on like we're, we're awesome, it's going to be awesome.
00:13:28 So we'll do a SQL maybe I don't know.
00:13:32 There's, there's just a lot of things.
00:13:34 To do as a community, that would be much easier to do, you know, to decentralized way than it would be in a centralized way.
00:13:42 So that's that's.
00:13:44 The kind of stuff that I that's at least what I'm envisioning and look, things always change.
00:13:48 It could end up being a disaster.
00:13:49 I don't know.
00:13:50 Or we might find that there's something else that.
Speaker 2
00:13:52 This is good for.
Devon
00:13:54 So this is just like I said.
00:13:57 If I if I sat around and waited until I had the perfect plan for exactly how this was going to go and, you know, didn't want to like, you know, pull the trigger until I knew it would never get done.
00:14:11 So this is I just figured, what the ****?
00:14:13 Let's just let's just go with it and we'll, you know, maybe it'll maybe it'll end up being a lot of pain.
00:14:19 For, not for, not.
00:14:20 A lot.
00:14:20 Of not a lot of prize, you know, like it might not be worth it, right.
00:14:25 But we'll see.
00:14:26 We'll see.
00:14:28 It's better to try, I don't know, jump in with both feet and see how it goes then.
00:14:34 They never know how.
00:14:36 What, what kind of opportunities we miss by not trying, so that that's my vision for that in terms of funding something I want to.
00:14:44 Talk about a little bit.
00:14:46 And then we'll.
00:14:46 Look at that.
00:14:48 That video.
00:14:48 I think this is like a new thing people are talking about and someone approached me about this.
00:14:56 I want to say like a month ago or so and I didn't really get it and I still don't get it like 100% but.
00:15:06 I'm I'm going to, I don't know, let's. So I'm sure people have it. It I I feel like I'm the last one to actually get it and I still don't get it, but it's NFT's NFT's and it stands for non fungible token right.
00:15:26 Now what is happening now?
00:15:30 Is it's kind of I kind of feel like it's like when Bitcoin first.
00:15:34 Came out and you try to explain Bitcoin to people and it and it's really hard to do and usually it's harder.
00:15:43 It's hard to do because you yourself don't quite fully.
00:15:45 That either.
00:15:49 With these NFT.
00:15:51 I honestly, I don't know that this is going to be a thing that goes on forever.
00:15:56 I kind of feel like this is just it's kind.
00:15:57 Of like in two.
00:15:59 1017 where you had like the the alt coin craze, right where you had all these different stupid coins coming out and most of them didn't really solve a problem, but it was just like.
00:16:12 Well, as a way I think for developers to.
Speaker 2
00:16:14 Get rich, but.
Devon
00:16:15 And NFTS to some extent are kind of the same thing.
00:16:19 So but but but part of this is because I don't really.
00:16:24 I don't really get it.
00:16:26 And so let me explain why I don't get it.
00:16:29 And I guess why other people.
00:16:31 Might get.
00:16:32 It so.
00:16:34 Just as an example, I think you guys remember that animated GIF.
00:16:39 Nyan Cat and I don't know.
00:16:42 Maybe I can.
Speaker 2
00:16:42 Bring it up.
Devon
00:16:44 I think a lot of people are aware of this stupid meme.
00:16:48 It was like a meme that was a cat that had like a rainbow shooting out of its ***.
Speaker 2
00:16:54 Let's see here.
00:16:56 I probably should've downloaded this before, but that's OK.
00:17:01 Here we go.
Devon
00:17:07 I wonder if animated gifts will work in.
Speaker 2
00:17:10 In obs.
00:17:13 We're about to find out.
00:17:18 Somehow I don't.
00:17:19 Think it'll work, but we'll see.
00:17:30 Oh, look at that.
00:17:31 It there it goes.
00:17:34 There's nyan cat.
Devon
00:17:38 So whoever made this meme and I don't know.
00:17:43 I guess it'd probably be easier to find, especially after what happened.
00:17:46 So the guy who made this meme sold a A NFT for this meme.
00:17:56 This is where.
00:17:56 It gets weird.
00:17:57 And I don't 100% understand it and it and parts of it feel kind of scammy, OK?
00:18:03 He sold it for something like half $1,000,000.
00:18:07 Now, what do you get if you paid the half $1,000,000 for this meme?
Speaker 2
00:18:17 Well, you don't.
00:18:18 You don't really get anything right, you just.
Devon
00:18:21 You have this.
00:18:23 Fake token on the Internet that says.
00:18:28 You have that meme.
00:18:30 And that's it.
00:18:32 And like you know, you can.
00:18:34 It's not like he he doesn't own it because, like, look, you can't sue me for using it.
00:18:40 He can't prevent you from getting it on the Internet.
00:18:46 You know, it's not just his or hers or whoever.
00:18:48 I don't know who bought it.
00:18:50 It's but yet this person has a token saying they.
00:18:57 I guess I mean that this is where it's weird for me where it like I guess they own it, but they.
00:19:04 I don't know.
00:19:05 I don't get it.
00:19:06 Don't get it a.
00:19:06 100% so.
00:19:11 They're they're going to and look, a lot of people are going to go around selling a lot of these old memes, you know, like the chocolate rain stuff.
00:19:16 All these people who weren't able to monetize their memes, I guess this is a way they can monetize. But just like with Bitcoin, it's only worth as much as people are willing to pay for it. And apparently someone is willing to pay half $1,000,000.
00:19:32 So they can say they own this and and I guess that's what it is.
00:19:35 That's all it is, is.
Speaker 2
00:19:35 It's it's bragging rights.
Devon
00:19:38 I guess that's I mean.
00:19:39 It's because again, it's not stopping other people from having the meme I.
00:19:43 Guess there's rappers.
00:19:44 Now that are putting out albums and and songs where it's.
00:19:52 You know, they, you, you, you can still go out and buy the songs.
00:19:55 You can buy the you can.
00:19:56 Everyone can listen to it, but somehow one person technically owns it.
00:20:04 Like I said, it doesn't make any sense to me.
00:20:06 So anyway, someone approached me about like.
00:20:09 A month ago or so and said, look what they're going to be doing, one of these, one of the ways this.
00:20:17 Can be used.
00:20:19 Is it can be used to fund like kind of like Patreon, right?
00:20:24 If you get the platform from a?
00:20:26 All these places that like Patreon and and just monetizing in general, what you can do is you issue out a token for like in my case, right?
00:20:40 It would be like every stream or maybe even some of my older memes or something like that.
00:20:46 And then someone buys the token and then again I don't get it.
00:20:52 That's where I'm just like, OK.
00:20:53 And then what?
00:20:54 I I don't get it.
00:20:56 And then the only.
00:20:57 Way I because I kept researching.
00:20:59 This cause like this just seems kind of like this.
00:21:02 Just seems like a weird way that crypto millionaires like they have too much money.
00:21:08 Or maybe they're just OCD and they like to collect things, so maybe it just seems like a way to like take advantage of like extreme cases of OCD.
00:21:19 You know, amongst the the crypto rich.
00:21:24 The only way I could really think about this and kind of get it is if I thought about it as a digital receipt.
00:21:33 Now let me explain what.
00:21:34 I mean by that.
00:21:36 If you're already going to like, just in the case of this like in terms of the Nyan cat thing, I guess it kind of works.
00:21:43 For that too.
00:21:45 If you think of it as.
00:21:47 I'm already going to donate to crypto like people send me crypto right to help me out and help me keep doing the the streams and stuff like.
00:21:58 That and so if if you're already.
00:22:01 Going to do that.
00:22:03 Then you just would send the same amount that you would anyway, only now you get some gay token.
00:22:16 And then it's like a receipt.
00:22:17 It's just like a digital.
00:22:18 Receipt like I gave X amount for.
00:22:21 That's the only.
00:22:22 Way I could think about it and.
00:22:23 Have it make any.
00:22:24 ******* sense to me because like.
00:22:25 I said it's it, you.
00:22:26 Can't really do anything with it.
00:22:28 Or at least not that in a way that I understand, I mean, I guess you can sell it to someone else if there's like a.
00:22:34 See I I here's where I think I'm having.
00:22:38 A problem it's.
00:22:38 It's cause in the same way I don't.
00:22:40 I don't understand.
00:22:42 It's kind of like how I don't understand people who watch professional sports and I and I never have.
00:22:47 Like, it's never.
00:22:47 It's not like like one day I was like ohh this.
00:22:50 This is gay.
00:22:51 It's like, no, I never even as a kid.
00:22:52 I was like, I don't why?
00:22:54 I don't see why are you sitting here in your living room watching people be active on a TV?
00:23:02 And and why you know what, watching the commercial like I don't.
00:23:06 There's what's there's no, you have nothing at stake.
00:23:08 You don't get anything if they win.
00:23:10 Nothing happens bad to you.
00:23:12 If they lose like it, it doesn't make any sense to.
00:23:15 You know, and then on.
00:23:16 Top of.
00:23:16 That you know the the merchandising right, you're wearing their their uniforms.
00:23:21 You're you're buying these cards with their pictures on it.
00:23:24 Like none of that **** makes any sense.
00:23:26 To me.
00:23:27 And so like in the same way that doesn't, it just doesn't make any sense to.
00:23:30 Me this doesn't make any.
00:23:31 Sense to me, and the only the only thing I can come up with.
00:23:37 Is maybe the people?
00:23:41 That because because I I.
00:23:42 Remember, a time before the Internet, right?
00:23:45 And so.
00:23:48 When I think about digital assets, especially this because like you don't actually.
00:23:52 Get a thing.
00:23:53 Like you just, it's just like a.
00:23:56 Like a A number on on a blockchain somewhere changes like.
00:24:00 That's all that happens.
00:24:02 Like, that's all that physically happens.
00:24:04 And so for to me.
00:24:05 It's just like what this?
00:24:06 Is kind of dumb but.
00:24:10 I remember a time before the Internet.
00:24:12 So to me digital things don't really seem real.
00:24:17 In fact, that's why I I like all this analog technology.
00:24:21 You know, This is why I like the older ham radios and I use old analog cameras and just stuff like that because that seems more real to me.
00:24:31 You know, software just doesn't seem tangible to me and I like tangible things.
00:24:37 I like tangible things.
00:24:39 I like things that you can touch and feel.
00:24:42 And use and.
00:24:43 And you know, software just seems something, it just seems.
00:24:49 I don't know it, it just doesn't seem real, and this isn't even like software like software you can use as a tool, right?
00:24:54 And even that doesn't.
00:24:55 Even seem all that.
Speaker 2
00:24:56 Real if you know what I mean.
Devon
00:24:59 But this isn't even like software.
00:25:01 This is even something.
00:25:02 That you can use.
00:25:04 But then I started thinking there's a whole generation where they don't know of a world without the Internet.
00:25:12 And so in a lot of ways, the Internet does seem.
00:25:15 Real to the.
00:25:17 And on top of that, they've been spending their whole lives spending money on similar stuff like DLC for video games or skins for, you know, their their players and things like that.
00:25:33 Right.
00:25:34 And so maybe that's what it maybe that's why.
00:25:37 Maybe that's why there's people that maybe that's why, I guess what I'm getting at is I don't see why there's a market for this.
00:25:44 But there is.
00:25:46 But there is.
00:25:47 So I'm considering and I'll talk to you guys about it. I'm considering because, you know, no one's being forced.
00:25:54 To get it right.
00:25:55 And if, like I said, if someone's going to be donating anyway, this is 1, just a different way to support the.
00:26:00 Show and you know nothing.
00:26:03 Like I said, nothing happens to me.
00:26:04 It's not like.
00:26:05 They own the rights to the.
00:26:06 The straight like nothing happens, right? Like it's so crazy to me. I don't get it, but if someone someone's willing to send send me crypto so that they can get a.
Speaker 4
00:26:17 I don't know another person I talk.
Devon
00:26:18 Because I I've, like I said, I've been trying to figure this **** out and someone else said, well, think of it like like a like it's an autograph.
00:26:25 Like they're paying for an autograph and I'm still.
00:26:27 Like, yeah, still don't.
Speaker 2
00:26:29 Get it cause?
Devon
00:26:29 Like, you know, like an autograph is like again.
00:26:32 It's like an analog thing, you know, like.
00:26:35 Their hand was holding the I mean.
00:26:37 I still look, I'm not someone that collect autographs, so that's another.
00:26:40 I guess.
00:26:41 Separation to where like I.
00:26:43 I mean, I kind of get autographs a little more, but even that's kind of like I don't get it, but at least.
00:26:48 There it's.
00:26:48 Kind of like, yeah, but they're they physically, you know, wrote their name.
00:26:54 Like that's.
00:26:55 They were connected physically to that piece of paper through the pen or whatever.
00:27:01 At at a certain point.
00:27:02 So that just seems more like a I don't know, like a more like a real thing.
00:27:08 I but I don't get it.
00:27:10 I don't get it.
00:27:11 I don't know for all.
00:27:12 I know that this is just one.
00:27:14 Big weird siop to get everyone closer to wanting everything to be virtual and to upload into the matrix and all that stuff.
00:27:22 I mean, look I.
00:27:23 That's entirely possible, so I don't know, but we'll talk about that.
00:27:26 That's something I've been thinking about.
00:27:28 Like I said, it doesn't affect me at all.
00:27:30 People want.
00:27:31 It you know I.
00:27:32 All right, yeah, whatever.
00:27:36 If you, if you're willing to if that's if that's going to motivate you to support the the stream, then why not?
00:27:42 It doesn't hurt me any.
00:27:43 It doesn't.
00:27:44 I don't have to do anything really for it.
00:27:46 It doesn't, you know.
00:27:49 But it's still in a weird way.
00:27:50 I do feel like somehow you're taking advantage of, like, extremely OCD people like that.
00:27:55 Just ohh I I need to collect something.
00:27:58 In fact, I kind of feel like if, like let's say I did this.
00:28:02 And there was like some super OCD people that were like, oh, I must have. Oh, I'm missing stream #400.
00:28:09 You know, like that kind.
00:28:10 Of because look, the I guarantee you they're people collect anything, right, so and.
00:28:15 It it, there is.
00:28:16 There's a fine line between collector and hoarder, you know, like crazy person collecting and.
00:28:22 I kind of feel like if it was me, like on the other end of this, I would probably purposely buy.
00:28:28 Like one of.
00:28:29 Them and then just lose the keys to it cause I guess that's how it works, right?
00:28:34 It's I'm assuming.
00:28:34 It's like crypto.
00:28:37 Where that's you.
00:28:38 If you have to have, like a private key or something to transfer it.
00:28:42 So I would just get it kind of like it's like when you think about all these bitcoins that are stuck in these wallets forever, you know, there's like 30 Bitcoin or.
00:28:50 You know, maybe like.
00:28:50 100 Bitcoin and some random wallet that no one has access to anymore, and they're just like stuck.
00:28:57 And and I I feel like I would purposely do that just so someone couldn't have all of.
00:29:00 Them maybe I'm just an *******, but.
00:29:05 Anyway, so that's we'll talk about that a little bit, I.
00:29:12 I'm like I said, I'm leaning towards doing it because why not?
00:29:15 And as long as I'm open about it and like.
00:29:17 You know no.
00:29:17 One's.
00:29:17 Getting hurt and it's.
00:29:18 Just if you're going to be sending me crypto.
00:29:20 Anyway, here's a.
00:29:21 Thing that you get now and whatever, but it, like I said, I can't help.
00:29:26 I just don't.
00:29:27 I don't understand it.
00:29:28 And that's that's the one of the biggest holdups.
00:29:31 Maybe someone in chat.
00:29:32 Understand that I.
00:29:33 Don't know, but that's one of the biggest reasons why I'm kind of like hesitant because.
00:29:36 I'm just like ah.
00:29:39 I don't get it though.
00:29:40 You know, like I I I don't get it and I guess it get there's there's more complicated versions where you can like stake them and.
00:29:49 Again, I don't know.
00:29:50 I don't it just it.
00:29:51 Just we're we're entering into a realm of.
00:29:57 Weird that I don't.
00:29:58 I don't quite get and I I like to think of myself as as relatively tech savvy and.
00:30:02 And this still it just seems like it's.
00:30:06 I don't know.
00:30:06 I don't get it.
00:30:07 It's it's next level autistic or something.
00:30:11 So anyway.
00:30:13 That's something there's a bunch of platforms people brought up.
00:30:18 In the.
00:30:21 The emails you guys sent.
00:30:24 Decentralized stuff.
00:30:25 I'd like to find something.
00:30:28 I don't have to have a.
00:30:29 Server of my own.
00:30:31 Only because you know, even if, like, let's say you find some some platform that that is secure and all this stuff they can.
00:30:40 Go after your host.
00:30:42 And I just, I don't want to create more work.
00:30:44 You know, I don't want to, like, worry about some server all the time.
00:30:47 And even if it's just like a VPS or something like that, and it's not even like the cost really because a lot.
00:30:53 Of that stuff.
00:30:54 Is probably pretty cheap for what we'd be using.
00:30:57 But it's still something that could be, I don't know, I don't know.
00:31:00 But I I have a long list of stuff to get through.
00:31:02 So anyway, actually what?
00:31:05 Let's **** it.
00:31:06 Let's just let U.S.
00:31:07 What do you guys think of these?
00:31:09 These NFT things.
00:31:13 You guys have any?
00:31:16 Oh, looks like.
00:31:18 Looks like my.
Speaker 2
00:31:20 Trovo died on my tablet.
00:31:22 Here, let me.
00:31:22 Bring it up.
00:31:25 Alright, let's back up.
Devon
00:31:27 I'll be I'll be in chat in a.
00:31:29 Second, hold on.
00:31:33 OK, I'm back.
00:31:35 So what do you guys think of this stuff?
00:31:37 Someone says it sounds ********, sounds fake and gay.
00:31:40 Yeah, it kind of does.
00:31:45 Yeah, that's I, I I really don't get it.
00:31:49 I'm late and don't really know what the **** you're talking about.
00:31:52 I don't know what the.
00:31:53 **** I'm talking about.
00:31:56 Faker and gayer than crypto?
00:31:58 No, it is.
00:31:59 That's why because I don't see how I don't see.
Speaker
00:32:01 How there's a?
Devon
00:32:02 Market for it, but apparently there is.
00:32:06 Apparently there is.
00:32:08 And like I said, it's.
00:32:10 I don't.
00:32:10 I can't think of a way it's hurting anyone other than.
00:32:13 Like I said, some weirdo obsessed crypto millionaire that must have all the things.
00:32:19 And I don't really feel too bad about that.
00:32:22 But that's that's that's because that's the first thing.
00:32:24 I want to make sure that OK before I do this, is this is this?
00:32:29 Bad in some way that I'm not understanding.
00:32:33 And I can't think of any way.
Speaker
00:32:34 That it's.
Devon
00:32:35 That it's bad, other than the fact that, I mean, look, I'll just be honest if you get.
00:32:39 This get one of these.
00:32:40 If I do this and you get one of these things, don't.
00:32:44 Whenever you don't think of it as like an investment.
00:32:46 All right, my guess is.
00:32:49 That's not the way it'll look at it at all.
00:32:52 It's more like I said, it's more like a receipt.
00:32:54 It's more just like a.
00:32:56 I gave.
00:32:58 I donated.
00:33:01 To the string.
00:33:01 And here's my little digital receipt and most people wouldn't even want that.
00:33:06 But maybe there's someone out there that would want that, I don't know.
00:33:13 Let's see here.
00:33:17 Yeah, people are saying, yeah, if.
00:33:19 If I was a crypto.
00:33:19 Millionaire, I would have started an ethno.
00:33:21 State in southern Dakota.
00:33:27 Yeah, it's just it it is.
00:33:30 Like I said, it's another way to support creators like someone Chad just said that yeah, like the way I see it is, it doesn't seem to.
00:33:37 I don't see how it hurts anyone, and if they're if.
00:33:40 Someone wants it?
00:33:42 I don't know and I don't 100.
00:33:43 Percent get it? I'm.
00:33:44 Going to do a little more research.
00:33:46 But it just it does seem weird like like I said, the only thing the only thing that I can see is a downside.
00:33:54 Is it is in a weird way.
00:33:57 It is one, it is one step closer to the whole upload your consciousness into the matrix.
00:34:03 Kind of a thing, you know.
00:34:04 What I mean like?
00:34:06 But I mean, I don't know.
00:34:07 I don't know if that, I don't know.
00:34:09 I don't know.
00:34:09 If I'm just being.
Speaker 2
00:34:12 A weirdo about that, but.
Devon
00:34:15 Yeah, I don't get it.
00:34:16 I'll have to get it.
00:34:17 Before I do it.
00:34:18 But at the moment I'm just I'm I don't.
Speaker
00:34:21 Get it?
Devon
00:34:23 Beyond the receipt explanation.
00:34:25 I already gave you.
00:34:27 OK, so anyway.
00:34:31 The video that I was talking about last stream.
00:34:37 Is a video that was put out by, you know.
00:34:41 We've talked about this before you.
00:34:43 Know when when you see some of this technology or.
00:34:49 That that's in movies and uh and and it's about the future, sometimes it's it's ridiculous, right? Like in the 1950s. And maybe they'll have some of this in.
00:34:59 This video I haven't watched.
00:35:00 Little thing, uh, they talk about how, like, oh, everyone's going to have a flying car and and and this sort of a thing.
00:35:06 And obviously we don't have that and.
00:35:07 And, you know, back to the future.
00:35:09 There was the hoverboards.
00:35:11 And and you know, in fact, pretty much all the technology and back to the future is stupid and so usually.
00:35:20 You see this stuff and it just goes nowhere but sometime.
00:35:24 Sometimes it it does inspire people to try to invent it, like and look, people have tried to invent hoverboards and people have tried to invent some of the technology they've seen.
00:35:35 If you watch 2001 Space Odyssey, you know when he's on the the space station, he uses the the video phone and that was considered like, wow.
00:35:44 Super high tech, but now everyone has that in their pocket.
00:35:47 No big deal.
00:35:47 You can FaceTime people and stuff like that so.
00:35:50 Sometimes this tech does end up existing this.
00:35:56 Particular movie was funded though, by Ford, and there's a ridiculous Ford in it.
00:36:03 You know, you're gonna laugh when you see it.
00:36:04 I don't even know why they thought it looked futuristic, cause it's just impractical.
00:36:08 And then there was also.
00:36:11 Well, who was the other sponsor?
Speaker 2
00:36:12 Let me open it up here.
Devon
00:36:22 Oh wait, that's not it.
00:36:23 That's the wrong one.
00:36:32 OK, they say the sponsors in the beginning here.
00:36:37 Yeah, like their clothes, too, like everyone's just going to wear ******* cloaks.
00:36:41 That'd be kind of ******, I guess if everyone just wore cloaks all the time.
Speaker 2
00:36:47 Mommy. What that?
Devon
00:36:48 This is the weirdest part. It's 1999, but he's like Mommy, I forgot what year it is and she's like, oh, I'll tell you what year it is.
00:36:57 Hold on.
00:36:57 I'd be more worried that your kid.
00:36:58 Forgot what year it is.
Speaker 2
00:37:01 Let's see, yeah.
Devon
00:37:02 Sponsored by Philco Ford Corporation so Philco.
00:37:08 What did they turn into?
00:37:11 Because my if I remember correctly, they're the ones that did all the electronics for Ford, but I think they were maybe part of a bigger company or or maybe they got.
00:37:19 Maybe they like part of Philips.
00:37:23 Lucent and all that stuff.
00:37:25 But anyway, so it was it.
00:37:27 Was big global corporations.
00:37:31 That put out this film.
00:37:35 To kind of like.
00:37:36 Show consumers what was what was down the like, what we we were about to see.
00:37:42 Happened in the in the market, you know, after 75 years of Ford, what you can expect to see in the future in the year 1999 and look some of it, some of it weirdly weirdly came true.
00:37:57 A lot of it didn't.
00:37:59 A lot of.
00:37:59 It didn't, but some of it weirdly came true.
00:38:02 So let's take a look at this and we will see how accurate Philco Ford's view of 1999 was.
00:38:13 And look, we'll even give we'll.
00:38:14 Give him a little leeway, right? Because in 1999, I don't think they actually had some of the stuff that they talked.
00:38:20 About but some of it is has since.
00:38:22 Become a reality.
00:38:24 So I'm going to back it up just a tiny bit and I'm going to start the intro and step away just for half a second.
00:38:33 And then I will be back.
Speaker 3
00:39:09 How did the girls fly?
00:39:14 They ride on the air like an air car soda.
00:39:19 What are you building, Jamie?
00:39:21 It can help.
00:39:22 Can't you tell?
Speaker 8
00:39:24 But you haven't finished it.
Speaker 3
00:39:26 What did I forget?
Speaker 8
00:39:28 What's this room?
Speaker 3
00:39:30 At the center where I go to school, that's where the computer lives and where I go to sleep and where you and daddy sleep.
00:39:41 And where we go to swim and where we see the ball.
Speaker 8
00:39:45 And the Symphony, what would you?
Speaker 3
00:39:47 Like when you left out the room.
Speaker 8
00:39:49 Where you're supposed to scrub behind your ears.
Speaker 3
00:39:52 Oh yeah.
Speaker 8
00:39:55 The back door.
00:39:56 Right.
00:39:56 And there's one more the Health Center.
Speaker 3
00:40:04 How does the computer know everything?
00:40:07 I mean like, I mean like, how many times do exercise and all?
Speaker 8
00:40:13 I haven't the faintest notion that's just too much for your old mother to understand.
Speaker 3
00:40:19 Old. Well, not so old.
Speaker 8
00:40:22 When I'll be.
Speaker 3
00:40:22 44 next year, what's not so old?
Devon
00:40:23 OK, I got.
Speaker
00:40:24 My headphones for you.
Devon
00:40:28 All right.
00:40:28 So first of all, a couple of things right off the bat.
00:40:31 You know, he did mention the flying cars.
00:40:35 But notice how and there's a big focus on this, which is eerily similar to a lot of the talk we hear from the, you know, World Economic Forum, right.
00:40:47 And just the these smart cities and all this stuff.
00:40:50 This isn't a new view.
00:40:54 That that, you know, like, Oh my God, everything will be AI driven and everything will be run by the computers.
00:41:00 Now this is a dream that they have had since computers.
00:41:07 And so you're going to see a lot of that over and over and over again where there's a computer, you know, the little kid already mentioned.
00:41:13 Ohh, how how does the computer know how much I should exercise?
00:41:18 See, this is we already have this stuff right?
00:41:20 We have, like, the Apple Watch kind of thing.
00:41:22 We have the, the all the these health monitoring gadgets that people are plugging into their phone.
00:41:29 The only thing that's different, and I think this is because it was probably harder for them to to fathom, is that in the this scenario, a lot of the mainframe.
00:41:38 All the stuff, it's all handled privately at their home.
00:41:42 And I think that's because honestly, maybe, maybe not even necessarily because they couldn't imagine something with like the bandwidth required to have it all centralized, but maybe because it would be less scary, you know, it's less scary if you have a centralized computer that you control, it's your property.
00:42:02 It's not one of those things like the World Economic Forum is pushing where they're saying.
Speaker 2
00:42:06 You know you're.
Devon
00:42:07 You will own nothing.
00:42:08 You're just gonna pay a subscription to the.
00:42:10 AI and the centralized AI is going.
00:42:13 To do everything.
00:42:14 And and if you if you do something that doesn't like it.
00:42:16 Will be platform you.
00:42:19 This was more centralized in your home, so you did have an AI.
00:42:23 You did have a computer that kind of ruled a lot of your life, but at least it was in your house.
00:42:30 He talked about, well, this is the room.
00:42:32 Where the computer?
00:42:32 Lives, so they at least with the way that they're describing this, they're imagining a world where there is like a mainframe.
00:42:42 In uh, in your home that does all this stuff and it controls well, I mean, as you'll see a lot of stuff.
00:42:49 The other thing I thought that was funny.
00:42:51 Is this this agelessness right like ohh I'm.
00:42:56 40 and I don't know, she doesn't.
00:42:59 I don't see I.
00:43:00 I guess she could be 40.
00:43:01 I mean, this is a bad frame to stop.
Speaker 2
00:43:03 On right to let.
00:43:04 Let me let me.
Devon
00:43:05 Do her a little more justice here, yeah.
Speaker 2
00:43:07 Ohh or the video player will not behave.
Devon
00:43:11 That works OK.
00:43:13 So does she look 40?
00:43:14 I don't know.
00:43:15 I I don't know.
00:43:16 I guess could be but, but I would say more 30s.
00:43:21 But that's the idea too, right?
00:43:22 And that you saw that in the Star Trek shows.
00:43:27 You saw that most science fiction was this idea that we're all going to live forever.
00:43:32 We're going to have this new technology that's going to allow us to live forever, and that's the transhumanist.
00:43:40 Dream right now, they've gone beyond that.
00:43:42 Now they're saying that.
00:43:44 Not only, I mean Google.
00:43:45 Was saying just a couple of.
00:43:46 Years ago, they were going to cure death, right?
00:43:50 Like that was going to be their big thing is curing death.
00:43:53 And if they find that they can't do that, the next best thing is again something they're already doing right is they'll just upload every sentence that you've ever spoken.
00:44:04 Like, if it was me, right.
00:44:05 That they would just upload all of my streams and all of my social media posts.
00:44:09 And and everything and into this AI that would then evaluate everything that I had said and try to mimic my speech patterns and and and come up with some kind of AI that would that would pass as me it would sound like me it would maybe say some of the same things and and.
00:44:29 You know, as the technology gets better it, it would probably trick a lot of people into thinking it was me and so that would be, you know, an immortal version of yourself.
00:44:40 But ultimately that's.
00:44:42 I mean, that's just like the first step.
00:44:43 Ultimately what they.
00:44:44 Want is they would want to actually have a computer complex enough.
00:44:52 To where it could take a snapshot of.
00:44:58 All the activity.
00:44:59 Well, first of all, a snapshot of the exact structure of your brain, the physical structure of your brain, and then also a snapshot.
00:45:09 Of the all the impulses going on inside your brain, all the chemicals, all the activity.
00:45:17 But not only that.
00:45:18 Like the vector, right?
00:45:19 So in other words, the the direction and the velocity of all of those signals, so that by capturing this one moment.
00:45:29 Digitizing it.
00:45:31 And so it's almost like hitting pause on your brain, right.
00:45:35 And then it uploads, this builds a a replica of your mind that slice in time of your mind into the machine and then they let go of the pause button and then it it continues.
00:45:49 Right. So you are.
00:45:52 In a way, in a way.
00:45:55 You continue to exist now inside of this computer, in the cloud or whatever, digitally forever.
00:46:06 You know, unless someone erases your brain.
00:46:09 And so they, I don't know why transhumanists finding this so fascinating, because it just sounds horrifying to me because.
00:46:18 It it, obviously it's soulless.
00:46:20 It's not you and it and and it's it's it's just like it's maybe a really good copy of you.
00:46:30 But it would know you would think it would be.
00:46:33 I mean, if if you were smart enough to understand what was going on, it would be smart enough to understand.
00:46:37 What was going on and it would know that like, oh, I'm.
00:46:40 I'm just a copy of this life form.
00:46:42 And then how?
00:46:42 You know, in fact, there's a there's a series of science fiction books I read years ago that really got into some of this stuff where they talked about.
00:46:51 Now you would in order to quote UN quote live forever. What people would do is they would.
00:46:58 Upload their consciousness in this way that I just described into a a mainframe, and then when they're then they they would kill their body off essentially.
00:47:07 And then if they decided to go back into the physical world, they would just get a blank body and then they would put that they would do the exact opposite, right.
00:47:16 They'd hit pause.
00:47:17 And then they would recreate what they had a digital blueprint for into the physical body that they had created.
00:47:24 And then, you know, hit let go of the pause button and all of a sudden this consciousness would now be.
00:47:30 In the physical world.
00:47:32 But the problem is again you would know that you weren't really that guy.
00:47:38 You were just yet another copy.
00:47:40 And in fact, you could run into problems where you could make multiple copies of the same guy.
00:47:44 You know, I guess kind of like the the matrix movies.
00:47:47 All the agent Smiths and stuff like that.
00:47:49 But and I forget, I wish I remember the name of that series.
00:47:52 It was really, really transhumanist.
00:47:54 And like, really, really long books and I and then and I read like, like I got through like four of them before.
00:48:00 I was just like, I can't ******* take.
00:48:01 Anymore but like 1.
00:48:03 Of the good things about it, I guess in a in a way in a way to make you think in a theoretical way, is it it in introduced all these problems that people would have by having to upload and download and go back and forth and and all the psychological problems that created for these.
00:48:21 So-called people.
00:48:24 Because in some cases, right, like because of for ease of access to this snapshot, everyone when you were born, you were given like a chip in your head.
00:48:35 That was always.
00:48:36 Recording the the the.
00:48:37 The the current state of your brain at all times, so that if you actually died, let's say you died.
00:48:43 In an accident.
00:48:44 They could just recover your chip, plug it into someone else, and you would just that next.
00:48:49 That new person would all of a sudden wake up thinking that they were you a moment after you had died.
00:48:56 And uh.
00:48:56 But again, then that new person would would have the realization at some point the wait.
00:49:02 Whoa, I'm not actually that person.
00:49:04 That person died.
00:49:05 I'm an exact copy of that person.
00:49:07 And then it led to, like, all these, you know, weird psychological things.
00:49:11 So that's kind of where things have gone with the transhumanists.
00:49:17 But when this was made?
00:49:20 Which was sometime in the I want to say the late 50s might have been early 60s, but it looks kind of late 50s to me.
00:49:26 The color is fairly newish looking.
00:49:31 They are still talking about the the magic of Western medicine, just keeping you young and alive forever.
00:49:38 And I think that a lot of if.
00:49:40 You think about how.
00:49:41 Boomers thought about the world and how they thought about, and even just in terms of, like medicine.
00:49:49 Like when you had the.
00:49:50 The the Boomers medicating their kids.
00:49:53 With like Oh well.
00:49:54 Just if you give them this pill, it'll.
00:49:56 Get rid of his ADD.
00:49:57 You know, just all you have to do, you don't have to worry about actually parenting or anything like that.
00:50:02 You just you just give them this pill.
00:50:05 You know, it's this magic pill.
00:50:07 And if you look at a lot of these old space movies, you'll notice there's a.
00:50:10 Lot of, oh, we don't have to eat.
00:50:13 We just take this pill.
00:50:14 You know the, the, the, the whole idea that we have these magic pills that just fix everything.
00:50:21 And of course, you know, we don't have, I mean.
00:50:22 Everyone knows the the other.
00:50:24 Pills that the boomers were taking.
00:50:26 As all this was going on.
00:50:28 And so I think that's really, I mean look at the, the modern pharmaceuticals, you know the companies that have these commercials with the, the, the side effects that go on for like the entire like pretty much the majority of the commercial is just the side effects.
00:50:45 And but if you notice a lot of these are not geared towards young people.
00:50:49 Usually these pills, these magical oh, you know, if your cholesterol is too high, take this pill.
00:50:54 Like, don't don't actually address why your cholesterol is too high.
00:50:58 Take this pill.
00:51:00 Just take this pill and it'll fix it.
00:51:02 Oh, you've got diabetes.
00:51:04 Take this pill.
00:51:05 **** **** doesn't.
00:51:06 Take this pill, you know and.
00:51:08 And that's just.
00:51:09 How I think, because boomers now and obviously that.
00:51:13 We're in the future.
00:51:14 We got all these magic.
00:51:15 Pills that fix everything just like.
00:51:16 The sci-fi movies told us we.
00:51:18 Would so this is.
00:51:20 The mindset they were in when this was.
Speaker 8
00:51:25 I haven't the faintest notion that's just too much for your old mother to understand.
Devon
00:51:30 At least at.
00:51:31 Least you know the patriarchy was alive and well.
Speaker 8
00:51:35 I don't.
Devon
00:51:35 Know how all this newfangled?
00:51:37 Technology works.
00:51:38 I'm just a girl.
Speaker 3
00:51:41 Not so old, but I'll be 44 next year. That's not so old.
Devon
00:51:48 Yeah, I'm 44. Look how young she looks, though.
00:51:52 Because of space. Not anymore.
Speaker 3
00:51:55 What day is it now?
00:51:57 I forgot.
Devon
00:51:59 See. Well, I'd.
00:52:00 Be really concerned if my kid forgot what year was because he doesn't look like he's.
00:52:05 He's young enough to forget what year it is.
Speaker 8
00:52:08 Here I'll show you.
Devon
00:52:19 You know, for this being like a fun like this is what the future is gonna be like.
00:52:23 That sure is some scary.
00:52:24 *** music.
Speaker
00:52:26 1999 Dun Dun.
Devon
00:52:29 Dun but like it's supposed to get.
00:52:30 Us excited about the future?
00:52:32 This sounds terrifying.
00:52:52 Yeah, yeah, I like you gotta love the fashion.
00:52:54 Like I said, I I would.
00:52:55 I would.
00:52:55 I would.
00:52:56 I don't know that little kid.
00:52:56 I would dress like that.
00:52:58 I would dress like that.
00:53:00 The goofy hat and the cloak I would dress like that.
00:53:09 Walk around like ******* Batman all the time.
Speaker 6
00:53:11 1999.
00:53:15 More than a generation away and yet dreams travel faster than light.
Devon
00:53:20 OK, so this.
00:53:21 Car in in.
00:53:22 Some ways looks pretty dope, like I would probably.
00:53:27 I'd want the car, but the the obvious problem with it.
00:53:30 Why are there 2 front tires?
00:53:33 That would make it, I mean, engineers made this thing right, like that makes it harder to steer.
00:53:38 I don't anyway.
Speaker 6
00:53:40 Even now, scientists and planners are shaping the lives of our children.
00:53:44 Who will?
Devon
00:53:45 But in terms?
00:53:45 Of style.
00:53:46 You gotta give it to them like that looks way cooler.
00:53:47 Than any car that they make now.
Speaker 6
00:53:49 Given the 21st century.
00:53:51 How will they live?
00:53:53 Perhaps in a honeycomb structure like this?
Devon
00:53:56 Ohh good.
00:53:57 See now it's not a conspiracy that they want us to be insect people.
00:54:03 In fact, I've specifically mentioned bees where they want us to.
00:54:07 Just be bees that that all.
00:54:09 Work for the Queen or in this.
00:54:11 Case the AI and we.
00:54:12 All just live in.
00:54:13 Our little pod and we you know that sort.
00:54:15 Of thing he's I.
00:54:16 Mean he's that, like I said, it's.
00:54:18 Not a new view.
00:54:19 This is not.
00:54:20 A new goal of the ruling class this is.
00:54:23 That's precisely what they want.
Speaker 6
00:54:26 The oldest, strongest natural shape.
00:54:29 Hexagon modules that grow with the.
Devon
00:54:32 Hexagon pods.
Speaker 6
00:54:33 Family size and interests. Michael Shore, 45, husband Father is an astrophysicist several days each week he commutes to a distant laboratory, where he's engaged in the Mars One project.
Devon
00:54:52 OK.
00:54:52 Well, two things they got wrong.
00:54:54 One, the commute thing.
00:54:56 And well, 2 Mars.
Speaker 6
00:54:59 The colonization of the 1st planet is minor in the some 10 years he attended, A Midwestern university was botany.
00:55:06 It is one of his many continuing hobbies.
00:55:09 He is engrossed on this sunny morning in the study of the cellular structure of a new exotic fruit tree.
00:55:15 Hopefully is.
Devon
00:55:16 So I guess you you worked for Monsanto.
Speaker 6
00:55:19 Experiments will produce a giant Peach with a thick protective skin, much like that of a tangerine.
Devon
00:55:26 So yeah, they, they again they they.
00:55:28 They wanted to genetically engineer.
00:55:30 As soon as they figure out they could.
00:55:32 That's exactly they're like.
00:55:34 It's like this.
00:55:35 The Old Jurassic Park thing.
00:55:37 You were so excited about whether or not you could.
00:55:40 You didn't stop to ask whether you should.
Speaker 6
00:55:43 This is one of the many 21st century devices or appliances.
00:55:47 That are part of the everyday life of the.
00:55:49 Shore family.
Speaker 2
00:55:53 All right, so now this is a.
Devon
00:55:54 Little hokey.
00:55:55 This is supposed to be his computer, his desktop computer, but again, it's for for guessing about what the future is going to look like.
Speaker 2
00:56:04 It's not far.
Devon
00:56:05 Off like obviously like the special effects of what you're going to see is looks pretty.
00:56:10 Stupid, but if you just think of it in terms of lay a concept, I mean they.
00:56:14 Kind of got it.
Speaker 6
00:56:18 This workbench, with its electronic screen, enables Michael to call up photographic sections of the two parent fruit trees from which he began his experiments three years ago.
00:56:37 At that time, he stored the two photographic images in the central home computer, which is Secretary, librarian, banker, teacher, Medical Technician, bridge partner and all around servant in this House of Tomorrow.
Devon
00:56:53 Ah, sweet nixie.
00:56:54 Tubes got.
00:56:56 I love.
00:56:57 I love to see Nixie tube.
00:56:59 I I would love, I would have.
00:57:00 I would love to have a computer with Nixie tubes.
00:57:02 I guess I could make one, but anyway, so again, the the way they're selling it is you have this mainframe in in your house and you control it.
00:57:11 It's not.
00:57:11 It's not like something that's being controlled by a centralized authority, so that doesn't sound so scary it sounds.
00:57:20 Actually kind of OK.
Speaker 6
00:57:21 All pertinent information about this family, its records, its tastes and reference material is stored in these memory banks.
Devon
00:57:30 Ah yeah, all that data, all that data, everything from your.
00:57:34 Personal taste your health records.
00:57:38 But instead of being stored in a room in your house with a giant computer full of switches and nixie tubes.
00:57:46 It's now stored in the cloud in the cloud.
Speaker 6
00:57:50 Available instantly to every member of.
00:57:52 The family.
Devon
00:57:53 Available instantly to every member of the government.
Speaker 6
00:58:02 Master James Shaw, 8 years old student, attends formal school two mornings a week.
00:58:10 Much of his education, however.
Devon
00:58:12 So this is this is again this is kind.
00:58:14 Of accurate in a way.
00:58:16 I mean they got the big.
00:58:17 Flat screen TV.
00:58:19 You know he's doing well.
00:58:21 I mean, I guess in the age of COVID, he's he's going to school remotely from home.
Speaker 6
00:58:26 Over is carried on in a kind of Education Center within the home.
Speaker 5
00:58:39 And so an era that began 500 years earlier with Copernicus and Galileo ends as the first astronaut takes his first halting steps.
00:58:50 Onto the shores of the moon and begins a new age of man.
Speaker 6
00:58:57 His assignments are program.
Devon
00:58:59 You know what, I.
00:59:00 I'm guessing this the reason they were using that footage.
00:59:04 Is they hadn't gone to the moon yet.
00:59:07 That's why it was like this, I mean.
00:59:11 I wonder what year this was made because.
00:59:13 That looks.
00:59:14 You know very similar to the the moon landing stuff, but it's clearly not not.
Speaker 5
00:59:19 100 years earlier with Copernicus and Galileo ends as the first astronaut takes his first haunting steps onto the shores of the moon and begins a new age of man.
Speaker 6
00:59:34 His assignments are programmed into the home computer and fed into teaching machines, which allow him to progress as rapidly as his awakening mind can absorb the audio visual lessons.
Speaker
00:59:46 Now see on.
Devon
00:59:47 Again, this is one of those things where that doesn't sound so bad.
00:59:51 To me, it sounds like home schooling.
00:59:53 It sounds like computer assisted homeschooling. Yeah. And you know, I wouldn't want it to be 100%, you know, computer. Computerized.
01:00:02 But the the thing.
01:00:04 See the thing that really makes this a problem today isn't that we're using technology.
01:00:10 You know it's technology in and of itself is not the problem the problem.
01:00:15 Is the the.
01:00:17 Those who control the technology and in this example here.
01:00:22 It's not like you would have like if this was the way that we were educating children today.
01:00:28 It's not like you would sit a kid down and and have these pre made.
01:00:32 Made education cassettes or like whatever the ****.
01:00:36 Yeah, they they're they're saying that he does with that, you know, to load up these different programs that you can look and make sure it's all you know legit and you can approve it and you can swap it and you can custom customize it.
01:00:47 Taylor, I mean, there's nothing wrong with the way they're describing it per say, I I feel like there should be more human interaction.
01:00:53 There, there's no like centralized hub that's able to change and and and alter history remotely and that sort of a thing.
01:01:41 See again the music.
01:01:44 This music it it does it.
01:01:47 As much as they're trying to make this seem like a a beautiful future, it just sounds like a terrifying future, like whoever scored this.
01:01:54 Maybe they knew more than we than.
01:01:57 Than than we knew.
01:02:10 You idiot.
01:02:11 Well, I mean, the kid forgot what year?
01:02:12 It was.
Speaker 4
01:02:30 This is lecture 102.
01:02:33 Galileo's life, work, and indeed his personal character, can perhaps be exemplified by describing one of his early experiments, according to Aristotle.
01:02:44 Battled a body that falls, possesses weight.
01:02:48 Those that do not fall have no weight.
Devon
01:02:51 Well, I guess that's accurate too, right?
01:02:53 If you try to teach a kid.
01:02:55 Using technology, he's just going to find ways around that technology, find ways to turn it into entertainment.
01:03:06 I suppose I suppose they knew kids well enough to know that that.
01:03:10 Was what was going to happen.
Speaker 4
01:03:13 Since air does not fall, it has no weight.
01:03:17 Galileo decided to examine.
Devon
01:03:19 Well, that's that's a pretty ******* cartoon he's watching there.
Speaker 4
01:03:24 In this conclusion, in his own fashion.
Speaker 6
01:03:31 Karen Ann Shaw, 43, wife mother, part time homemaker.
Speaker 3
01:03:41 Hey mom, I'm hungry.
Speaker 7
01:03:44 Yeah, me too.
01:03:45 How about lunch?
01:03:46 How about?
Speaker 3
01:03:46 2 minutes.
Devon
01:03:47 See now that probably seemed astounding back then, but that's that's fairly normal, you know, I mean, I in a way have just like like zoom call.
01:03:56 That's basically what it was.
01:03:57 They just did.
01:03:58 A zoom call.
Speaker 3
01:03:59 OK, two minutes and counting 100 and 21119.
Speaker 4
01:04:04 Alright, but you better not.
Speaker 3
01:04:05 Show up with a dirty face.
01:04:08 115.
01:04:14 114.
01:04:20 112.
Devon
01:04:37 That's pretty normal.
01:04:38 Getting getting recipes and **** from your computer.
Speaker 8
01:04:52 Mike, how about chicken salad?
Speaker 7
01:04:56 Cheese cheese burger from French fries and a nice cold bottle of beer.
Speaker 9
01:05:02 I'll see.
Devon
01:05:04 And once again, patriarchy alive and well.
01:05:09 She's like.
01:05:11 Using the technology in order to be a better wife and mother and.
01:05:15 Why not?
Speaker 8
01:05:29 Mike Cold, Ross feet.
Speaker 10
01:05:33 OK.
Devon
01:05:34 See, it isn't this so much?
01:05:35 Better than what we were watching, like what ended up happening with the the commercials, the, the, the stream where we we saw all the craft macaroni and cheese stuff because again when they.
Speaker 2
01:05:45 Made this this is this.
Devon
01:05:46 Is before they were.
01:05:47 I mean, they were still housewives.
01:05:49 That was pretty normal thing, like being a stay at home Mom.
01:05:52 Is not seen as like this weird thing.
01:05:55 So the idea that she's actually researching the calories in the food and and actually doing meal planning and you know, like one of the previous screens you was going, you know, planning the the meals for the whole week, you know, like it was that was considered a job.
01:06:12 It was considered a job to be a homemaker.
01:06:14 It wasn't just, you know, like.
01:06:16 They try to minimize it now.
01:06:18 Right?
01:06:18 Like, oh, you're just going to be a stay at home mom like that somehow.
01:06:21 That means that's really what it's definitionally.
01:06:24 Just you stay at home.
01:06:26 And you're a mom like that and that.
01:06:28 That's the end of it.
01:06:29 And unfortunately, a lot of moms, you know, that's.
01:06:31 That's how they.
01:06:31 Do it.
01:06:31 But but like it look, she's she's being a homemaker.
01:06:34 She's being an actual homemaker where she's planning out the diets of her, of her husband.
01:06:39 And look, the the computer, of course, is making suggestions.
01:06:46 And I think in the in the future that that I imagine it, it ceases to become a suggestion.
01:06:54 And well, it ceases to have a housewife doing.
01:06:57 Right.
01:06:58 But yeah, I mean, this is this was still a normal way to view it, right?
01:07:03 It was like hey, yeah, you know, we're going to have this technology that makes your your job as a wife and mother just easier.
01:07:10 You'll have access to all these recipes.
01:07:12 This easy way to organize and meal plan.
01:07:16 You can check out the calories of everything.
01:07:19 You can do the kind of research that look mothers and wives and mothers did back then.
01:07:24 They was just more difficult to do.
01:07:26 You just haven't, you know, this was solving a problem that already existed.
01:07:30 But how did they really solve it?
01:07:32 With Kraft Macaroni and.
Speaker 3
01:07:34 Cheese 257473.
Speaker 7
01:07:35 Be right there.
Devon
01:08:10 All right, the space food machine.
01:08:16 That's something that they've wanted.
01:08:17 For a really long.
01:08:18 Time you know, if you watch Star Trek, they got the whatever that I forget.
01:08:22 What the machines called?
01:08:23 But you just push a few buttons and it magics the food below.
01:08:28 I still remember when I was a kid.
01:08:31 And I was watching an episode of Star Trek, one of the original ones on TV, and they they had one of those machines.
01:08:39 And like Captain Kirk's.
01:08:40 Like beep beep.
01:08:40 Beep boop.
01:08:41 You know to like it.
01:08:42 Food comes out.
01:08:43 Or whatever.
01:08:43 And my boomer mom commenting.
01:08:46 Well, it's funny because we got that.
01:08:48 Technology and I was like.
01:08:49 What do you mean it's?
01:08:50 Like, well, it's like a microwave.
01:08:52 You know, like you just put in a TV dinner and push a button and then it.
01:08:56 Heats it up.
01:08:57 And even then, I was like, that's that's no like, is that how you're justifying?
01:09:01 Using a microwave because.
01:09:04 That's that's no that this, that's not at all what this is.
Speaker 3
01:09:09 39383736.
Devon
01:09:26 Man, this, this, this music, it's gone from.
01:09:29 Terrifying to like, just frantic beatnik music.
Speaker 3
01:09:40 2019181716.
01:09:50 987.
Speaker 7
01:09:56 Hi 321.
Speaker 3
01:10:00 Martin is served.
Speaker 6
01:10:03 Split second lunches color keyed disposable dishes.
01:10:07 All part of the.
Devon
01:10:08 Disposable dishes.
01:10:10 See that was the other thing that the that that was like a a big selling point for for boomers, everything was disposable.
01:10:20 Almost nothing was disposable like 100 years ago.
01:10:25 And that was like that was considered a big leap in technology. Everything's disposable.
01:10:31 Now they, I mean **** they they used to reuse coke bottles.
01:10:33 If you got a bottle of coke in a in the glass bottle, you returned the bottle and they reused it like they only they washed it, but they they filled it back up with coke.
01:10:43 And and then everything turned into like these plastic, disposable everything and paper plates.
Speaker 6
01:10:49 And Society of tomorrow, a society rich in leisure and taken for granted comforts.
Devon
01:10:57 Say no more.
01:10:59 Say no more.
01:11:01 It's all about comfort, isn't it?
01:11:03 It's all about entertainment and comfort.
01:11:07 It's a future that's centered around entertainment.
01:11:12 And comfort.
01:11:13 It's it's a paradise.
01:11:14 All we have to do is.
01:11:17 Push buttons and the magic food machine gives us food.
01:11:20 I'll tell you what I am kind of digging.
01:11:22 I'm digging the retro futuristic aesthetic.
01:11:25 I do like that.
01:11:26 I do like that I'd be down with the kitchen.
01:11:28 Look like that.
01:11:30 The stupid food machine.
01:11:31 I don't need that, but I don't know if it.
01:11:33 If it was awesome.
01:11:34 And it actually worked.
01:11:35 But we all know that's impossible.
01:11:38 But yeah, I I like kind of a sucker for this kind of ****.
01:11:42 Like that stupid table I like.
Speaker 6
01:11:44 That at the turn of the next century, most food will be stored frozen in individual portions.
01:11:50 The computer will keep a running inventory on all foodstuffs and suggest daily menus based on the nutritional needs of the family when the.
Devon
01:11:58 Ohh yes, I was.
01:12:00 My mom was right.
01:12:01 It is just TV dinners that are frozen and some some freezer thing and then it it microwaves them for them.
01:12:07 I thought it was magicking the food, you know, into existence, but no.
01:12:12 Apparently it's just like a giant snack machine that you that you pay to have filled up with frozen dinners.
Speaker 6
01:12:20 The field has been selected.
01:12:22 The various portions are fed automatically into the microwave oven for a few seconds of dethawing or warming.
01:12:31 The House of 1999 will be virtually maintenance free, a central atmospheric system will maintain constant year round temperatures and control humidity, bacteria, pollen and dust.
01:12:45 Clothing of the non disposable variety.
Devon
01:12:49 Clothing of the non disposable variety.
Speaker 2
01:12:53 See, I'm.
01:12:54 I don't know why.
Devon
01:12:55 They thought disposable was such a innovation, but they were big into disposable.
Speaker 6
01:13:00 Will be stored in cleaning closets where a chemical vapor at.
01:13:04 Sphere and an ultrasonic vibrator will remove dirt.
Devon
01:13:07 Just just, you know, chemical chemical atmosphere with the.
01:13:12 Vibrating ultrasonic.
01:13:14 You know that's good.
Speaker 6
01:13:19 Fingertip shopping will be one of the many homemakers convenience.
Devon
01:13:22 Ohh Amazon, they predicted Amazon.
Speaker 6
01:13:26 This video console will be channeled into the store of her choice.
01:13:30 A camera will scan a display of wares which she will select by push button.
Devon
01:13:41 I mean, they kind of got the mechanics of it wrong, but that's basically Amazon.
Speaker 6
01:13:49 Another part of this console is a household monitor screen which maintains a watch on critical areas in the house swimming.
01:13:58 Pool or yard?
Devon
01:14:00 People, everyone has that.
01:14:01 You know, they got the Amazon ring.
Speaker 6
01:14:10 What the wife selects on her console?
01:14:12 Will be paid.
01:14:13 For by the husband at his counterpart console.
Devon
01:14:17 Yeah, patriarchy alive and well, alive and well.
01:14:20 But yeah, online banking, that's been around a.
Speaker 6
01:14:21 Long time, all bills and transactions will be carried out.
Devon
01:14:26 That look on his face.
Speaker
01:14:28 Ah, the wife.
Devon
01:14:29 The wife spending too much money again.
01:14:32 No, but online banking was was totally around in 1999. In fact, it probably looked a lot more like this.
Speaker 6
01:14:40 A central bank computer will debit the families account. The amount of purchases and credit the department store, for example, in forming the family's home computer.
Devon
01:14:50 That's that's how it works.
Speaker 6
01:14:52 At the same time.
Devon
01:14:54 But again, see.
01:14:56 He's he's making it sound like.
01:14:58 And look, this is the way it would be if you had like, Bitcoin or something like that.
01:15:01 He's making it sound like the bank itself exists in that same mainframe.
01:15:07 Inside their home, you know it's he's not saying that a centralized bank will handle the transaction or or really what's more realistic is, I mean, there's a lot of different parties involved with that, right?
01:15:22 It's it's certainly not a transaction that exists just between you and the merchant.
01:15:28 You know you the merchant has a payment processor and that payment processor is just a gateway for someone like Visa or MasterCard.
01:15:37 And then that interfaces with your bank. I mean so by that when you buy something and every one of these purchases, right, someone's taken it, someone's taking a cut for doing essentially nothing. Like one of the things that cryptocurrency was supposed to solve is to take out all those middle men, which is precisely why.
01:15:59 They'll never want it to replace.
01:16:01 Cash, because if it ever became as easy as cash and is accepted as cash, all those middle men, I mean, think about how many things are being purchased at any given moment with a Visa debit card.
01:16:15 And now realized that visa is taking.
01:16:18 A little time it might be a tiny little cut.
01:16:20 Might even be like a fraction of a cent.
01:16:23 But those fractions of a cent add up.
01:16:26 And little by little, you know you're you're just making tons of money for really doing nothing other than providing access to a network that's from the 1970s.
01:16:36 But the way they're describing it here is it's just that it's a transaction that exists directly between you and the merchant and your computer at home is handling.
01:16:45 See, that's not so.
01:16:47 That's not so bad.
01:16:48 That's like I said then.
01:16:49 And really that's that's how crypto works, right?
01:16:52 You can have a crypto wallet on your mainframe at home.
01:16:55 If this is, you know that's the way that things were.
01:16:57 Instead of using the cloud.
01:16:58 And that's precisely what would happen, right?
01:17:00 You would, you would buy the product and then your computer would would send the crypto.
01:17:06 Directly to the merchant and done deal no middleman, but that's not how it.
01:17:10 Works at all.
Speaker 6
01:17:14 Father at the touch of a button receives an instantaneous printed copy of his budget.
01:17:19 The amount of taxes he owes the payments left on the car, and so forth.
01:17:25 All documents and household records are available on the video screen for immediate reference, also at his disposal.
01:17:33 Is an electronic correspondence machine or home post?
01:17:36 Office, which allows for.
Devon
01:17:39 Yeah, that's that's something that it wouldn't make so much sense to people back then not having a hard copy.
01:17:45 So it's interesting that he said that.
01:17:48 Like Ohh then it prints out like a hard copy, but it's also available on the computer.
01:17:52 It's like, well, why do you want the alright?
01:17:54 But I think it's more because.
01:17:55 People would be freaked out a little bit if they didn't have a hard copy of.
01:17:58 Of a financial record.
01:18:00 But then, yeah, he's now.
01:18:01 He's got an e-mail machine.
Speaker 6
01:18:03 Instant written communication between individuals.
Devon
01:18:05 With a light pen.
Speaker 6
01:18:08 Jewels anywhere in the world.
01:18:13 To maintain these and hundreds of complex electronic circuits, a monitor checks all circuits every few seconds, inserts a backup circuit if and when trouble develops, and alerts the communal service agency for replacement.
Devon
01:18:31 God, that chaotic ******* beatnik music.
01:18:34 I mean, it's.
01:18:36 It's enough to make you go mad, like in fact, it it sounds like the soundtrack of of a 1950s movie when the the person on the screen is losing their mind.
01:18:48 But yeah.
01:18:49 That's kind of interesting. You know, they have a a computer that that is self-sustaining. It detects when it it requires a, you know or a part or something and then it.
01:18:58 Orders it automatically.
Speaker 6
01:19:02 The Home Energy Center, with its fuel cell, furnishes power, provides absolutely pure water, burns, waste and heat, so cools the rooms.
Devon
01:19:13 Another thing that that that will never.
01:19:15 Happen again, that gives you independence.
01:19:19 You mean the the future they envisioned was a future in which you are producing your own electricity at your home?
01:19:28 No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, that's that's not no, that's not good.
01:19:32 That's not good.
01:19:34 No, no, no, no, we.
01:19:35 Need to be able to.
01:19:37 To to control that centrally and then we'll deliver it to.
01:19:41 You over wires, but that's that's.
01:19:44 Yeah, that, that, that this right here is all definitely not what globalists want.
Speaker 6
01:19:49 Too computerized, too cold.
01:19:57 The world of tomorrow will be as cold as sunlight, Pune through photochromic windows.
Speaker 2
01:20:06 Photochromic OK.
Speaker 6
01:20:18 It will be as wide as the ocean, which provide not only recreation for the adventurers, but an increasing variety of hydra, cultured, exotic, fresh foodstuffs.
Devon
01:20:31 Uh, that's that's a little bit getting in the territory of eat the bugs.
01:20:34 It's just eat the what did he?
01:20:36 What did he call it?
Speaker 6
01:20:38 The ocean, which provide not only recreation for the adventurers but an increasing variety of Hydra, cultured, exotic, fresh foodstuffs.
Devon
01:20:49 Hydro cultured exotic fresh food stuffs.
01:20:52 So that's.
01:20:53 That's better than eat the bugs.
Speaker 6
01:20:58 And tomorrow will be as happy as music.
Devon
01:21:03 Ohh God like.
01:21:06 I'm I'm really not looking forward to what this music's gonna sound like given the the soundtrack of the rest of this video. Geez.
Speaker 8
01:21:12 Hey, Chopin.
Speaker 3
01:21:13 What's up? Ohh, playing song.
Speaker 9
01:21:16 Ah, what's it called?
Devon
01:21:19 It's called the scariest futuristic.
01:21:21 Song you've ever heard.
01:21:22 I mean, I don't know.
01:21:22 I haven't.
01:21:23 I haven't heard this.
01:21:24 I'm just guessing.
Speaker 3
01:21:25 I forgot you.
Devon
01:21:27 Just like I forgot what year it is.
01:21:28 What do?
Speaker 2
01:21:29 You what are?
Devon
01:21:29 You feeding this kid?
01:21:30 Is it that hydro cultured exotic foodstuffs?
01:21:33 Is that bad?
01:21:34 I think you should stop giving that to the kid.
Speaker 3
01:21:37 Baker, how about playing the song we learned yesterday?
01:21:40 OK?
Speaker 8
01:21:49 That's augmented, OK.
Devon
01:22:00 Ohh, let's augment this a little bit.
01:22:02 In other words.
01:22:03 Let me hit a button and it just plays an entirely different song.
01:22:08 But I don't know what would you say that this is replaced?
01:22:12 I mean this this I guess is one of those weird things that doesn't really match up that well.
01:22:21 I mean Casio.
01:22:22 Keyboards. I don't know.
01:22:36 I can just repeatedly move.
01:22:38 My hands up and down on the same keys.
01:22:40 And it sounds like a.
01:22:43 Esquivel orchestra.
Speaker 5
01:23:01 It was just not terrified.
Speaker 6
01:23:08 Yes, life will be richer, easier, healthier as space age dreams come true.
01:23:15 As part of his everyday regime, Michael Shaw enters this home Health Center.
01:23:20 He lies for perhaps 15.
Devon
01:23:22 See, this is another.
01:23:23 Thing that you wouldn't want you.
01:23:24 To have because again it.
01:23:27 Is as much as it seems like a simple thing like ohh having a home gym or whatever it it it they'd rather have it centralized, they'd rather have, they would say to you.
01:23:39 I mean, in a way, you're being too.
01:23:41 You're you're wasting space, right?
01:23:43 Because you're supposed to own nothing.
01:23:45 So why would you have this entire this Health Center in your home?
01:23:50 Where you know, sure, you own the equipment and you know you can.
01:23:56 It belongs to you and it and all the data that it's collecting is going to your home computer instead of the cloud.
01:24:03 But they would much rather you go to a centralized hub and work out there where you don't own anything.
01:24:09 You're just renting out.
01:24:10 Space there.
01:24:12 And that so this this goes totally against the the I guess the more modern.
01:24:20 View of the future.
Speaker 6
01:24:22 On a kind of medical couch, his weight, temperature, pulse, respiration, blood pressure and electrocardiogram are routinely recorded.
01:24:32 At the same time, his body is scanned for any isolated temperature pockets that signal oncoming disease or a localized infection.
01:24:42 At the end of the examination period, the computer calculates the amount of exercise necessary to balance mikes food intake and maintain proper muscle tone.
Speaker 9
01:24:57 Exercise requirements 8 1/2 minutes bicycle, 6 minutes programmed calisthetics.
Speaker 7
01:25:03 Oh, that's ridiculous.
Devon
01:25:05 Siri sounds crazy in the in the past.
01:25:08 Yeah, I mean this is 1 area where.
01:25:10 I feel like technology didn't really.
01:25:13 Didn't really advance that well, you know, there's not like any kind of AI that does a good job of this, but that's.
01:25:21 I'm sure that's certainly that's in the works.
01:25:26 If nothing else, to have an excuse to have access to your vital signs.
Speaker 7
01:25:29 Can make a mistake, you know.
Speaker 9
01:25:36 Your weight increase over 30 days. 1.1 kilograms. Repeat exercise requirements 8 1/2 minutes bicycle 6 minutes programmed calisthetics.
01:25:48 Confirm. Please confirm please.
Speaker 6
01:26:02 The computer now relays any important physical changes to a central Community Medical Center.
Devon
01:26:08 Why are you working out with a turtleneck on dude?
Speaker 6
01:26:12 Where mikes personal position will be alerted for further diagnosis.
01:26:19 At conclusion of the exercise period, the pertinent data are again recorded for comparison with pre exercise measurements.
01:26:27 The results are again forwarded to the Community Medical Center.
Devon
01:26:30 Ah, there you go.
01:26:32 There you go.
01:26:34 There you go.
01:26:35 I guess that doesn't.
01:26:35 That doesn't just stay in the home.
01:26:37 Even then they they went to the Community Health Center.
01:26:41 Yeah, that's it.
01:26:42 We need the the the Community Health Center.
Speaker 6
01:26:45 For further study if necessary.
Devon
01:26:47 Just for for further study, you know, if it's if it's necessary.
Speaker 6
01:26:52 If the computerized life occasionally extracts its pound of flesh, it holds out some interesting rewards.
Speaker 7
01:27:05 Hi, Fred.
01:27:06 How's the old golf game?
Speaker 10
01:27:09 Don't ask 6 inches of snow in a Blizzard on the way.
01:27:12 What do you got in mind?
Speaker 7
01:27:13 Ohh, how about some golf at Pebble Beach Saturday afternoon?
Speaker 10
01:27:16 Great. Anything to get out.
Speaker 7
01:27:17 Of here.
01:27:18 Alright, hold on a minute.
01:27:22 I don't know.
01:27:23 The coast looks a little doubtful.
01:27:24 There's a low moving in.
01:27:26 Let me check Mexico City.
Devon
01:27:29 See again, this is.
01:27:29 This is the sort of thing that that this would seem.
01:27:32 Totally normal to you and I.
01:27:34 Right.
01:27:34 You can call someone up on a video call and make plans and check the weather, but this was, you know, when they made.
01:27:41 This this is like.
01:27:42 Like is what?
01:27:43 What the narrator saying just prior to this, like oh.
01:27:45 You know it.
01:27:46 Might suck having to do you know all of the exercise the computer wants you to do.
01:27:50 But don't worry, there's some benefits too.
01:27:53 And you know this is this right here is this.
01:27:56 She's totally normal.
Speaker 7
01:27:59 Yeah, it looks great.
01:28:01 And here's what we'll do.
01:28:03 We'll meet at the old central about noon, have some lunch, and then we'll tee.
Speaker 10
01:28:06 Off great, only this time I'm going to have to get about two strokes aside because I haven't been playing all winter and I'm a little rusty and I know that you've probably been playing every day, right?
Speaker 6
01:28:22 In in a virtually dirt free environment, Karen Shore several hours a week gets her hands very dirty.
01:28:33 Guild Potter.
Devon
01:28:35 See look at.
01:28:35 Look at all this leisure time.
01:28:38 Ladies, you know, and because everything's every part of being, or at least a large portion of your job as a homemaker is going to be automated, you're going to have.
01:28:48 All this time for leisure.
01:28:50 You have all this time for leisure.
01:28:53 No, no, no, but instead instead.
01:28:57 Instead, you're making PowerPoints.
01:28:59 You're making PowerPoints and.
01:29:03 Wage slaving and spending our commute back and forth and you know.
01:29:11 Having a only fans to get attention.
Speaker 5
01:29:15 The work.
Speaker 6
01:29:15 Decorates their home and the homes of many of their friends during her career years, she was a teacher of Fine Arts.
01:29:23 Now she's able to.
Devon
01:29:24 During her career years, so I guess, I guess, she.
01:29:26 Did have a career at some.
01:29:27 Point, but at least she stopped her career to have a family.
01:29:31 You know, she didn't try to do it both.
Speaker 6
01:29:33 When you practicing her crafts because the household demands on her time have been greatly diminished.
01:29:41 In the same way, Jamie, although he has a rigorous lesson schedule, is already taking advantage of his electronic world.
Devon
01:30:12 I I like how high tech it seems that a computer would play chess.
01:30:17 And by the way, that this was, I mean it was high tech that the computer could play chess up until very recently when I was into weird retro video game systems and stuff like that.
01:30:30 I had never when I was a kid, I'd never even heard of.
01:30:34 There was a gaming system called the.
01:30:37 What was it called?
01:30:38 Who made it?
01:30:38 It wasn't Maxwell, wasn't Maxwell.
01:30:41 I don't remember.
01:30:42 Anyway, it's called the Odyssey 2.
01:30:44 And it was kind of like I think it was the same computing power as an Atari, right?
01:30:49 It was made to compete with the Atari.
01:30:51 And you could buy it was kind of like this obscure gaming system that didn't really sell too well.
01:31:00 But I mean, in fact, you can find them on eBay.
01:31:02 Or like well, I don't know at the time.
01:31:03 Maybe they're expensive now.
01:31:05 I bought mine for, like, 20 bucks.
01:31:07 And you had, there was a game, a chess game.
01:31:11 You can get.
01:31:11 And I think this.
01:31:12 Was probably 19.
01:31:13 I don't know.
01:31:14 The system probably came out like mid 80s.
01:31:16 I don't know what year exactly and for in order to play the chess game you had to buy another processor that plugged into the top of it.
01:31:25 That could handle the chess game.
01:31:28 It was like this whole module that was half the size of the gaming system itself that you had to plug into the top and then you plugged in the chess game and then it could play chess.
01:31:41 Chess has always been like that weird obstacle that they thought.
01:31:44 For some reason, computers would never be able to to handle.
01:31:48 But yeah, they're now reliably beating beating humans.
Speaker
01:32:08 Who's your?
Speaker 3
01:32:08 Where the opponent's dad? Ohh.
01:32:12 I'm playing that game we had Sunday even a little loose with his clean, and I want to see if I can work that trap that Bobby Fisher used in the World Games.
Devon
01:32:23 Bobby Fischer, reference based.
Speaker 8
01:32:25 Your dad will be.
01:32:26 Home soon.
01:32:26 Why don't you wait?
Speaker 3
01:32:27 And play him live, OK?
Speaker 8
01:32:30 Well, I've got things to do.
Speaker 3
01:32:31 In the kitchen.
01:32:33 But think I'll help you.
01:32:42 What you doing with for oranges?
Speaker 8
01:32:44 I'm fixing dinner.
Speaker 3
01:32:47 Old fashioned way.
Speaker 8
01:32:49 The old fashioned way.
Speaker 3
01:32:53 Wouldn't you call?
01:32:54 That stuff?
01:32:55 Well, we're having duckling.
01:32:56 Our orange, my love.
01:32:58 That's pretty fancy.
01:33:00 Are we having company?
Speaker 8
01:33:03 The shahs are.
Speaker 3
01:33:03 Giving a party Shah.
Speaker 8
01:33:08 And how was your life?
01:33:11 We finally got plans from Denver to.
Speaker
01:33:13 Cook to 20.
01:33:13 5000 feet.
Speaker 6
01:33:14 How are things in Paris, Pete.
01:33:16 Settle down, OK?
Speaker 7
01:33:17 Yeah, Marge loves it and.
Speaker 4
01:33:19 The kids are partly brewing like me.
Speaker
01:33:21 It's about Vicki and Med school.
01:33:23 Well, you know.
Devon
01:33:23 It's a very hip and happening and.
Speaker
01:33:25 From 1990.
Speaker 7
01:33:28 As a fishing in the Philippines.
Speaker 4
01:33:29 Ohh I've never.
Speaker
01:33:30 Had a fishing like that anywhere in.
Speaker 4
01:33:32 The world I still say you can't beat the Amazon.
Devon
01:33:35 See, let's notice how how.
01:33:39 Much that they talk about travel, you know, like, oh, we're going to go golfing in Pebble Beach.
01:33:45 Oh, how's fishing in the Amazon?
01:33:46 How's or fishing in the Philippines?
01:33:48 Oh, it's not as good.
01:33:49 As the Amazon.
01:33:51 This this was this was definitely, I wouldn't say.
01:33:55 I would say West or I'd say white. Primacy was on the way out. Obviously the like the first person they show was was, you know, black the show, like how diverse everything's getting.
01:34:05 And I could be mistaken.
01:34:07 I think that the there's even an interracial couple on on the right there, but Western primacy.
01:34:15 Was still absolutely a thing.
01:34:18 Where we're just just setting around and just using the rest of the world as our playground.
Speaker 7
01:34:23 You don't happen to catch a live performance of a great sensational you Stinger.
01:34:27 In Puerto Rico the other night.
01:34:29 Would you like to love to?
01:34:31 Hey, everybody recorded a great new singer down San Juan Way the other night.
01:34:35 Would you like to see him?
01:34:36 Ohh share it with you.
Speaker
01:35:00 Yeah, this is.
Devon
01:35:01 This is something that's always.
01:35:06 This is this is not unique just to this weird video.
01:35:10 Cuban music has been.
01:35:13 News in 19 the 1950s, when they would do future scenes. I don't know why, but Cuban music was like was was meant to to.
01:35:25 Give the feeling of futurism you know, like there's a lot of futuristic scenes in 1950s film that use very Cuban music. I've never understood it.
Speaker 5
01:35:56 I think I think this is it.
Speaker 3
01:36:24 My favorite.
Devon
01:36:39 I wonder, I wonder if.
01:36:41 Because this would be around the time of the Cuban missile crisis, I wonder if this was like a.
01:36:47 A way of saying look, everything's going.
01:36:49 To be cool with Cuba.
Speaker 7
01:37:00 MM would you make me a dupe for that? I'd like to show it to some friends.
Speaker 6
01:37:03 Of ours. Who?
Speaker 7
01:37:04 Spend a lot of time down there.
Speaker 4
01:37:05 Sure. Well, I.
Speaker 7
01:37:05 Guess you want in.
01:37:06 3D Yeah, we finally made the switch. You gotta keep up with the times, you know.
Devon
01:37:11 Oh, see. And that was. That was the other thing that would have been that's different, right? He asked for a a dupe of that. So he wants, like, a physical copy of it in 3D, of course.
01:37:21 And you know without without the the the foresight to know that ohh, you could just.
01:37:28 Send it to.
01:37:28 Them digitally that.
01:37:30 The whole bandwidth thing seems to totally escape.
01:37:33 The makers of this film.
Speaker 7
01:37:35 Yeah, but what?
Speaker 6
01:37:37 Well, there's a three.
Speaker 7
01:37:38 D and 4D, you know.
01:37:41 What's next? What's next?
01:37:43 You never know.
01:37:44 You never really know.
Speaker 8
01:37:51 Now we know.
Devon
01:37:53 What's next is the trans kit.
Speaker 6
01:37:56 What's next? The things you've seen are technically possible. It remains only to apply what we now know. To fulfill these dreams of tomorrow, the world of 1999 and beyond.
01:38:10 Is limited only by the boundaries of our imagination today.
Speaker
01:38:24 Philco Ford.
Devon
01:38:27 So that was Philco Ford's view.
01:38:29 Of 1999.
01:38:32 I don't know.
01:38:32 Like I said, they they got a, you know, a reasonable amount of it.
01:38:35 Right.
01:38:36 And a reasonable amount of it wrong.
01:38:39 Take a look at chat here.
01:38:43 But sex in Botswana is next.
01:38:50 If they only knew about Y2K.
01:38:52 Yeah, in fact, that's.
01:38:53 The future we were going to have a lot of guys for younger kids that were born after Y2K and.
01:38:58 Don't know this.
01:38:59 That's actually what it looked like in 1999 and Y2K.
01:39:03 Just did it.
01:39:04 ****** it all up.
01:39:07 Someone just said it's from 19. Is it from 67, I guess?
01:39:11 That makes sense.
01:39:12 I thought I was older.
01:39:13 Than that.
01:39:15 Back then, I think they had better intentions with technology to improve quality of life and didn't know how nefarious and evil big tech would become, and used to track and control us.
01:39:26 I'd say well, that would be that would be true because in some ways, just because of the whole demographic thing, right, if you have a a population that you view as your family, see, this is another reason why multiculturalism is a bad idea.
01:39:42 It's not just because of the obvious stuff that we all run into on a day-to-day basis.
01:39:47 It means that your ruling class in the same way that like we laugh now and make fun of our military for just being like a.
01:39:54 Bunch of ******** and and fat chicks that stand no chance against the Chinese and we don't really even give a **** anymore because it's just it's like, not really our country anymore, right?
01:40:05 That that same attitude.
01:40:07 Exists among the ruling class.
01:40:10 I mean, if you have a.
01:40:11 Ruling class that is ruling over people that are genetically close to them.
01:40:16 That's going.
01:40:17 I mean, ****, even if they end up being atheists and they don't really care what happens, you know, like if they do.
Speaker 2
01:40:21 You have.
Devon
01:40:22 Excuse me, principles or morals or or that sort of a thing.
01:40:26 There's at least going to be that right.
01:40:27 There's going to be at least.
01:40:28 That that genetic connection with the population that you don't want to be.
01:40:32 ******* over your people well.
01:40:34 When when they cease to be.
01:40:35 Your people, why do?
01:40:36 You why do you give a ****?
01:40:38 I mean, are we Zuckerberg's people?
01:40:42 No, obviously not.
01:40:45 Are we?
01:40:46 I mean, neither one of the the Google guys, we're not their people.
01:40:52 You know, so as as you look at these big tech companies and they're headed up by people that have no connection to you, it it works the other way.
01:41:01 It's it's in the same way that these immigrants come and they have no genetic connection to the founding fathers and and therefore they feel no responsibility to preserve it or the culture, and in fact, in a lot of ways.
01:41:13 It's foreign and it's evil and it should be remade to better suit them.
01:41:19 I mean, what do you think when those exact same attitudes exist in someone who has real power?
01:41:27 And that and that's really I think a a huge part of this.
01:41:31 Now look, the ruling class has always been a bunch of ********.
01:41:34 I mean, that's.
01:41:34 I just think that happens, right?
01:41:36 Like you might get lucky for a generation or two, but then it.
01:41:39 Always goes back because.
01:41:41 You know you have you have the.
01:41:45 The the.
01:41:47 Inclination the OR the instinct of the ruling class to put self preservation first, right and and and by that I mean their self preservation.
01:41:56 You know the the number one priority of every institution is to preserve that institution.
01:42:03 So you give that enough time and it just turns into a big cluster, kind of like what we're experiencing right now.
01:42:09 But when you add in that to that element, I mean Kamala Harris.
01:42:14 She has no connection to you.
01:42:17 She she doesn't feel like you are her people.
01:42:22 Obama, same thing.
01:42:25 I mean, if anything, they, they they have disdain.
01:42:27 For people like you.
01:42:30 And when you're ruled over by people that have disdain for you as a group, what what do you?
Speaker 2
01:42:35 What do you expect?
Devon
01:42:38 What do you expect?
01:42:42 So that almost more than anything else, that's that's one of the biggest.
01:42:47 I'd say dangers of multiculturalism.
01:42:49 And you know, forget all.
01:42:49 This this stuff that happens to you in the micro day-to-day.
01:42:53 You know, this stuff impacts you in a a more sinister and behind the the scenes kind of a way.
01:43:03 All the time.
01:43:04 You know, they they don't.
01:43:05 Zuckerberg feels no responsibility.
01:43:08 Towards you.
01:43:10 You're not his people.
01:43:14 You're not as people.
01:43:16 You're not Kamala Harris's people.
01:43:24 Let me take a look at chat here.
01:43:29 The USA spies on its people more than Russia and China. 1.3 million people are on a watch list despite committing no crime.
01:43:41 I yeah, I don't know, getting the number, but it doesn't.
01:43:44 It sounds accurate.
01:43:46 I I would, maybe it even sounds a little bit low I'd.
01:43:50 Say episode of Murdoch Murdoch, where the Chins and vein and treats the.
Speaker 4
01:43:56 Whites with more respect.
Devon
01:43:58 Join for the look.
01:44:00 Then you introduce the propaganda.
01:44:04 Well, yeah, that's The thing is, if if there were, if there were people that.
01:44:11 Like honestly, if you were, if we were rolled over by like if we became like a a conquered Chinese territory, whites would be given more respect than they are currently given in the society.
01:44:24 Let's see here.
01:44:25 Henry Ford was right about European immigration.
01:44:27 Absolutely he was.
01:44:33 I I highly recommend taking a look at at Henry Ford's riding on the.
01:44:38 On this subject you can find it for free.
01:44:41 You know, it's kind of funny again, I guess this is another example of how much the culture has changed.
01:44:48 Henry Ford produced a I guess it was kind of like a newsletter.
01:44:53 It was kind of like it was.
01:44:54 A free newspaper, and it was called the the the international.
01:44:58 Do and when you would go to a Ford dealership. Again, this wasn't that long ago. This is like less than 100 years ago.
01:45:06 If you went to a Ford dealership in the lobby, there were you could get copies of the International Jew.
01:45:12 It was just.
01:45:13 It was just it was just right there for free.
01:45:17 And you can find people have compiled it into different volumes.
01:45:21 Like there's it's in book form now you can get a hard copy of it. There's PDF's or whatever, but he funded his own, his own little newspaper that discussed.
01:45:31 Problems that the West was going to have.
01:45:38 With a certain population, that and their growing influence, and he kind of got.
01:45:45 A lot of stuff, right?
01:45:47 Just saying.
01:45:49 So I I highly recommend.
01:45:53 Taking a look.
01:45:56 So says the Ford Foundations guard.
01:45:57 Well, now it is because.
01:45:59 Like the.
01:46:01 Like I have always said, when these corporations and these foundations live beyond their founders, they just turn into these these zombies, these immortal zombies that.
01:46:14 That feast that feast on.
01:46:16 The population and don't really.
01:46:19 Have any they they.
01:46:22 The reason why we a lot of reason why we don't have the innovation that I that is probably depicted in this movie is once you have a monopoly.
01:46:31 Again, your your first priority isn't to innovate and to create things for your customers.
01:46:37 It's self preservation.
01:46:42 And businesses went, you know, the the whole.
01:46:44 Too big to fail thing, right?
01:46:50 My Chinese friend's mom would regularly chat about how great white skin is.
01:46:54 Yeah, there's there's some Asians like that.
01:47:00 A lot of Asians do not like black people.
01:47:07 Corporate zombies. Exactly.
01:47:11 Pass that out now and watch everyone look at you like you're a psycho nut.
01:47:15 Well, I.
01:47:15 Mean look, you'd.
01:47:17 You'd be out of business.
Speaker 2
01:47:18 Right.
Devon
01:47:19 You'd be cancelled if, if if Ford dealerships tried doing that, they would be burned to the ground and deep platform from banks and you know, they'd be gone in a overnight.
01:47:31 But that's not that's my point though. That's that's how much it's changed in less than 100 years, you had that level of free speech, and that level of of discourse about these topics in places as as normal as a as a car dealership.
01:47:51 You know, I mean it, it was that.
01:47:53 Was a totally normal topic of discussion.
01:47:56 At a car dealership.
01:48:00 People and people, it didn't stop people from buying Fords.
01:48:04 In fact it it in some ways it.
01:48:06 Probably got people to buy Fords.
01:48:14 Disney is everything he could to keep the the Jews from taking over Disney.
01:48:19 But look what happened.
01:48:21 All right.
01:48:22 Well, Disney is another company that you know, that should have been allowed to die after after his death.
01:48:27 In fact, the the if they'd left copyright law alone it.
01:48:31 Might have died.
01:48:33 The they changed copyright law because of Mickey Mouse, because the way copyright is supposed to to work is 50.
01:48:42 What is it like 50 years after the death of the copyright holder?
01:48:45 Then it just.
01:48:46 Goes into the public.
01:48:47 Well, 50 years after Walt Disney did.
01:48:50 Mickey Mouse was going to go into.
01:48:52 The public domain.
01:48:54 Along with a bunch of other **** that.
01:48:55 He that he made.
01:48:57 But he couldn't have that.
01:48:59 Couldn't have that because these zombie corporations, these immortal corporations.
01:49:05 Are milking like they they they're all about.
01:49:09 I mean, apparently, 50 years after the death of the copyright holder was not enough time to squeeze money out of Mickey Mouse.
01:49:19 And all these other properties and that's another reason why these media companies will pretty much once you get big enough, how are you ever?
01:49:25 Going to go out of business.
01:49:27 How are you ever gonna go to business if you can just sit there and milk the same ******* and look, they don't just they don't just copyright movies they made, they copyright movies they didn't make.
01:49:39 And they can sue you if you if if they have a script that they didn't even, you know, make or produce.
01:49:46 You can't make that movie now without paying them.
01:49:54 And and so like all these songs, same thing.
01:49:56 You know, you make a song 50 years.
01:49:57 After your death.
01:50:00 Record company can renew that **** forever.
01:50:02 It's a wonderful life.
01:50:04 That's so that's everyone.
01:50:05 The reason why you've even heard of that movie is the copyright ran out, ran, ran out on it.
01:50:10 So TV stations start playing it.
01:50:13 And so that became just like the Christmas movie that was on at Christmas time, because TV stations could play it without having to worry about copyright.
01:50:22 Well, and then the all the people that made them, you know the OR at least the the people who I still owned.
01:50:30 The the studio or who had purchased cause it was made by I think it was made by RRKO or whatever, but whoever owned RKO, they got all ****** *** because all these people were were enjoying a movie for free and they couldn't milk any money out of it.
01:50:46 And so they found ways of of stopping it.
01:50:50 What they did is they said, well, OK, well, the copyright on the movie might have run out, but the copyright on the soundtrack is still, like, valid.
01:50:59 So you can't play the movie because the soundtracks in it.
01:51:02 And then I think they also said the copyright on the script was still.
01:51:07 Valid, so you can't play them, so it's just the movies ******* like 100 years old.
01:51:13 And they're still making money off it.
01:51:15 It just be once those those, those media properties spring into creation.
01:51:22 And they can make them, you know, make money.
01:51:24 Off of them for.
01:51:28 Forever and ever.
01:51:30 Yeah, same thing with like these patents, right?
01:51:31 Once you patent some, you only have to like actually create the.
01:51:34 Thing that you patent.
01:51:35 You can just like I have this idea that this theoretically would work this way, and then if someone actually gets it to work that way, you can you get money.
01:51:44 Now that's what you hear.
01:51:44 About these patent trolls, right?
01:51:46 That's what they do to make money.
01:51:49 You know, they, they they patent an idea with the hopes that someone will actually, eventually invent that thing.
01:51:55 And then you go after him the.
01:51:57 Whole intellectual property **** is.
01:51:59 Is a mess.
01:52:01 That's capitalism for you, I guess, right?
01:52:08 Let's take a look here.
01:52:11 That chat.
01:52:16 Chinese families get excited if their daughter is marrying anyone with a job.
01:52:21 Well, I don't know.
01:52:22 I don't know about Chinese.
01:52:30 Walt made a cartoon with Donald Duck holding up the palm of his hand to show a pentagram.
01:52:38 I don't think I've seen that one.
01:52:41 It's a wonderful life, 1946, exactly.
01:52:47 If the Jays hated Disney, then he was.
01:52:51 Good enough, his.
01:52:54 Bees, his BS was.
01:52:57 A rip off scam and degenerate, but an enemy of my enemy is.
01:53:01 My friend, I don't.
01:53:02 Know like the early Disney stuff.
01:53:06 I don't think was that degenerate.
01:53:10 The real early.
01:53:11 I don't know.
01:53:12 Maybe it was out to.
01:53:13 Go back and look at it.
01:53:16 Intellectual property is faking gay.
01:53:18 Yes, it is.
01:53:19 You can't invent things now without going broke fighting rich guys that claim they already own the patent.
01:53:26 No, it just it kills innovation.
01:53:28 And it it just again it's.
01:53:30 Just a way that the ruling class can keep.
01:53:32 The wealth in their hands because now let's say even if you invent something that's really good, well, in order to use it, you have to pay some ******* patent guy.
01:53:41 Well, now, even if it was something that you could manufacture in your garage or whatever, now you have to get that VC ******* money, right?
01:53:48 And now they own 75% or more.
01:53:50 Of your idea.
01:53:51 Because they paid off the patent troll.
01:53:54 So of course they're not going to they're not going.
01:53:56 To ******* change it.
01:53:58 Have you heard of this NFT stuff?
01:54:00 That has to do with intellectual property NFT.
01:54:01 Yeah, that.
01:54:02 That was the whole.
01:54:04 That was the very beginning of the the stream, but it doesn't have to do with intellectual property because you don't actually own it.
01:54:11 You know what I mean?
01:54:11 Like, that's what I don't understand about it is.
01:54:15 Like if you buy the the NFT token for like I was talking about, like if I made one for like this stream like.
01:54:22 Oh, here's the token for for tonight's stream and then someone bought it for like.
01:54:28 50 bucks or something, right?
01:54:30 Then so then nothing happens like they don't.
01:54:35 They can't.
01:54:36 They don't own the stream.
01:54:38 They can't stop you from watching the stream.
01:54:40 You know, they just have, like.
01:54:42 A token that says.
Speaker 2
01:54:44 They own the stream or.
Devon
01:54:45 You know, I mean, not even they.
01:54:47 I don't know.
01:54:47 I don't.
01:54:48 I don't see that I don't get.
01:54:49 It I don't understand.
01:54:50 It I don't see what you're paying for.
01:54:53 Other than like, like I said, it's like it's like a receipt saying that you.
01:54:56 Paid money for it.
01:54:57 But that seems to be it.
01:54:59 It's like saying I paid money for this thing, but I don't have it.
01:55:05 I don't.
01:55:06 I I don't.
01:55:07 I don't ******* get.
01:55:07 It I don't get it.
01:55:11 Walt Disney originally wanted to build expansions to Disneyland Park that exhibited American history and manifest destiny.
01:55:18 Today, it is a Jewish comic book creations for Marvel, Star, Star Wars, and Black Princesses marrying frogs or something.
01:55:26 Yeah, well, and they're ripping.
01:55:27 Out all the old.
01:55:28 Disneyland stuff like it's all gone now, right like.
01:55:31 Or Pirates of the Caribbean.
01:55:32 They're like, oh, this is racist.
01:55:34 I don't remember what they had a problem with, but they got same thing with it.
01:55:37 It's a small world.
01:55:38 They they they've gone around and taken out all the the white primacy out of Disneyland.
01:55:42 It's all gone.
01:55:48 You got me talking to a friend who was more knowledgeable about crypto should about NFT's. It's probably going to be used to make it so that a website won't accept your image without.
01:55:57 You having a?
01:55:57 The hash to copy.
01:56:00 You would have to buy the hash to submit it, all right?
01:56:03 So they're trying.
01:56:04 To see this is.
01:56:05 That's The thing is like I can't understand.
01:56:09 The why behind it.
01:56:11 You know why people would want?
01:56:12 To own it, but I guess if.
01:56:16 I mean that could be A use for it.
01:56:19 I don't, I don't know.
01:56:21 I don't know.
01:56:21 I'm I'm gonna.
01:56:22 I'm going to have to look into this further.
01:56:25 Because I I the last thing I'd want to do was put myself.
01:56:31 Into a situation where I like, don't own my own content.
01:56:34 You know what I mean?
01:56:35 Like, if it's just a receipt for a donation, that's one thing.
01:56:38 But if it's like giving rights to my content to someone else and now and now, now all of a sudden I can't even post my own videos.
01:56:47 I I definitely will not be doing that.
01:56:55 I ever looked into Philo Farnsworth and how the system ****** him.
01:57:01 No, that doesn't even sound familiar.
01:57:03 Ohh **** it, I'll look him up right now.
01:57:05 Filo Farnsworth.
01:57:07 That's sounds like the guy who made the.
01:57:11 The that carburetor thing right?
01:57:18 You got a weird name.
01:57:25 Oh, it says he invented the TV.
01:57:28 Let's take a look here.
01:57:32 Philo Taylor Farnsworth was an American inventor and television pioneer.
01:57:37 He made many crucial contributions to early development of all electronic television.
01:57:43 Oh, is this?
01:57:44 Wasn't he like a ham radio operator like a like a Mormon guy that invented TV?
01:57:49 Then they.
01:57:49 Just took it.
01:57:51 And he's best known for his 1927 invention of the first fully functional all electronic image pickup device, video camera tube.
01:58:01 The image I actually have some.
01:58:03 I have an old tube camera.
01:58:05 I've got a couple of old tube cameras I could I I I'd fully intend to use them on a stream because they work, they work and there's definite weird look about them because it's all it's all being picked up from a tube so it's got like the, you know.
01:58:21 Right, like it doesn't update really fast.
01:58:23 It's black and white.
01:58:24 Actually, I got one that's color, but it's got some burning it anyway, doesn't matter.
01:58:28 The image Dissector as well as the first fully functional and complete all electronic television system Farnsworth developed the television system, complete with receiver and camera, which he produced commercially through the Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation from 1938 to 1951.
01:58:49 In Fort Wayne, IN in later life, Farnsworth invented a small nuclear fusion device.
01:58:58 The Farnsworth Hirsch Fuser, employing inertial electrostatic confinement.
01:59:05 It was not a practical device for generation for generating nuclear power, though it provides A viable source of neutrons.
01:59:13 The design of his of this device has been inspirational or has been the inspiration for other fusion approaches, including the polywell.
01:59:21 This doesn't something I'm getting ****** over.
01:59:23 Let me see.
01:59:28 Legacy honors.
01:59:31 Popular culture.
01:59:34 They don't something about.
01:59:35 Him getting screwed over.
01:59:36 He's got like.
01:59:37 A **** ton of patents.
Speaker 2
01:59:41 Let's see here.
Devon
01:59:48 Yeah. The other thing AM.
01:59:49 I going to screw over.
01:59:54 I'll talk.
01:59:55 I'll look.
01:59:56 I'll look into him further.
01:59:56 He was a ham radio operator though, and.
02:00:00 Apparently that's what.
02:00:04 Got him into the whole whole thing and he was a Mormon.
02:00:07 I think.
02:00:08 I mean, he was born in.
02:00:09 Provo in like 1906, so the chances that he's Mormon is.
02:00:15 Pretty ******* high.
02:00:19 Yeah, I'm looking at that guy further.
02:00:21 He doesn't say anything here about him getting screwed over.
02:00:25 One of the first rides in Tomorrowland, one literally got shrunk into a.
02:00:31 Needle delivering.
02:00:32 I don't know you guys talking about.
02:00:37 Oh wait, you saying the ride is supposed to be looking look like a?
02:00:47 Like you shrink, I don't know what you talk about.
02:00:49 Anyway, Farnsworth regretted the invention of the television.
02:00:53 Allegedly was only proud of the invention.
02:00:55 After watching the televised moon landing didn't own a TV himself until then and didn't watch TV.
02:01:03 Not related, but interesting.
02:01:04 Steve Jobs never allowed his kids to use iPads.
02:01:13 Well, I mean, and I don't think drug dealers probably don't let let their well, I don't know depends on the drug dealer but.
02:01:18 Probably don't want their kids doing drugs.
02:01:24 The corporation stole his invention through BS patent law.
02:01:27 He never got rich.
02:01:29 OK, I was not aware of that.
02:01:36 He never made any money.
02:01:40 Yeah, I'll look into that further.
02:01:45 Everything is racist now.
02:01:46 I saw a tweet today where some crazy SJW type is claiming sunglasses are misogynistic because men can leer and scowl at women without being detected.
Speaker 2
02:02:00 All right.
Devon
02:02:04 Got your e-mail reply today won't reply.
02:02:07 Thanking you.
02:02:08 We'll just say it here.
02:02:09 All right.
02:02:09 Well, you are welcome.
02:02:11 Like I said, I I pretty sure I got back to everyone.
02:02:14 At least on this e-mail address, I will have to dig up the other one.
02:02:20 Eventually, because I'm sure there's people that you know, frustrated and with reason to be sent me a message months ago and I never responded.
02:02:29 So I will get back to those guys too.
02:02:33 Ever looked into Cosmos Cosmos?
02:02:39 No, I can't even say it.
02:02:41 What do you think about all the gun control crap that is coming through the Biden administration next week?
02:02:49 Yeah, it's gonna be drip, drip, drip.
02:02:51 They're never going to do the whole we're going to go door to door and, you know, confiscate guns because they know exactly where that'll lead.
02:03:00 They're they're it's, it's.
02:03:01 Boiling the frog, I mean, they've been doing it a really long time.
02:03:04 I mean, look, California has has already done some pretty ridiculous **** that, like, I would, I mean, owning a gun in California not only is that a pain in the ***, but like, you have to have a special California gun.
02:03:15 Like how stupid is that?
02:03:17 And they've managed to do it.
02:03:18 I don't see anyone challenging that in the Supreme Court and winning.
02:03:22 So that to me that says that it's it's legally possible for them to do that nationwide.
02:03:29 Why not, you know, and and perhaps even by executive order?
02:03:35 You know, so a lot of this stuff that that would be a significant change would be, you know, having ammunition taxes, having changing the capacity of magazines.
02:03:49 You know, doing the same kind of stupid **** that California did to the trigger mechanism requiring, well, I mean, this is stuff that we we.
02:03:58 Read through.
02:03:58 The the the the Bills that that were posted online the the way that at least you know the way that they were written at the.
02:04:06 I don't.
02:04:07 I don't know if they're going to pass that stuff, like I said.
02:04:10 So I'd be surprised if they were able to pass that stuff, but some of the stuff they can just do by executive order, why not?
02:04:17 No one's going to challenge it and and win.
02:04:21 So look you should.
02:04:26 Look, you should have had your guns.
02:04:27 A while back.
02:04:29 You know you shouldn't.
02:04:30 You shouldn't be worrying too much.
02:04:31 You should already.
02:04:31 Have like that.
02:04:33 I mean, you should be obviously keep an eye on it and and push back on it as much as.
02:04:37 You you can, but don't think that people weren't pushing back on the Brady bill or that people weren't, you know, like every time this stuff happens, a larger number than exists today we're pushing back on it and they failed.
02:04:48 You see, again zoom out the.
02:04:51 Every year, not only does it get worse, the reason why it's speeding up is the demographic that was attempting to slow it down and failing.
02:05:03 They're shrinking while the demographic that or demographics rather that wants to make all these changes is growing not just in, in numbers in terms of votes and stuff like that, but like in, I mean they're they're holding office.
02:05:17 I mean, again Kamala Harris.
02:05:20 You know, just think of it this way in your parents lifetime, many of you, it was controversial.
02:05:28 It was controversial that JFK was Catholic.
02:05:32 It's controversial that there was going to be a Catholic president.
02:05:40 That's that's how different it is.
02:05:44 That's that's how much and and like like I said in in your parents, many of you, your parents lifetimes.
02:05:51 It went from well, I don't know.
02:05:53 We're worried about having a Catholic president cause.
02:05:55 What does that mean is?
02:05:56 He going to be, you know, subordinate to the Pope or, you know, like, you know, we're the.
02:06:02 You know, we're a white Protestant nation, and so this is going to be a little bit weird to now, like.
02:06:07 The Supreme Court is.
02:06:09 Well, I guess we have a Catholic President. Still Biden's a Catholic president.
02:06:14 And, you know and now.
02:06:17 We've got we had Obama and, you know, look, Nancy Pelosi's Catholic.
02:06:23 You know Biden's Catholic all, all these you know, that's The thing is, is.
02:06:31 Catholics really can't make the same complaints about not having power influence.
02:06:37 Your group has power influence.
02:06:40 You know, and look, it's not just you guys. I mean, Romney's a Mormon and he's a *******, right?
02:06:47 And there's plenty of there's plenty of ship bag Protestants too, but yeah, that's that's how much the landscape has changed.
02:06:56 And when JFK was was running for president, that was like one of the big scary.
02:07:01 Oh, no.
02:07:01 I don't know.
02:07:02 He's a Catholic and now that, like no one cares about that at all.
02:07:07 And nor do they care about the the fact that Kamala Harris is is not even an American, and she she ****** her way into the into politics.
02:07:21 And and she hates people like you.
02:07:25 Like, actually hates people like you.
02:07:29 And that's not hyperbole.
02:07:30 She hates people like you.
02:07:35 And she's going to be president.
02:07:39 I mean I.
02:07:39 Don't know if you've been watching Biden lately.
02:07:41 It's like every clip.
02:07:42 He just seems like worse every every clip.
02:07:46 I mean, he was pretty bad during the campaign.
02:07:48 He's not even making public appearances.
02:07:51 And the the, the handful of public appearances that he that he has to do, which are under very controlled, in a very controlled environment with, you know, like very limited access to him, he's you can tell he's he's ******* deteriorating.
02:08:08 He's he's spiraling down and this guy.
02:08:13 Harris will be president.
02:08:16 Perhaps even sooner rather than later.
02:08:21 And then she'll be the one making executive orders.
02:08:27 OK, let's take a look here.
02:08:31 When Harris takes over, whites are ******.
02:08:34 Yeah, well, the whites already ******, but I think that'll just speed things up a little bit.
02:08:45 What I understand is why did Biden do this?
02:08:48 He betrayed his own people, appointed nothing but our enemies.
02:08:51 Not, not not his enemies.
02:08:55 He wants this.
02:08:58 He he was celebrating whites being in the minority when he was vice president to uh Obama. He was talking about how in 2017 we'd be in the absolute minority and what a great.
02:09:08 Thing that was.
02:09:12 Now, how much of that was Biden going through that same baby baby boomer education system that that we went over last dream like cause that that I look, I think that's.
02:09:22 Part of it.
02:09:24 How much of it is that he's just a a globalist puppet?
02:09:27 Obviously that's part of it.
02:09:30 And how much of it is he's just a sociopath that does not give a **** and who it likely rapes children and like, that's the level of of bad person we're dealing with.
02:09:41 That's obviously part of it too.
02:09:45 You know this?
02:09:47 This this, this connection that you feel.
02:09:51 Like, let's just get this straight like this connection that you feel to your people, that the people listening that are white, that feel like a white culture and and a white nation is something worth preserving and that it's a preference that you have that you you like.
02:10:07 You know the.
02:10:08 You you like the idea?
02:10:11 Of living in a white society that with that cares about the interests of of white people.
02:10:18 That's not the majority view, even amongst white people. That's just not like Biden's, not the weirdo. You're the weirdo.
02:10:29 And I know that's hard for a lot of people to understand, but like, you're the weirdo.
02:10:33 I mean, even amongst right wing boomers and right.
02:10:36 In other in.
02:10:36 Not even just boomers.
02:10:38 There's a lot of libertarian, you know, leaning white people.
02:10:44 That same thing you start talking about looking after white.
02:10:49 Interest and they they ******* have an aneurysm.
02:10:54 And start screaming and babbling irrationally and calling you Hitler.
02:11:01 And again, I don't know how much of that's the programming.
02:11:04 Probably a good chunk.
02:11:06 Probably as we saw the contrast between the American Boomers and the uh, the South African boomers, right?
02:11:14 A lot of that's a lot of that's programming.
02:11:17 Because what do you think happens like after they got the boomers at an early age in this, you know, the Springfield plan and everything in the the the Frankfurt School and all those other programs that happened post World War 2 that were actively, actively.
02:11:34 Look, we watched the whole ******* video on it.
02:11:36 They they were celebrating the fact that they were going to actively go after the children, the white children in America, and program them to to not have pride in their culture or their people, but instead to Revere the cultures of the people showing up.
02:11:55 And not only that, they were going to promote that same reverence in the people that were showing up about their own cultures.
02:12:03 So the new people showing up weren't going were being told that they didn't have to respect the culture, that the of their new country.
02:12:13 And they were supposed to be proud to be an American.
02:12:15 But it was a hyphenated American, right?
02:12:16 They were supposed.
02:12:17 To be proud to.
02:12:18 Be, you know, Mexican American or African American or Chinese or whatever, right?
02:12:26 And the the American American was supposed to be very respectful.
02:12:34 Of this, of this hyphenated part of their, their fellow citizen.
02:12:42 And have have no no.
02:12:47 Feel no obligation or even desire.
02:12:50 To preserve.
02:12:53 The culture of their people.
02:12:56 And so you had the boomers grow up like that and then?
02:12:58 Look, it gets worse every generation, right?
02:13:01 Because then they did a ******* number on the boomers.
02:13:05 And then the next generation they're being raised, at least with the boomers, they're being raised, at least they're gonna they're very least they'll encounter people that that never were part of that educational system.
02:13:20 Right.
02:13:21 So they're they're going at least and look, maybe they'll they'll have no respect for those people.
02:13:26 Those people will be depicted as the, you know, like the Archie bunkers of the world and stuff like that.
02:13:31 But at least they'll encounter those people.
02:13:34 Well, I mean if if.
02:13:36 You were raised by boomers.
02:13:37 You're not even encountering those people.
02:13:41 Because they're all dead.
02:13:44 And then you know.
02:13:45 And it just gets worse.
02:13:46 Every generation you're getting further and further and further.
02:13:50 From that moment where white primacy was the norm.
02:13:55 In the same way that I was saying.
02:13:56 Like you know.
02:13:58 A lot of people, younger people, have never lived in a reality without the Internet.
02:14:06 And so because I remember a time before the Internet.
02:14:10 It's we have there's subtle differences in the way that.
02:14:15 We see the world.
02:14:18 And some not so subtle I think.
02:14:20 Well, in that same.
02:14:21 Way we've never.
02:14:24 I mean, me neither.
02:14:24 We've we've never lived in a in a country.
02:14:27 That had that was.
02:14:30 That had a functioning patriarchy.
02:14:33 A functioning White Patriarch and just put that way.
02:14:35 We've never we've never once.
02:14:37 And no one listening here unless you're really ******* old, has lived in a country with a functioning white patriarchy.
02:14:46 So we don't even know what it's like.
02:14:49 So it it gets it it it makes it first of.
02:14:51 All it makes it easier to lie about.
02:14:54 Right.
02:14:55 Because if if, if you're telling if you're brainwashing boomers, some of what you're telling them about, you know, the evils of white people that that that's going to apply to their parents.
02:15:06 And so it might not be as easy to say, well, oh, it's so evil because you know.
02:15:10 This cause you're like well.
02:15:11 I don't, I don't.
02:15:11 Know Uncle, Uncle Bill doesn't seem so evil.
02:15:16 You know, but we're so we're so disconnected from a time of white white patriarchy.
02:15:23 Especially people that that have no interest in in believing that and you know a lot of these NPCS, people know inner voice.
02:15:32 They're just going to eat it all up.
02:15:33 They have no how would they know?
02:15:36 Because we, you know, we've talked about, like, fake news, right.
02:15:38 Fake news eventually turns into fake history.
02:15:41 If you open up your history books and you look at at what they say happened in the in the civil rights movement.
02:15:48 He was all peaceful protests.
02:15:51 Peaceful protests.
02:15:52 Well, now we know what what they mean when they say peaceful protest.
02:15:58 But if you're raised in the education system, it was all peaceful protests and you know Martin Luther King was like this ******* genius pacifist that totally reshaped the world and and died for equality.
02:16:15 And you know, it's so.
02:16:19 There, and there's and look, you don't.
02:16:20 And it's you're so separated by by time.
02:16:25 That you there's no one that you in your life that can say no.
02:16:28 Actually I was.
02:16:29 I was there, you know, it was not a peaceful protest.
02:16:32 That's and that's the same ****.
02:16:33 They're gonna tell your kids about George Floyd.
02:16:37 They're going to tell your kids and your kids, kids and so forth, that George Floyd didn't do nothing.
02:16:45 George Floyd was just this innocent black man. He was going to be an engineer some day. He was #1 in his class. He was artistic. He was a dreamer. He was a man among men.
02:17:00 And one day, he went to the store.
02:17:04 No, he went to the blood bank to go donate blood.
02:17:08 For disaster relief.
02:17:10 And to save white people that were poor.
02:17:14 And on the way to his truck.
02:17:23 ******* evil white.
02:17:26 Hateful Nazi.
02:17:29 Ran up to George Floyd and shot *** **** off with a shotgun and then hung him from a tree.
02:17:37 And while while lighting him on fire and and ******* on his smoldering corpse afterwards.
02:17:45 And then there was peaceful protests.
02:17:48 And that's why you go to George Floyd Elementary, son.
02:17:55 That's going to happen.
02:17:57 I mean, I mean slightly hyperbolic, but I mean slightly.
02:18:03 That's going to happen.
02:18:06 And in the same way that black people keep bringing up cases from the civil rights movement over and over and over again.
02:18:17 They'll bring up George Floyd forever.
02:18:19 That's never going away, you know.
02:18:22 He's he's now.
02:18:23 He's now part of, like, the the black version of the Holocaust, you know?
02:18:28 He's part of that mythology.
02:18:33 And unfortunately.
02:18:36 You know, white people aren't.
02:18:37 Don't get that mythology.
02:18:40 And there's only one way to really get it.
02:18:45 I think that's where we're headed.
02:18:50 You know persecution or it, or at the very least a persecution narrative, regardless of whether it's true or not, brings people together.
02:18:59 That's something that that's one of.
02:19:02 That's another reason why perhaps white people don't have the same kind of in Group preference is because I think.
02:19:08 One of the things that drives in Group preference is persecution, and when you've been dominating the planet for ******* centuries.
02:19:18 Sure, white people have have been the victim of a lot of atrocities and evil.
02:19:22 But when, by and large, your people have been the dominant force in the world for, you know, like I said, centuries.
02:19:32 It's that part of your your people's narrative goes away.
Speaker 2
02:19:39 Right.
Devon
02:19:41 It goes away.
02:19:46 Now and maybe that's why you could say that that or at least partially, why whites were so successful is their narrative wasn't a victim narrative so much as it was a narrative of exploration, A narrative of, of conquest, a narrative of innovation.
02:20:04 You know, it was all these positive.
02:20:08 Well, those sorts of things usually don't apparently lead to in Group preference.
02:20:17 In the same way that a victim narrative does in the same way that a you know, like a Holocaust narrative or a slavery narrative does, right?
02:20:30 Unfortunately, I I think in order for.
02:20:34 Whites to have that?
02:20:36 That seemingly necessary piece of the puzzle.
02:20:41 You're going to have to go through some.
02:20:44 You have to get.
02:20:45 Yeah, you have.
02:20:46 To experience some pain.
02:20:49 Of historic proportions.
02:20:52 And then, yeah, I guess I'm, I'm guessing.
02:20:56 And a lot of it is because, as you said, you know, there's people like Biden that that should be part of your group that should have in Group preference that should be preventing you from experiencing the kind of pain that gives you a a lasting victim narrative.
02:21:12 But is who is instead helping engineer it.
02:21:19 You know, again, in a weird way, it's because there is no.
02:21:24 There is no in Group.
02:21:25 He doesn't have in Group preference you know.
02:21:29 So maybe this is just nature's way of giving you ingroup preference you.
02:21:32 Know like you just have to.
02:21:35 I don't know.
02:21:36 I I hope not.
02:21:37 But I, you know, maybe it is.
02:21:39 Take a look at.
02:21:40 Chat here.
02:21:41 That makes sense about people dominating the world.
02:21:44 Don't have an in Group preference.
02:21:45 That's probably why a lot of meds and slaves are ethnocentric.
02:21:49 Unlike English and French.
02:21:52 Well, yeah, yeah.
02:21:53 I mean, I guess in a way you could say that.
02:21:58 I mean the the.
02:22:01 The slobs.
02:22:02 I mean, the Russians are more ethnocentric and I'd.
02:22:05 Say that they.
02:22:06 I don't.
02:22:07 I went to have dominated the the planet in the same way that the West did, but they certainly dominated a a huge part of the planet.
02:22:15 And so they they have, they're they, but but they're also pretty ethnocentric.
02:22:19 So I don't know.
02:22:20 There's it look, it's more.
02:22:22 Just it's never just one thing.
02:22:23 But I do think that's a piece of the puzzle.
02:22:25 I think that if you have the victim narrative, the persecution narrative look, Mormons have a persecution narrative.
02:22:35 And it's it's taught in the church and it is part of the glue that holds them together.
02:22:41 You know, their their persecution narrative is that you know, ohh, we were just my our business trying to trying to start our church in Missouri and then and look.
02:22:52 Good parts of this are true.
02:22:54 Enough of it is true to where it's basically true.
02:22:57 Then the Missouri started just murdering the **** out of the Mormons.
02:23:01 The governor made it legal to kill Mormons, and Mormons abandoned their their land and traveled across the Utah and a bunch of them died.
02:23:10 And they made, you know, the the.
02:23:12 Salt Lake.
02:23:13 And so that's part of their persecution narrative.
02:23:15 Right.
02:23:15 And like the federal government, you know, went after them and tried to to, to deny them statehood and all, you know, like, so they they've all they've had adversity I guess right.
02:23:25 Like they've been, or at least even look, you can look at the details and there's probably things that obviously they're.
02:23:31 Bending, they're biasing and bending right, but ultimately it doesn't take away their persecution narrative, right? And it's a way more true than other people's persecution.
02:23:45 Narrative and put it to you that way.
02:23:50 And so it it's part of the glue that holds them together.
02:23:52 That's part of why it's the curriculum that you learn when you're a kid.
02:23:56 Growing up in that church.
02:23:58 You know, because it's very useful in in in creating in Group preference.
02:24:04 And unfortunately, like if you're American.
02:24:07 I mean, can you really play the victim like?
02:24:11 I mean, we've been pretty, we've been victimizing.
02:24:16 Countries for a long time.
02:24:20 You know, we're the we're the bad guy.
02:24:23 In a lot of situations.
02:24:25 And we have not been tossed around like a rag doll by any other country.
02:24:32 In a really really really, really long time.
02:24:35 And in fact you could even say to some extent ever.
02:24:38 Right, at least the way that it's taught in school.
02:24:41 American history, the way it's taught in school, is just like this string of ******* righteous victories, right?
02:24:48 You know it's.
02:24:49 It's not always easy, but in the end, America always wins.
02:24:54 There's this, there's there's no moment in American history where that, you know, they're the the Americans are enslaved or the Americans are.
02:25:04 Or even subordinate, really.
02:25:06 After the revolution, you know?
02:25:10 So there's no, there's no persecution narrative.
02:25:13 There's no, therefore there's no.
02:25:16 In Group preference.
02:25:19 Because in the same way that I think that one of the reasons why you see these actors and these rich people be complete ******* cucks is because they have this guilt for their success because they know they didn't really earn it right.
02:25:34 Like a lot of these people are generational wealth ************* like.
02:25:39 In Hollywood, right, a lot of these people, they didn't just show up, you know.
02:25:42 Get off a bus and.
02:25:44 And start acting on a street corner and they work, you know, I mean, like, a lot of these people are are second and third generation Hollywood royalty, right?
02:25:53 And so they don't feel like they really.
02:25:55 Earned their wealth.
02:25:57 And look, and even if.
02:25:58 You did show up in Hollywood.
02:26:00 Your job is pretty ******* easy for like, the amount of money you get paid.
02:26:05 So there's there's again, there's a certain amount of of guilt associated with that, with being like being so successful.
02:26:16 When when you see people that are more deserving than you are not not having anything even close to what you have.
02:26:26 And I think Americans as a as a nation, as a whole, suffer from a version of that right.
02:26:33 And I mean, look, you see evidence of that.
02:26:36 When you have all these charities right that try to guilt Americans and give getting ohh look at the black kids with the flies walking around on their eyeballs and.
02:26:43 The you know.
02:26:44 Like that kind of **** with the sad.
02:26:46 Music in the background.
02:26:48 You know, even has really nothing to do with you, and you should probably be prioritizing the poor people in your country first over these randos on the other side of the planet that are only going to get a small fraction of what you're donating anyway, but no on emotional level.
02:27:04 That's what affects you, because the the disparity is so great.
02:27:09 Because you are #1.
02:27:11 You know you live in America.
02:27:14 And so the disparity is so great that you feel bad for it.
02:27:17 You feel guilty for having all these nice things.
02:27:20 It's like when parents at the table would say ohh you better eat all your food, you know they're starving.
02:27:25 Kids in Africa.
02:27:26 Like like So what?
02:27:30 So like if if if I don't eat the food there you know like what happened.
02:27:35 Like doesn't the two are not even connected.
02:27:40 But it's guilt.
02:27:42 It's guilt for the prosperity that they have.
02:27:46 And so it it does the opposite.
02:27:47 It does the opposite of in Group preference.
02:27:50 Look, this might just be one of those part of the mechanics of the the the way history echoes or cycles or repeats or however you want to look at it.
02:28:00 You know, there's gotta be reasons why that happens and and you know several countless reasons, but this might just be one of them.
02:28:08 There might just be this just might be a part of human behavior in in a way, it's kind of like how the equal Librium works out, right?
02:28:17 Well, it's like that South African chick.
02:28:19 Her quote with Spangler, you know, after the pinnacle is reach comes the fall or whatever the exact wording was.
02:28:26 But that's maybe that's part of why is your society has no victim narrative to hold them together.
02:28:36 They have an increasing amount of guilt for their success.
02:28:41 You know you have, like I said, a plethora of other reasons, but that I think those are two probably.
02:28:47 Fairly significant factors in that.
02:28:52 In in terms of the the group psychology of what's going on there.
02:28:58 And in countries that look and that's probably why a lot of Americans.
02:29:03 Also wanted to welcome in all these these people from the poor countries.
02:29:09 You know, we talked about the 1965 Act, the Immigration Act, that really ****** us demographically. Yeah, people didn't vote for it. You know, probably would have lost if you'd put it.
02:29:20 To a popular.
02:29:22 But they also didn't go and burn down.
02:29:24 ******* washed it over it, you know.
02:29:25 Like they.
02:29:25 Just a lot of people probably were OK with.
02:29:29 You know, when they added the poem to the Statue of Liberty.
02:29:34 You know what does it make it sound like it?
02:29:36 It's basically describing what I'm talking about this.
02:29:40 You know, send us your your worst people because we're so charitable because you know, it's this philanthropic.
02:29:47 Psychosis, you know, or whatever you want to call it this weird.
02:29:50 This weird.
02:29:55 Feeling obligated to those less fortunate and look some of that might have ties to Christianity.
02:30:01 You could even say, and you saw the same sort of a thing happen when not just Americans, but Westerner, you know, we're talking about the the UK when they go around and they would colonize.
02:30:14 Third World countries or primitive countries around the world, you know, there was a lot of charity involved with that.
02:30:20 I mean, look, you know, they didn't get a whole lot of thanks for it, but.
02:30:24 There was a lot of charity.
02:30:27 There was a.
02:30:28 Lot of of again, like I said when you know America took over, conquered this continent and took it from the the native population.
02:30:38 They gave the native population reservations.
02:30:43 Out of out of what?
02:30:44 Out of what feeling exactly what do you think?
02:30:46 Guilt, right?
02:30:50 And who else would do that?
02:30:55 Is that is.
02:30:55 That the kind of behavior you see happening in Israel when they have.
02:31:01 Is that is that the relationship that Israel has with?
02:31:05 With the Palestinians, I mean, I guess in a weird way, you could say that they made like a little apartheid.
02:31:10 State form, but they they certainly won't let let it go.
02:31:14 They won't let them.
02:31:14 Have independence, right?
02:31:21 And I mean, you know, they have the the African immigrants that did go to Israel, what they do, they sterilized them against their will.
02:31:34 Because they have a totally different mindset.
02:31:37 They have a totally different psychology.
02:31:40 And they have in Group preference and they have a great, probably a a greater desire than the other people.
02:31:47 To preserve their people and and.
Speaker 3
02:31:50 OK.
Devon
02:31:51 Guarantee that it remains.
02:31:54 An ethno state.
02:31:56 Because it's so.
02:31:58 Tied to their narrative.
02:32:01 And Americans don't have a narrative like that.
02:32:04 Again, well, I'll say again.
02:32:06 One of the reasons why.
02:32:08 Mormons are patriotic.
02:32:10 Is their Zionist in a way.
02:32:13 But their Zion is Utah, you know, like there there's Zion is Salt Lake City.
02:32:20 You know what, I.
02:32:21 Mean and so they feel like that's a a religious, a religiously important part of Earth is.
02:32:31 And that's just something that not a lot of Americans have a version of, and like, it's not even that strong among Mormons, but.
02:32:38 It does exist.
02:32:39 Mormons do have, like a weird.
02:32:42 Well, I guess it's understandable if you understand the story.
02:32:45 Of their religion, but they do have a a a sense that America is something.
02:32:53 That they have a religious tie to.
02:32:56 And most people don't have that a lot of.
02:32:58 People don't have that.
02:33:03 OK, let's take a look here.
02:33:10 In Group preference is an evolutionary adaptation, that is, that is, everyone is born with.
02:33:16 Well, I I don't know.
02:33:18 I don't know that that's.
02:33:20 The best thing is I don't know how much of that is is environment, you know, like after watching that boomer.
02:33:29 Contrast in my last stream I I don't know.
02:33:31 I think more of its environment than we think.
02:33:36 I mean, look, yeah, certainly some of it's.
02:33:38 Going to be biological.
02:33:42 But I I just, I think that environment plays a big role.
02:33:47 UMI went to church Mormon and it's all old people. Church attendance is way down. I'm not surprised. I guess that probably depends on where.
02:33:55 You go to.
02:33:58 What do you think about the speculations going around online that Israel is getting a different vaccine against the Kung flu?
02:34:07 Yeah, it's possible.
02:34:11 I don't remember which one they.
02:34:12 Got I.
02:34:13 I haven't really been keeping I the last few days.
02:34:16 I haven't been keeping up with stuff because I was just doing the emails for like the last 12.
02:34:20 Hours like.
02:34:22 And then stuff around the the homestead.
02:34:26 I think the session is a real possibility going into the future.
02:34:29 I don't see the country holding together peacefully.
Speaker
02:34:32 Yeah, I I.
Devon
02:34:32 Think that's an option?
02:34:33 I hope it's a a peaceful option.
02:34:37 A friend of mine, young dude who is relatively high-ranking member of the Mormon Mormon Church, says the big problem they are facing is that they are acting more like Neo lives as opposed to Zionists, which is what they need.
02:34:53 Well, there, look at. It's bound to happen, right? Every it's happened before, you know, like the Mormon church did not allow blacks to have the priesthood until I think it was 1978.
02:35:06 Something like that.
02:35:08 So I mean that was a that was a boomer influenced change.
02:35:15 You know, that was obviously influenced by the civil rights movement and all that stuff.
02:35:22 Unless you really believe God came down and said OK, I've. I've decided Black's gonna have the priesthood now.
02:35:26 That it's 1978.
02:35:28 You know, you know, come on.
02:35:30 So it it was it.
02:35:31 Look they, they they.
02:35:33 Go with the wind blows just as much as anyone else.
02:35:35 I just think they lagged behind a little bit, you know, longer.
02:35:43 There's a study with with babies where they recoil from people of different ethnicities other than their parents.
02:35:50 It's a really odd study, but it's real.
02:35:52 Yeah, no, I've seen that.
02:35:53 In fact, there's a study where black babies prefer white mothers.
02:35:57 If you can believe that.
02:36:00 How is the telegram chat?
02:36:02 I don't think it's I I don't think the telegram chat is going to come back.
02:36:05 I think we're going to instead have a lot of people I have, I have to look at it.
02:36:09 A lot of people recommended something called matrix that I've I've never even looked at.
02:36:13 There's other, which is I guess, somewhat like discord, but that's my, my, my, that's where my hat.
02:36:21 Is that right?
02:36:21 Now is any kind of chat platform that we roll out is going to be something where I can't just get a message saying ohh someone said something bad and now it's gone and I don't want to ******* deal with that.
02:36:33 And there's just nothing.
02:36:34 There's nothing that's that.
02:36:36 I mean, if telegram.
02:36:38 Is going to shut you down for saying naughty things.
02:36:40 And look, I still don't know.
02:36:43 What it was that did that?
02:36:45 But if Telegram is going to do that, then.
02:36:48 You know, I can't think of a platform that's going to let us.
02:36:52 Let us exist, so I'd rather it be something that I run and it's going to be have to be something that has mods because.
02:37:00 I don't wanna get like, you know, if someone tries to take us down through other means or get us in legal trouble by posting.
02:37:06 Like bad **** in there that would give the the authorities an excuse to come after us if it's a server that I personally run.
02:37:15 So yeah, it's.
02:37:18 It's a complicated thing.
02:37:19 A lot of people sent in a lot of suggestions and most of them I have no I have no experience with, so I'm it's going to take me a couple of days to go through and test drive some of this.
02:37:28 Stuff and just take a look at it.
02:37:35 It's amazing how many Floyds drop left and right and everyone remembers them for decades, yet no one remembers Malcolm X or soul.
02:37:44 It's such an ape like attitude.
02:37:46 It makes me so angry.
02:37:48 Well, it's it's just they.
02:37:49 They're look the people.
02:37:52 People also don't remember, like, you know, there's some, like all you have to do is is every single day, every single day, there's a horrific black on white crime where like horrific.
02:38:08 And no one remembers these victims.
02:38:10 Like most people don't remember Ashley Babbitt?
02:38:12 And that just happened a couple months ago.
02:38:15 A lot of you guys listening will think, oh, that sounds familiar.
02:38:17 I feel like I should know who that is, but I don't.
02:38:20 That was the the Maga lady that got shot in the ******* neck by captain diversity at the Capitol.
02:38:25 And they won't release his name.
02:38:28 Because he's captain diversity and promoted Black Lives Matter.
02:38:33 On social media.
02:38:38 But yeah, that's because again you that that's how you know you're.
02:38:41 Not in control.
02:38:43 If you had the power, it would be it.
02:38:45 Would be the opposite.
02:38:47 If you had the power, all these FBI investigations that have been directed towards the MAGA riot people or whatever you want to call them would have been directed towards Antifa.
02:39:00 People like Hillary Clinton would have been investigated.
02:39:04 You know, like that you don't.
02:39:06 You you have no power.
02:39:10 Our side.
02:39:13 Trump was like an illusion of power.
02:39:17 Trump was the security blanket.
02:39:23 For a.
02:39:26 A shrinking.
02:39:28 Group, whose who had lost its power and just didn't realize it yet.
02:39:37 And that's still the case.
02:39:38 That's still the case.
02:39:40 I mean the.
02:39:41 This the whole the next, I mean, look, they're going to now they get to have their cake and eat it too, right, because now they can still have Biden pass all the laws that, you know, all the executive orders he wants.
02:39:53 They I mean, look, this is perfect if you're, if you're the globalist like this is like the best situation ever.
02:40:00 Right, because now you still get to have the distraction that is Trump, right?
02:40:05 Like you still get to have Trump come out and do speeches at CPAC and tell people to donate to whatever and and trust the plan.
02:40:14 And you know, whatever.
02:40:14 Right.
02:40:15 And look, there's going to be ******* that that still literally trust the plan.
02:40:19 Like, as in they still think.
02:40:20 It was real.
02:40:21 And so there's and then a lot of those people who now know maybe that the the queue plan was fake, they still love Trump.
02:40:29 They're never going to.
02:40:30 That's never going to go away.
02:40:32 So now they get to have the guy that they want doing the things that.
02:40:36 They want and, but people aren't freaking out about it because, well, we're going to win in four more years.
02:40:42 In four more years, we'll get Trump on that, then, then, then, then the plan will happen.
02:40:50 No, in four more years, you're just going to be that much.
02:40:54 In that much of A ******** position.
02:41:02 Yeah, trust sessions and trust Ray.
02:41:07 So anyway guys.
Speaker 3
02:41:09 Hopefully hopefully this.
Devon
02:41:13 I feel like this stream got better.
02:41:14 It had a really rough start.
02:41:16 Oh my God, that was a rough start.
Speaker
02:41:19 Ohh man.
Devon
02:41:22 Part of that was I was just, I've honestly, I just had like the splitting.
02:41:26 Headache and like my.
02:41:28 I I had slept weird because of the the e-mail.
02:41:31 I I knew I had to.
02:41:33 I told you guys I would get all those emails responded to before this stream tonight and I would not go to bed.
02:41:40 I well, I here's The thing is I was like, I'm not going.
02:41:44 To go to sleep.
02:41:45 Until I've responded to all of them and there were so many, and we're just good.
02:41:49 I'm glad.
02:41:51 I'm not complaining.
02:41:51 I'm glad that there was a lot of them.
02:41:53 That's that's really I'm I really appreciate it.
02:41:56 I really do.
02:41:56 And by the way, I.
02:41:59 Hand hand responded, hand wrote.
02:42:01 Every one of those responses, even the ones that seem copied and pasted because look.
02:42:06 I got a.
02:42:06 Little robotic I hand tied to every single one of those those responses.
02:42:12 Nothing was copied and pasted.
02:42:14 And after I got through like almost all of my I was I I just had to sleep for a little bit.
02:42:22 And so I did take a little.
02:42:23 Bit of a.
02:42:23 Nap and I then I responded to the rest of them and then it was like I had to go live.
02:42:29 I had like 3 hours.
02:42:30 I was like, oh, should I?
02:42:31 Should I just try to sleep?
Speaker 2
02:42:32 Like a minute.
Devon
02:42:33 And then I did and that's.
02:42:35 Almost, sometimes that does.
02:42:37 More bad than good, like as.
02:42:38 Then I wake up and I'm just like I just.
02:42:40 I just felt, I don't know.
02:42:42 I just felt like, yeah, I was, like, more tired.
02:42:46 I should just stayed up anyway.
02:42:48 And then my ******* in the ******* cat.
02:42:50 Anyway, I'm still kind of.
02:42:53 I still kind of a.
02:42:53 Headache and I'm a little.
02:42:54 Frankie, I guess.
02:42:56 So I'm going to go out.
02:42:57 And try to shoot.
02:43:01 I'm gonna unleash my aggression on some furry little rabbits.
02:43:07 Who I've, I've.
02:43:08 I've almost.
02:43:09 I've so I've shot at him so many times.
02:43:12 I don't know how I've missed the last time one of the times it would have hit him right in the ******* head, but he was.
02:43:18 He was on the other side of this this chicken wire fence and I was like, no.
02:43:24 Big deal, right?
02:43:24 Like what are the?
02:43:25 This is.
02:43:26 That's that the pellets going to like, hit the chicken wire well pretty good apparently, because he just ******* smacked the chicken wire and away he went.
02:43:36 It would have.
02:43:36 It would have.
02:43:37 It would have been a.
02:43:37 Kill shot.
02:43:38 I had it perfect.
02:43:40 Had it ******* perfect anyway, doesn't matter.
02:43:42 So I'm gonna go and try to kill.
02:43:43 A rabbit.
02:43:45 And then I'm going to crash out.
02:43:46 Crash the **** out, but yeah, and then I'll once I wake up tomorrow, I'll take a look at all these suggestions you guys have sent me.
02:43:56 Also, a lot of people sent me like music and artwork and stuff like that.
02:44:01 You know, all that's all of it was really good.
02:44:05 Like you guys got a lot of talented people out there, so that's really cool.
02:44:09 And you know, even those of you who didn't send something like that, you know, sounds like our audience is.
02:44:15 Well, first of all, it's more international than I thought it was.
02:44:17 So that's cool, but also you guys all seem like you're pretty.
02:44:23 You know, high IQ normal people.
02:44:25 What I was expecting at least like a few crazies and I don't think I got any real crazies.
02:44:29 So that's good too.
02:44:33 So alright guys anyway.
02:44:35 Hope you enjoyed the stream.
02:44:38 Hope you have a good Wednesday.
02:44:43 For black pilled.
02:44:45 I am of course.
02:44:48 Devin stack.