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Well the virus has now killed more than a hundred people in China and new cases have been confirmed around the world. | |
You don't want to frighten the American public. | ||
France and South Korea have also got evacuation plans. | ||
But you need to prepare for and assume. | ||
Broadly warning Americans to avoid all non-essential travel to China. | ||
This is going to be a real serious problem. | ||
France, Australia, Canada, the US, Singapore, Cambodia, Vietnam, the list goes on. | ||
Health officials are investigating more than 100 possible cases in the US. | ||
Germany, a man has contracted the virus. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
Japan, where a bus driver contracted the virus. | ||
Coronavirus has killed more than 100 people there and infected more than 4,500. | ||
We continue to grow more and more dependent on technology as it advances and evolves over time. | ||
From smartphones in our pockets to smartwatches on our wrists, we are getting ever closer to merging our bodies with the latest tech that we develop. | ||
This is exactly what is happening in Sweden. | ||
High-tech futuristic microchips are being implanted under people's skin to help them carry out daily tasks such as opening locked doors, accessing public transportation, and even making payments using nothing but their hands. | ||
Ever since 2014, approximately 6,000 people in Sweden have had a Biohacks microchip implanted into their hands. | ||
This biocompatible near-field communication or NFC implant is about the size of a grain of rice that can be easily inserted under the skin. | ||
The chips typically are inserted into the skin just above each user's thumb, using a syringe similar to that used for giving vaccinations. | ||
These implants can also be used to store emergency contact details, social media profiles, or e-tickets for events and rail journeys within Sweden. | ||
According to its pioneers, in the future, the chip will be able to accurately portray health metrics taken from inside the body. | ||
So, they predict that millions of people will eventually have this technology implanted under their skins to make their lives more convenient. | ||
OK, it's Saturday, 27 November, the Year of Our Lord 2021, the second part of our Saturday show, another special. | ||
We pride ourselves on signal, not noise here and getting this audience prepared for in the information to get ahead of the curve in their personal life, their professional life, their community's life, their nation's life. | ||
One of the things we've been hammering on over the last couple of years, but really when we got Joe Allen here full time, is transhumanism. | ||
So I want to go back and give some of the fundamentals, particularly, let's be brutally frank, on a weekend where now, where Dr. Malone and Peter Navarro and others have warned and warned and warned about the leaky nature of these vaccines and the whole thing about vaccinating everybody instead of just targeted populations like the elderly, comorbidities. | ||
You know, people that are obese, you know, diabetes, minority communities, all of that, that now we're in this whole firestorm of this new variant, the new variant coming out of South Africa, Botswana, and about the world's response to that as we, you know, are still in this pandemic. | ||
And people can argue, hey, it's just the flu. | ||
It's just a common cold or it's more serious than the death. | ||
Some of them are made up. | ||
Hey, we try to go through all that. | ||
Make sure you see the evidence, the data and the facts. | ||
But in that. | ||
There's something actually deeper going on, and we want to make sure you understand that. | ||
This is the concept of transhumanism. | ||
I want to bring in Joe Allen now, our editor. | ||
The guy's cranking this stuff up all the time. | ||
One of the things, Joe, I know we're on it. | ||
You can't go to Drudge. | ||
You can't go to these aggregation sites. | ||
Yahoo! | ||
There's not four, five, or six stories every day about the convergence of all this. | ||
So I want you to take us through in the first segment some of your thoughts, particularly this kind of shocking | ||
Clip we played that was up about about Sweden because I want to talk about the singularity the convergence of it But I want you to tee this off because this is your line of country and you've done such a tremendous job Since you've been here really getting the audience's Understanding of this and awareness of this and consciousness of this To be at the forefront of some of the things that they're thinking about as we fight for this Republic that we so love Joe Allen | ||
Steve, the video we just saw presented the work of a company Biohax out of Sweden. | ||
And the purpose of bringing that in is to show not only where things are at, what's possible now, but also to show what the intention is ultimately for some people. | ||
I wouldn't make the argument that everyone should be expecting to be forced to get chips in their palms. | ||
But I think that when you see the work that Biohax has done, And you see the work that other bio-implant companies have done. | ||
Some estimate that upwards of 100,000 people are using similar technologies. | ||
You see that there is a trend towards using technology for control. | ||
There is a trend towards using technology for access to the goods of society. | ||
And when you see people with RFID chips in their palms, gladly, You really get a sense of what is possible under a system in which one's identity is tracked both digitally, possibly genetically, and one's health status, or just simply one's standing in society according to some social credit score, could leave you barred from anything from school to work to food itself. | ||
So, ultimately, I think that this The system that we see coming down around us right now, you see it in its extreme forms in Austria, forcing everyone to get the vaccine. | ||
You see it in an extreme form in Australia with QR code based passports, according to the same model. | ||
And even now in New York City with QR code based vax ports. | ||
This is a totalizing sort of technological grid in which we're supposed to be operating going forward. | ||
It doesn't have to be that way, though. | ||
I think that there is... Hold on, hold on. | ||
But I want to get a... Hang on, hang on. | ||
I want to get a concept in here and have you help the audience, because this is about nomenclature. | ||
It's about process and event. | ||
It's about status and dynamics of process. | ||
biometric tyranny biometric tyranny which comes from either this can be the shots which austria one february You're going to have to get a mandatory vaccinations, the entire population. | ||
And right now they started with a lockdown of the unvaccinated. | ||
Now they've gone to the whole country. | ||
They're kind of pushing back the ski season. | ||
One February, they've said everybody's got to get vaccinated. | ||
Germany's heading in that direction. | ||
It's one of the reasons Ben Harnwell and all the guys doing the reporting. | ||
Biometric tyranny, whether it's the shot, It's what Dr. Naomi Wolfe warned about on the QR vax ports, or the, you know, these passports of vaccinations. | ||
Is this guiding, is this now, are we now in a part of man's journey where biometric tyranny is starting to guide human evolution? | ||
Joe Allen. | ||
Absolutely, 100%. | ||
We've seen it since the beginning, since the announcement of there being the existence of the coronavirus in our population, and it's only going to get worse if people do not push back. | ||
The media and various politicians and various corporations, to be honest, have pushed fear into the hearts of every person that if they do not submit to this system, they're putting their entire society or perhaps all of humanity at peril. | ||
Knowing That the coronavirus is only dangerous really for a small demographic of the population. | ||
We know that they are either willfully ignorant or lying their faces off. | ||
Coming behind this is a system of control that will not go away even if the coronavirus disappears in six months. | ||
This system of control has been desired for a long, long time. | ||
This is simply an excuse to implement it. | ||
I'm not going to say anything more than that it's being used opportunistically, but I can say with full confidence that these ideas have been churned out from the World Economic Forum, from Bill Gates, even in disparate areas like Google has a very technological ideal for the future of society, as does the people at Facebook. | ||
We are seeing the implementation of dreams that have been in existence for a long time. | ||
Okay, so that you don't remember, there's no conspiracies, but there's no coincidence. | ||
I want to go back. | ||
You said, absolutely. | ||
That that that the biometric tyranny of this biometric precedent, whether it's the vaccines, whether it's the passports, all this, which they would argue they're doing because of a global public health emergency. | ||
Why do you say it's going to guide? | ||
Human evolution. | ||
Is that too big a jump? | ||
You said absolutely. | ||
Walk us through that in as much detail as you can, because that's a pretty startling assertion. | ||
Well, I'll use one example of the sort of framework that's being used here. | ||
You're probably aware of a company called Clear. | ||
Everyone sees them in the airports. | ||
Basically, you give a fingerprint and an iris scan In order to pass through more quickly at the airport. | ||
This company has been around since after 9-11. | ||
They were renamed after their data got stolen. | ||
But the idea that drives, clears philosophy as a corporation, as a biometric corporation, is that your biometric identity will be used in every facet of life. | ||
Whether it's to enter your workplace, whether it's to get your groceries, to get into your home, to go to school. | ||
They used it after 9-11 in order to get access to planes. | ||
They're using it now. | ||
They're one of the contractors in New York for the Vaxport. | ||
But the ultimate goal of that company and many, many others is to implement this as far and wide as possible. | ||
This is in line with all of the sorts of transhumanist philosophies that have emerged over the last three, four decades. | ||
It is an absolute Danger to every human freedom we have, because whoever controls this system, it doesn't have to be a world government. | ||
It can simply be your state government or just your school. | ||
Whoever controls this system will be able to dictate everything that the person within that system does, either by way of compulsion or by way of monitoring and just shutting off certain behaviors and access to certain goods. | ||
It is the most dangerous system of control to have ever emerged. | ||
And that danger cannot be emphasized enough. | ||
We've got a couple of minutes in this segment. | ||
I want to go back to this comment you just made about transhumanist philosophies. | ||
Walk us through, when you say transhumanist philosophies, most people say transhumanism. | ||
What's he even talking about? | ||
Give us the transhumanist philosophies you're talking about. | ||
In essence, transhumanism is the desire to transcend natural human limitations by way of technology. | ||
This is ultimately, I think, a replacement for religious aspirations throughout human history, and it fulfills all of the same roles and ultimately the same goals of being able to overcome one's physical weakness, one's cognitive deficits, and also, ultimately, the goal is to give a sort of digital or even possibly physical immortality, where religion, they believe, could not do that. | ||
At its core, transhumanism claims to be morphological freedom. | ||
The freedom to do with one's body what one wants, whether it's to put a chip in one's hand, or a chip in one's head, or simply stay online all day. | ||
But we all know where that leads. | ||
It is a totalizing system in its essence. | ||
And I think that this biometric tracking system And the insistence on altering one's immune system in accordance with a scientific paradigm that's questionable at its basis anyway, all reflect, either by running in parallel or for direct inspiration, all reflect the transhumanist philosophy of using technology to best organize one's soul and best organize one's society that that soul inhabits. | ||
Okay, we've got Joe Allen here for the hour. | ||
We're going to go through a lot of this, and one of the things that's been shocking, Joe's been so far ahead of this in talking about he was the guy that called early on that Facebook was going to change and call themselves meta because they were going to try to dominate the metaverse. | ||
And then, Joe, ever since you talked about that and we started playing over the show, the stories have come out about meta. | ||
But one of the most shocking was there's a $1 trillion profit opportunity in a land grab in the metaverse right now. | ||
Your understanding of this, your perception of this, and getting ahead of this has been outstanding. | ||
So we're going to go back to basics. | ||
When we return, we're going to talk about the singularity. | ||
We're going to talk about the technologies that are driving this point in mankind's history, that we will go beyond homo sapien. | ||
What it means for you, what it means for your country, what it means for your children and your grandchildren. | ||
all next. Joe Allen, our editor of all things transhumanist next in the war room. | ||
unidentified
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War Room Pandemic with Stephen K Bannon. The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. War Room Pandemic. Here's your host Stephen K Bannon. | |
By 2020, we'll have computers that are powerful enough to simulate the human brain, but we won't be finished yet with reverse engineering the human brain and understanding its methods. | ||
By 2029, we'll have reverse engineered and modeled and simulated all the regions of the brain, and that will provide us the software, algorithmic methods to simulate, you know, all of the human brain's capabilities, including our emotional intelligence. | ||
And computers at that time will be far more powerful than the human brain. | ||
And we'll be able to create machines that really do have the subtlety and suppleness of human intelligence. | ||
And they'll combine that power with ways in which machines are already superior to us. | ||
They can harness all of human knowledge with a few keystrokes. | ||
It can remember billions of things accurately. | ||
They can share knowledge at electronic speeds that are a million times faster than human language. | ||
The singularity is not just that point where we achieve human level of intelligence in a machine. | ||
I mean, that will start a new revolution where these machines will continue to grow exponentially in power. | ||
They'll be able to actually improve their own software design. | ||
By 2045, we'll have expanded the intelligence of our human machine civilization a billion fold. | ||
That will be singularity. | ||
And we borrowed this metaphor from physics to talk about an event horizon that's hard to see beyond. | ||
Event Horizon is one of the terms used in Critical Path. | ||
I want everybody to embrace this, that in the lived experience, Of everybody in this audience under 70 years old, this is all going to take place. | ||
Because I can tell you one thing, it's going to happen much more rapidly than they're talking about. | ||
Why do I say that? | ||
Because what's happened so far has happened more rapidly. | ||
And I understand there's still a lot of debate about, you know, artificial intelligence, artificial general intelligence, all of it. | ||
But it's happening, it's increasing at an accelerating rate. | ||
The one thing, and by the way, I'll bring Joe in. | ||
Joe, Was that Ray Kurzweil? | ||
Who was giving us that analysis right there? | ||
Yes, that's Ray Kurzweil. | ||
He's the primary philosophical architect of the notion of the singularity, and he's a top research and development director at Google. | ||
He's also the founder of Singularity University in association with Google. | ||
He is profoundly influential among futurists. | ||
Many people argue against him. | ||
They say he's Too, uh, overbroad or he's, uh, too hasty with his predictions. | ||
Maybe, maybe not, uh, but if you give or take half a decade on any of them, uh, most of them are indeed coming to pass. | ||
And this idea of the singularity, it's a very extreme notion. | ||
It's the idea that all of these technologies will converge to ultimately upend everything we've ever known in human life. | ||
And it is, again, a totalizing system. | ||
If anything approaching that level of technological revolution ever actually occurred, there would be no escape from it. | ||
And that shows you again, whether or not it's realistic or not, this is the intention behind it, is to create technologies that will ultimately be suffused into every aspect of human life, every aspect of the biosphere. | ||
And they honestly believe, at least many of them, Okay, hang on a second. | ||
to spread across the solar system, the galaxy, and out into the rest of the universe. | ||
These people are megalomaniacs. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Okay. | ||
Hang on a second. | ||
And I want to make sure that people get this definition right, or the real definition. | ||
Kurzweil, and he's not some grundoon. | ||
He's the Senior VP of Development at Google. | ||
Correct, sir? | ||
unidentified
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I mean, for many years he was at... He was looked at as kind of a... A top research and development director, yes. | |
Mostly natural language processing. | ||
They've bought DeepMind, they have acquired, and they're one of the most powerful companies in the world, if not the most powerful, particularly when it comes to mathematics and algorithms and all that. | ||
But the singularity, and too many people have narrow-casted it to him, what he just says right there. | ||
He's talking about artificial intelligence, and then going to the next level, which is artificial general intelligence, right? | ||
And he talks about the singularity with the brain. | ||
Step back. | ||
That is not actually The totality of the singularity. | ||
The singularity is the convergence of many technologies. | ||
It's one of the reasons we're going to have a very difficult time getting our hands around this and getting some sort of regulation to say, hey, we've got a full stop because the convergence is artificial. | ||
It is a chip design, right? | ||
Advanced chip design, artificial general intelligence. | ||
And that's when artificial intelligence starts to take itself to the next level without humans. | ||
Artificial general intelligence, regenerative robotics. | ||
That's when you've taken the human element out of the, taking the robots to the next level, regenerative robotics. | ||
And, last but not least, is The Code Breakers. | ||
And this is the book of the Nobel Prize winner, right? | ||
Dr., what, Jennifer Doudna. | ||
And we've said, we were the first people, I think, to get on this. | ||
Everybody in the Trump movement had to read this book. | ||
Because this is not simply about DNA, this is about the enzymes, this is about the process of how you change it, how you get to CRISPR. | ||
It is the convergence of biotechnology, the convergence of regenerative robotics, the convergence of artificial general intelligence, the convergence of advanced chip design, and a couple of other technologies. | ||
Should not be lost on you because there's no conspiracy, but there's no coincidences. | ||
If you look at Made in China 2025, right, was the theory of China, they wanted to be dominant in the industries of the future, particularly in the fourth industrial revolution. | ||
The top five or six were all these industries. | ||
The Chinese Communist Party made this a priority over a decade ago, 10 or 15 years ago. | ||
When we reach that convergence, Joe Allen, that point that it is converging on, on this side of the football, right, as the gentleman that wrote the book, wrote the great book, Homo Deus, on this side of that point is humanity, Homo sapiens, right, the how many hundreds of thousands, millions of years we've been here. | ||
On the other side of that That is post-homo sapien. | ||
And in the lived experience of this audience, particularly if you're under 40 years old, this will be the major political issue that you will struggle with. | ||
It won't be the simple issues we had of Keynesian economics and the Constitution and all these complexities we think we see today. | ||
It will be a fundamental decision of who is going to be here, who's going to control it, and what are they going to do in a post-homo sapien environment. | ||
And that is not science fiction. | ||
It's not us being wingnuts. | ||
And it's not conspiracy theory. | ||
That is coming out of the labs today, funded by your tax dollars at DARPA. | ||
Funded by your pension funds, your private equity, all throughout Silicon Valley. | ||
Done in the top research universities, not simply in the United States, but the world. | ||
Joe Allen, The Singularity. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
If I could single out four technologies that we're talking about. | ||
You just talked about CRISPR and gene editing in general. | ||
The idea is that because of this new technology, Geneticists are able to spot edit certain genes. | ||
It's primarily to turn them off, but they're getting better and better at being able to add certain genes, or at least, you know, add nucleotides to create different properties in those genes. | ||
It is the idea that we can fundamentally rewrite our genetic code so that we can take away all of the perceived flaws that are within it. | ||
The second is this idea of bionics, that even as the body fails, which it naturally will, Those parts can be replaced through these different technologies, whether it be artificial neurons or an artificial arm. | ||
The third is neuro-enhancement, and that is a really, really big one. | ||
These people are obsessed with intelligence. | ||
They're obsessed with data and information. | ||
They want to be as smart as the computer god that they think that they will create. | ||
One of the primary methods of gaining cognitive advances is the idea that we can rewrite the genome in order to give, you know, more dense neural structure. | ||
But there's also the notion that brain implants—we hear this all the time from Elon Musk—brain implants will confer these abilities to keep us at pace With this perceived artificial intelligence computer god. | ||
There's also another part of that though, virtual reality and the metaverse. | ||
The idea that we can control our perception, that we can control our reality, that we can create fictitious virtual realities. | ||
And inhabit them. | ||
And then, you know, even more extreme through nanobots, be able to actually bring to life actual physical entities and be able to trigger our neurons to perceive different realities. | ||
And at the core of all this, of course, is artificial intelligence. | ||
Right now, it's narrow to certain tasks. | ||
It's very good at Go. | ||
It's very good at Chess. | ||
It's very good at dogfights. | ||
It's actually pretty good at analyzing enzymes and proteins and biology. | ||
But the goal ultimately, as Kurzweil just said in that clip, is to reverse engineer the brain and then recreate a human brain or something like a human brain in silicate. | ||
And then once that has happened, we're able to, they hope, create a superhuman brain or a series of superhuman brains, perhaps all connected through global internet. | ||
And this superhuman brain will basically come to take the place of what Christians or Hindus or Muslims would call God. | ||
They want to create God in Silica. | ||
And I think that that megalomania is probably among the most dangerous. | ||
And it's setting us up for a situation, setting us up for a society In which we are expected to submit to whatever dictates an artificial intelligence program says, whether it's in business or in government or in education. | ||
It's already happening. | ||
It will only increase as this moves forward, as the technology increases, and it will only increase as people come to believe that these technologies are in fact superior to human beings. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
When we return, we're going to talk about one of the driving forces about this. | ||
They put it under the term life extension. | ||
These people want to be immortal. | ||
They do not believe in any spirituality or any God. | ||
They want to be immortal. | ||
Life extension. | ||
The metaverse. | ||
Other aspects of this. | ||
Dangerous, dangerous, dangerous. | ||
unidentified
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when we return, Joe Allen and the War Room. | |
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
This will actually be routine, ubiquitous technology early in the next decade. | ||
We'll have images written directly to our retina from our eyeglasses. | ||
They'll be able to create virtual reality environments, either overlaying real reality, so I'll have pop-up displays. | ||
When I see you, there'll be little pop-ups saying, reminding me it's your birthday next Tuesday, or reminding me what your name is, or completely overtake the visual field of view and create a virtual reality environment. | ||
The Metaverse refers to a convergence of physical, augmented, and virtual reality in a shared online space. | ||
The Metaverse is the next step in the Internet's evolution. | ||
You can think of the Metaverse as a 4D version of the current Internet. | ||
The Metaverse can be thought of as an Internet that you're inside of, rather than one that you're merely looking at. | ||
It will impact every industry and existence. | ||
Eventually, AR lens and AR glasses could be used to augment the world around us and even facilitate virtual assistants with the help of sophisticated AI. | ||
You could listen to all of your conversations, read your emails, monitor your blood chemistry, and more. | ||
With access to all of this data, this AI-enabled software will learn your preferences, anticipate your needs and behaviors, shop for you, monitor your health, and help you navigate toward your mid- and long-term goals. | ||
OK, the embodied Internet, the metaverse called here first by Joe Allen many months ago. | ||
Joe, I want to get into the metaverse. | ||
I want to also remember this is Black Friday weekend. | ||
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Okay, I want to bring back Joe Allen. | ||
Joe, the metaverse, the embodied internet, I'm going to get to in a second, but I need to go back to the last segment and talk about life extension and immortality. | ||
When you cut through all these guys, Right, and James O'Keefe had this when they did their secret hit on Facebook, the buried lead on the Facebook tapes of that senior engineer who was trying to impress the pretty young woman, right, over many, many sessions and talk about how they were involved in the politics and how Zuckerberg was very involved in. | ||
You know, setting up to steal the election and all that. | ||
At the end, he said, Zuckerberg and his wife's focus is on life extension. | ||
That's the buried lead of the whole thing is that he actually said, hey, their real focus is on that. | ||
And he actually talked about the dangers of artificial intelligence. | ||
Why are these oligarchs most focused when they cut through all the happy talk and Elon Musk and all the good they're going to do mankind? | ||
It's all nonsense. | ||
They're focused on one thing for themselves, that is life extension, which is just a nice way of saying immortality. | ||
What do they mean, Joe Allen? | ||
And what danger does that have for the rest of mankind? | ||
Well, I think the primary motivation is ego. | ||
And you're talking about men who, uh, you know, through their accomplishments and, you know, all credit to them for it, uh, have tremendous egos. | ||
And almost down to a man, they don't really have deep religious beliefs. | ||
I would say that's true of Elon Musk. | ||
Jeff Bezos certainly seems to hint at it. | ||
Definitely Ray Kurzweil and many, many others. | ||
They don't see anything on the other side of this life. | ||
It's just a big black nothing. | ||
And of course, their egos can't handle that. | ||
Most peoples can't. | ||
And so, They want to, first, physically prolong life as much as possible. | ||
That's, you know, the Altos Labs that Jeff Bezos and Yuri Milner are partnering on. | ||
The goal is to, in any way possible, and there are many different directions this is coming, to extend their physical lives as long as humanly possible. | ||
200 years, 300 years, you know, some of the wilder speculations we're talking about, many, many centuries. | ||
On the other side of that, though, is the digital or mechanical enhancement. | ||
So there's this realization that no matter what you do, the body is going to go. | ||
And they see that the soul, in their idea of the human being, the soul is only in the brain. | ||
And so once that brain goes, that's it, you're done. | ||
So you have to, before that physical body dies, replicate it as best you can In silica. | ||
So, you know, there's the bionic end, so you'll just keep replacing things and replacing things, kind of like the ship of Theseus. | ||
So that, plank by plank, the old ship falls apart and a new ship is formed, but they see it as being the same ship. | ||
That's one part of it, but then when you get to AI and the idea of this global brain, the more ambitious project is to actually replicate one's physical and psychic self, one's soul, | ||
In a computer system, so that then after the physical body kind of withers away, sort of like the cocoon as the butterfly emerges, the physical body withers away and the real being, the being that will be eternal, or as close as possible to eternity, will be this digital being, or any series of them. | ||
So it begins with ego, a lack of belief in any transcendent principle beyond this world, And they're scrambling as fast as they can to create as many mechanisms as possible to ensure that physical reality through technology. | ||
Walk us through the guiding of human consciousness now through Metaverse. | ||
And, you know, people, the Metaverse had a story up this week. | ||
It's a one trillion dollar business opportunity of a land grab there digitally. | ||
The embodied Internet. | ||
What are we talking about? | ||
How quickly is this coming upon us? | ||
What kind of impact is this going to have on man? | ||
You know, I would say it's already here and it's been here. | ||
There have been many metaverses. | ||
Really, virtual reality started out of the Air Force and NASA and has evolved into the commercial sector. | ||
Jaron Lanier is probably one of the most prominent developers going back to the late 80s, mid 80s. | ||
It's finally gotten to the point now, though, that the technology is good enough that when you put on a really high quality Head-mounted display. | ||
HTC Vive is excellent. | ||
You actually feel like you're inside of an alternate world. | ||
It's absolutely amazing. | ||
I've done it quite a few times, or at least, you know, four or five times. | ||
It's stunning. | ||
So, what it's doing, psychologically, is tricking the brain into believing that you are actually inhabiting this reality. | ||
The visuals track with your head motion or your full body motion, and most importantly, neurologically, that simulation that's inside your mind of the physical world that you inhabit now is being replaced with a digital simulation, the best of which are convincing down to the very last detail. | ||
And the ultimate goal, according to Ray Kurzweil and many other visionaries, including Mark Zuckerberg, I would say, is to get Humanity to a state where there is no real meaningful distinction between one's physical self and one's digital self, whether it's through virtual reality or the kind of holograms of augmented reality that are over the physical world, that kind of borderland, that liminal zone. | ||
And I think that ultimately, you know, I've written about this in Salvo Magazine, you know, the metaverse is heaven for soy boys, hell on earth for us. | ||
And also another article, you can find it at the War Room, warroom.org, The Transhuman Roots of the Metaverse. | ||
I think that what we're ultimately going to see is something like we saw with smartphones and really something like we saw with televisions, only orders of magnitude more dramatic. | ||
What we're going to see is that people will begin to kind of decouple. | ||
They will begin to disassociate from their bodies from their natural cultural lives and they will start to identify with their digital avatar or digital avatars. | ||
This is already occurring through gaming, this is already occurring you could say through social media and someone Really feeling like what happens with their social media presence is more important than what happens in their day-to-day lives. | ||
And this is already normal. | ||
And when we get to the point that actual worlds, fully inhabitable worlds, are created and normative, and they're bubbling up left and right, you pour this much money into something, it's going to happen in some form or another. | ||
You're going to see more and more people begin to disassociate from their actual selves and begin to identify with these artificial selves. | ||
And that's not a bug. | ||
That's a feature of the system. | ||
You cannot imagine how easily people will be able to be controlled in such a system, their psychologies to be controlled in such a system. | ||
It's already bad enough with television and social media and the internet in general, internet culture in general. | ||
The metaverse will be a key foundational stone in the kind of control systems I've been talking about. | ||
I want to just make sure, I want to go back and make sure the audience understands, all the articles are going to be up on Worm.org, and also links to books, links to other magazines. | ||
You need to immerse yourself to understand this, and I realize it's a lot given everything else we're working on, but this is absolutely essential. | ||
When you say the embodied Internet, And right now, remember, Facebook, one of the most powerful, profitable, and largest market cap companies in the world, changes their whole shift in business. | ||
Just not a name in meta, but really to focus on this metaverse, which is the embodied internet. | ||
For the audience, once again, what does the term embodied internet mean? | ||
And how will it have an impact on this audience's lives? | ||
What it means is that instead of having a device that's separate from you, Instead of looking at your phone and seeing that virtual world on a screen, that virtual world is intended to become a part of yourself. | ||
These people don't really, I mean, give or take, they don't believe in a transcendent soul. | ||
The transcendent soul is nothing more than neurological activity, and that neurological activity can be actively manipulated with virtual and augmented reality technology. | ||
So the idea of an embodied internet is that your whole body, your whole self, is present inside these worlds. | ||
That term comes up a lot. | ||
Wired editor Peter Rubin, Rubin certainly wrote a book, Future Presence, in which he emphasizes that presence is the essence of virtual reality. | ||
So that you feel present in that world, And it feels like that world is present to you just like the physical world, including artificial characters, perhaps, you know, programmed by a human being or perhaps that evolved on its own through artificial intelligence. | ||
We will be in relationship to these virtual artificial characters In the same way that we're in relationship with each other as human beings, at least ideally. | ||
So an embodied internet means that it's everywhere. | ||
It's inside your head, to some extent, as things progress, it's inside your physical body, and certainly it's the lens through which you see everything in the world. | ||
Remember of all the great religions Christianity the world's great religions Hinduism Buddhism Islam all of it being present Being present be here now being present is one of the most fundamental Roots of that was being present in front of the sacraments in front of Christ as you go about your life or being present and all these other religions and this is what they say is the central | ||
And the reason it has such religious connotations, that's the essence of the embodied Internet. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
Joe Allen is going to join us on the other side. | ||
We're going to talk about this transformation. | ||
We're going through an economic transformation now that we're trying to stop. | ||
The transformation that's upon us of all humankind and transhumanism next in the world. | ||
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It's all started, everything's begun And you are over Cause we're taking down the CCP Spread the word all through Hong Kong We will fight till they're all gone We rejoice when there is no more Let's take down the CCP Big tech monitors us, censors us, de-platforms us. | |
Conservatives have been helpless to do anything about it until now. | ||
Join Getter, the social media platform that supports free speech and opposes cancel culture. | ||
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It's time to cancel, cancel culture. | ||
And people could choose whatever gender they want if they weren't forced by society into categories of either male or female the way South Africa used to force people into categories of black or white. | ||
I would say in some ways I changed my gender about as often as I changed my hairstyle. | ||
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Okay, it's not just long-lasting bodies that are of interest to you now, it's long-lasting minds. | |
What we're working on is creating a situation where people can create a mind file. | ||
And a mind file is the collection of their mannerisms, personality, recollection, feelings, beliefs, attitudes, and values. | ||
Everything that we pour today into Google, into Amazon, into Facebook, all of this information stored there will be able in the next couple decades, once a software is able to recapitulate consciousness, be able to revive the consciousness which is imminent in our mind file. | ||
Everybody in the world, billions of people will be able to develop mind clones of themselves that will have their own life on the web. | ||
If anything, I'm perhaps a bit of a communicator of activities that are being undertaken by the greatest companies in China, Japan, India, the US, Europe. | ||
There are tens of millions of people working on writing code that expresses more and more aspects of our human consciousness. | ||
Tens of millions of people writing code, and you notice the United States was fourth in that list. | ||
We are entering a quite dangerous times, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Homo Deus, man is God. | ||
I want to bring in Joe Allen. | ||
Now, by the way, please support our sponsor, MyPillow, particularly over this weekend when you're doing your Christmas shopping. | ||
Think about going to MyPillow. | ||
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Right there, Joe, you've got tens of millions of people writing code right now, globally, to drive this. | ||
Tell us what's going on. | ||
So that was Martine Rotblat. | ||
She's one of the more outspoken proponents of transhumanism. | ||
What you saw was an explanation in some essence of her view of the fluidity of gender. | ||
And you can see a direct connection between transhumanism and transgenderism in that you are no longer bound to your biological body, your biological sex, your biological race, even your species in a virtual world. | ||
You are free to be whoever you want to be. | ||
And I think that you already see this tendency. | ||
It's very well described in Abigail Schreier's book, Irreversible Damage, that social media and the kind of decoupling of one's physical self and an identification with one's digital self has really been a driving force behind teen transgenderism. | ||
And I argue in my piece, The Transhuman Roots of the Metaverse, that it really boils down to a transhumanist notion and that the metaverse itself will provide all new opportunities for people to completely lose their real sense of self and become, you know, a fictional character. | ||
What you also heard is her description of, you know, Martine McBride, when still a man, I believe, founded Sirius XM. | ||
Isn't just coming from out of nowhere. | ||
Now, working on this, you know, a project of basically replicating one's human personality, or what we would normally call one's soul, in Silica to create a mind clone. | ||
And this mind clone would be a kind of companion that would live with you throughout your life, advancing and evolving next to you. | ||
And then once your physical body withers away, would then go on to become an immortal. | ||
It's one of the many kind of visions of digital immortality that transhumanists hold. | ||
And, you know, what you just saw there were two magazine covers from National Geographic. | ||
Both came out in 2017, and that was a time when there was this huge kind of public push to get transhumanism into the public consciousness. | ||
And in January, it was the next human, and it was this idea of genetic alteration to change human evolution and other sorts of cyborg-like visions coming out of National Geographic. | ||
And then later that year, they published The Gender Revolution, which clearly celebrates childhood gender transitioning. | ||
And it's no coincidence that this all occurred after Disney took over the public face of National Geographic in 2015. | ||
So you can just sum it up. | ||
You see this fusion of these ideologies of transgenderism and transhumanism in forgetting who one really is. | ||
And becoming what one wants to be, no matter what the constraints actually may be. | ||
Okay, I've got 60 seconds. | ||
How do people get access to your writings? | ||
I want everybody to start to immerse themselves in this. | ||
It's a major topic, if not the major topic, as we try to save our constitutional republic for future generations. | ||
How do people get to your writings, sir? | ||
Go to warroom.org. | ||
Click the Transhumanism tab on the top. | ||
There is a ton of stuff there. | ||
You can also find it at my site, JoeBot.xyz, and all social media, Gab, Twitter, and Gitter at J-O-E-B-O-T-X-Y-Z. | ||
Thank you very much, Steve. | ||
Joe, fantastic hour. | ||
We want everybody, this is kind of a primer. | ||
We're going to be doing a lot more of this when we get down to the details of it. | ||
And also, how do we stop this? | ||
How do you actually form it so it can be beneficial to mankind, not this out of control? | ||
And it's going to get out of control quite quickly. | ||
OK, we will see you Monday morning at 10 a.m. | ||
Return. | ||
OK, starting Monday, there's going to be a prairie fire lit. | ||
Because the fundamental transformation of the American economy is all going to start as we get into this spending, this orgy of spending they're trying to do to fundamentally transform our nation. | ||
And what the war room posse, what this cadre at the tip of the spear to save our country is going to do to stop it. | ||
Monday morning at 10 o'clock. | ||
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See you there. | |
We're taking down the CCP. Spread the word all through Hong Kong. | ||
Bye! | ||
We will fight till they're all gone. | ||
We rejoice when there's no more. |