Speaker | Time | Text |
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This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
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Pray for our enemies, because we're going medieval on these people. | |
I got a free shot at all these networks lying about the people. | ||
The people have had a belly full of it. | ||
I know you don't like hearing that. | ||
I know you try to do everything in the world to stop that, but you're not going to stop it. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
And where do people like that go to share the big lie? | ||
MAGA Media. I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
unidentified
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Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | |
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
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War Room, here's your host, Stephen K. Bamb. | |
It's Saturday, 15 April, on the Year of the Lord 2023. | ||
It's tax day. | ||
It's tax day, but we don't have to pay. | ||
I think it's not till Tuesday, I think. | ||
Tuesday's the new day. Normally, it's the first business day back if it's on a weekend, but I think they're giving you an extra day. | ||
So make sure you're happy about what you're paying for. | ||
Remember, Kevin McCarthy has a big kickoff speech On Monday, right, to kind of tee off this next two or three weeks, they're all coming back to Washington on Monday and Tuesday, and we're going to have really a throwdown. | ||
You've got the border security bill. | ||
You've got everything with the debt ceiling. | ||
We had Russ vote on yesterday, and Russ laid out for us pretty detailed about what's going on. | ||
They're trying to get a coming together of the 218 votes they need to put forward a plan. | ||
I'm hearing that some of the cuts may not be as steep as we are demanding, but we'll have to see all that. | ||
We think they've got to be pretty steep, but we'll make sure we check it all out. | ||
I'm going to get Joe Allen up here in a minute. | ||
Remember, I keep reminding you, 2024, one of the biggest issues we're going to face in this presidential election, because a lot's going to change, Given that we're in the early stages of the Third World War, but also this revolutionary technology that is upending civilization and upending culture, | ||
and that is artificial intelligence, which is just the lead of the tip of the transhumanist movement, which has many, many other verticals. | ||
The reason I want to start off with Joe today, it's 15 April, basically 90 days ago. | ||
90 days ago in Davos, you had the release of ChatGPT. | ||
And within this 90 days, you think how much has changed already? | ||
How dramatic has been this impact of artificial intelligence? | ||
And it's going to be in every person in this audience, in every one of your businesses, in every part of your life, this is coming. | ||
And right now, I can tell you, I think it's going to be quite difficult. | ||
It's quite difficult to control it because I don't see any, you know, we're going to get you, the Commerce Department is going to have open comment section next week on what's going on and wants your input. | ||
But that is a pretty thin read given what's happening and what we know is happening in weapons labs and university research, company research, and also hostile countries like mainland China, what's happening in North Korea, what's happening in South Korea. | ||
Russia, other places like that. | ||
So it's very, very, very dangerous. | ||
Also, in the fighting of war, and I talk about the early years of the Third World War and going to that, artificial intelligence is going to have a massive implication of the defense of Taiwan and the fight that's coming. | ||
Right now we know and from the intelligence reports have been leaked in this very controversial intelligence leaks. | ||
One of the things that comes out is the use of artificial intelligence and targeting. | ||
It's one of the reasons that the Ukrainians, although being outgunned, are doing so well, particularly in air defense, particularly in targeting, at least to date their air defense now looks like. | ||
Maybe chopped up, but where they've been successful is American, I don't want to say outsourced, but out of country targeting using artificial intelligence. | ||
Let me get Joe Allen of all things. | ||
Joe, I just want to give people a head. | ||
This is 90 days essentially from the Davos conference when it was released, and I keep telling people that You have to understand, Davos man prides themselves on being the insiders of the insiders. | ||
Now, when I say Davos man, the people actually come to Davos, and that is a collection of consultants and advisors and accountants and law firms and media specialists and technology companies. | ||
So the thousands that come there to participate, you're at what are called Davos man. | ||
They're not the insiders. | ||
They're not the big decision makers. | ||
But you see the shock on there, and they had other things to talk about, the great reset, everything else. | ||
Everything in Davos was just dismissed and discounted. | ||
This was, and they all turned to fanboys immediately, fanboys immediately. | ||
But the most important thing... | ||
Is the people that are the inside of the insiders, I'm talking Sergei over at Google, Eric Schmidt at Google, Bill Gates, Zuckerberg, even Elon Musk, the insiders of the insiders in social media, the oligarchs themselves were stunned to the fact that the radical business changes we've seen among the big tech oligarchs to me has been jaw-dropping. | ||
They have literally admitted. | ||
Zuckerberg admitted the whole thing with metaverse. | ||
Boom, dump it. It may turn out to be something. | ||
Dump it. I'm putting everything in the back of artificial intelligence. | ||
Sergey came back off the beach. | ||
These guys hadn't been in the Google building in years. | ||
Coming back to make this a priority. | ||
Bill Gates said this is the future. | ||
Elon Musk is warned, but you can tell that he's already getting, I think you're going to see a lot of Twitter associated with artificial intelligence. | ||
So not just the foot soldiers or the Grandoons at Davos, which are at least inside the velvet rope. | ||
But the key decision-makers in the biggest, most powerful technologies, caught by surprise, shock, stun, to, you know, in Metaverse's case, somebody who had already totally changed the direction of Facebook, put already billions of dollars into it, basically scrapped it to say, I've got to focus on this. | ||
So give us your 90-day assessment, because I keep telling people this is... | ||
Probably the biggest indication that something's massive underfoot, and you can't have any conversation with a venture capitalist. | ||
You can't have any conversation with a private equity person that you're looking for real financing of something. | ||
If you don't have artificial intelligence as part of that pitch, You're not going to get the meeting today. | ||
They're taking the meetings with those guys, and if you don't have artificial intelligence as an integral part of your business model, they'll get to you, but they ain't going to get to you today. | ||
Joe Allen. You know, Steve, this is oftentimes described as an AI arms race, and I think that's very accurate. | ||
Within America is a competition between all of these big tech companies to produce better and better artificial intelligence, because if they don't, then their competitor will. | ||
GPT really spearheaded this, right? | ||
That was what everyone was freaking out about at the World Economic Forum. | ||
And GPT was amazing because it showed these emergent capabilities. | ||
Now, it's easy to kind of dismiss it as just a chatbot, and it is. | ||
A lot of people dismiss it by saying, well, it's just garbage in, garbage out. | ||
Basically true, but what you have with GPT technology, right, a generative pre-trained transformer, is that this neural network, this artificial brain, by virtue of its size, by virtue of the number of nodes and parameters within it, and put that in layman's terms, basically think of it as brain cells and the connective dendrites and axons between them. | ||
What you have, by virtue of size, is an emergent system. | ||
So beyond just being able to predict the next word in a sentence to create coherent paragraphs and coherent essays, it exhibited a sort of reasoning capability. | ||
And before they put the woke safety layers over top of it, it was a fairly non-biased system. | ||
Everybody kind of talks about this as like, oh, AI is woke. | ||
The brain underneath all of those safety layers that make it so-called woke is not woke. | ||
The brain underneath, what was amazing about it is that it was capable of sifting through this vast quantity of human language And coming back with amazingly unbiased and informative essays, articles, short paragraphs. | ||
So that's what sparked this AI arms race. | ||
So just I think yesterday, Amazon has now entered into it with their system Bedrock, which is a generative AI system. | ||
Then, as you mentioned, you've got Meta, used to be Facebook. | ||
Their lead, their chief AI scientist, Jan LeCun, is pushing this forward as fast as possible. | ||
They already have language models like ChatGPT. | ||
Then you have, of course, Microsoft's investment in and incorporation of GPT. And then you have Google with their system Lambda, now known as BARD. And they are rushing into this. | ||
So that's just a few of the players within the country itself. | ||
But then, Steve, I think maybe the most important part, at least on, you know, An existential level, perhaps, is that the international competition in this AI arms race is also ramping up. | ||
Part of that is about chatbots, the language model. | ||
You've got Baidu with their Erniebot, innocently named Erniebot, which is basically a kind of version of ChatGPT. | ||
But what's really, really striking is the AI arms race around militarized artificial intelligence, right? | ||
So, as you mentioned, Palantir had donated their system to Ukraine for the purposes of battlefield reconnaissance, overall surveillance, target acquisition. | ||
And, you know, you There have been different estimates, but Alex Karp, the CEO of Palantir, estimates that it improved their targeting by 20x. | ||
That's pretty massive if that's the case. | ||
And then you also now have, because DARPA, of course, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency for the U.S. Department of Defense, DARPA is putting up A ton of money to develop better and better, | ||
of course, artificial intelligence systems, but most importantly, maybe, they're trying to build up America's drone swarms, so they have the amass program in which they're funding and contracting with different companies to create better and better, more and more sophisticated drone swarms, both for surveillance purposes and also to attack, right? | ||
These can be used to target individual people. | ||
They can be used to target tanks. | ||
They can be used to target bases. | ||
And maybe one of the important developments there, too, you have Eric Schmidt, former Google CEO of Eric Schmidt, who is backing a company, Istari. | ||
And Istari's goal is to create these sophisticated drone systems. | ||
They have two major goals aside from their previous role as a cybersecurity company. | ||
One, to create simulations to make better and better and more sophisticated high-tech equipment for the military. | ||
And two, to have interoperable drone technology, to have interoperable systems that can be used for surveillance and presumably also for attack. | ||
So this AI arms race has at least two elements. | ||
There's actually quite a few more, but just very simply, you've got the language models, which are going to be incorporated, as you say, All across the economy and the education system, and what could be more important than who speaks to you and who tells you the truth, right? And two, you've got the military angle. | ||
You've got the race to create better and better surveillance and weapon systems through artificial intelligence. | ||
By the way, in the artificial intelligence and the battlefield is kind of the least of our worries. | ||
It's going to be terrible, but it's the least of our worries. | ||
So much other big stuff going on behind the scenes. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
A couple of things. I want to make sure we go through a lot today of the kind of the housekeeping, but make sure you know because starting Monday of next week, it's going to be full strap-in in the war room, number one, on Monday. | ||
They're going to be the live hearings and we're hearing, as we talked about yesterday on the afternoon show, C-SPAN is trying to avoid covering. | ||
The hearing in New York of the Judiciary Committee, it's a field trip, what they call it. | ||
They take these out. They did it to Yuma. | ||
They're there to put Bragg on the spot. | ||
A federal judge is not shutting it down. | ||
C-SPAN and others do not want to cover it, are not going to cover it wall to wall. | ||
We're going to try to see what we do. | ||
We want to make sure you get intense coverage of this. | ||
Also, Kevin McCarthy giving a speech and some of the stuff's leaking out. | ||
I don't think it's nearly enough. | ||
What's leaking out about the budget is not nearly enough. | ||
We're going to talk all about that. | ||
We're going to talk about the Third World War, the early days, big conference next weekend in Los Angeles. | ||
We've got Joe Allen here to talk all things artificial intelligence, how it is now going to become a permanent part of American and global life, and you're going to have to deal with it. | ||
There's no stopping it now. | ||
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Now short commercial break, back in a moment. | |
Remember, another big development yesterday in the Third World War was that China, for the first time, we saw the CCP back down. | ||
If you remember, we talked about earlier in the week, they notified everybody they were going to put a no-fly zone I think over the East China Sea. | ||
They backed off of that yesterday. | ||
They dropped that. It's the first time on anything they've been doing since the island building, the artificial reef building, everything about trying to limit and restrict free and safe navigation of the South China Sea that they've really blinked on. | ||
Remember we had Dr. Bradley Thayer on the other day to walk through the three elements that they're getting ready. | ||
The first, they went and had an exercise about the decapitation. | ||
The decapitation move, the first thing you would do is try to decapitate the leadership in Taiwan with strikes all over. | ||
The second would be air superiority. | ||
The third, what he said is coming. | ||
This August is about amphibious and air assault to both seize the plants, also basically air and blockade, naval blockade of Taiwan, and maybe even an amphibious assault. | ||
That's all coming this summer. | ||
And then he said they're ready for an outright assault. | ||
The CCP during that week announced essentially a... | ||
But Kordon, Sanitaire, no-fly zone north of Taiwan, they have now backed off that. | ||
So a lot going on there, a lot going on in this really hurtling towards kinetic war in Taiwan. | ||
We're going to have Joe Allen's going to talk to us in a second about, we had Rebecca Koffler the other day about the artificial intelligence. | ||
We're going to get to Joe in a second. | ||
But this war, This is one of the things we're going to discuss next week, and I'm trying to get as much of that live stream as possible. | ||
If you can't make it, it's the American Freedom Alliance. | ||
It's in the greater Los Angeles area at one of the convention places or conference places. | ||
It's a two-day conference, Saturday and Sunday. | ||
It's got some of the top names. | ||
Many people we've seen here in the War Room. | ||
If you're in the general area, certainly would love for you to attend. | ||
If not, we're going to try to livestream as much as possible. | ||
By the way, you can go to the website and find out all the information. | ||
Grace and Captain Bannon will put it up to make sure we get it also in the live chat. | ||
If you can't make it in person, and one of the reasons I recommend you try to make it in person is that you get to network, you get to meet people. | ||
And we really try to carve a way to meet everybody that comes to these events and also to help you network. | ||
And I think everybody that comes with a feeling, hey, not just I get great content and great information, but I got to meet people. | ||
And Joe Allen, our own Joe Allen. | ||
is going to be there, and Joe is there because of this whole situation of artificial intelligence in the Third World War. | ||
The other aspect of this you can't leave out is that our allies, you know, whereas Beijing is bringing people to work with them, to bring people to go to Beijing and to sign up. | ||
You just had Persia and Saudi Arabia there last week. | ||
They're doing major output deals with the CCP, and they're not using petrodollars. | ||
They're going to use the yuan. | ||
As the currency, that's all this de-dollarization movement. | ||
You had Lula, which we've warned about, goes to Beijing on Thursday. | ||
First thing he does on the tarmac is give a big speech about how the American order is over. | ||
How the dollar, everything built upon the dollar is over. | ||
He then goes to what's called the Chinese Development Bank, which is essentially the bank of what we call the bank of the BRICS. That is Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, but it's all kind of the global south. | ||
that have all the natural resources where he says the day of the dollar is over, the reign of the dollar is over, and we're here to talk about a new financial architecture of the world built upon the yuan and other currencies. | ||
And we said Lula was going to do this as his own economy Is literally melting down, given the type of inflation, overspending he has, as you would expect any out-of-control Marxist to do. | ||
Make sure you go to birchgold.com slash Bannon. | ||
You've got to get the three-part series. | ||
We talk about the politics of money. | ||
This was the dominant politics in our nation in the 19th century. | ||
That all kind of stopped with the creation of the Federal Reserve, go figure, right, in the imposition of the income tax. | ||
Did I say that today was tax day, 15 April? | ||
It doesn't have to be filed until Tuesday, but today is the traditional 15 April date, the birthday of the Tea Party also, back in, what, 2009, so what, the 14th anniversary of that, if my math is correct. | ||
But this financial and kinetic war of World War III, which we're fighting in Ukraine right now, remember, that is not even a proxy war anymore. | ||
That is basically U.S. versus Russia. | ||
You can tell that by this massive leak that took place on the intelligence this week, that they all want to divert the attention to this young airman in the Air National Guard. | ||
You couldn't get a guy more out of the loop. | ||
And of course, some of the viewers, they said, well, he's an IT guy. | ||
Hey, the system has got enough That you should not be able to get some IT guy in Otis Air Force Base, Air National Guard Base near Cape Cod in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. | ||
Shouldn't be able to cut through it to get to the not just top secret, but top secret compartmented essentially war plans and briefings for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. | ||
But it did. And you can see in there all the lies and misrepresentations. | ||
One of the things you can also see there is the effect that artificial intelligence has had in the air defense of Ukraine. | ||
Joe, do we have a cold open you want to play for this segment on the artificial intelligence in combat? | ||
Yeah, I think that would be relevant if Denver wants to roll it. | ||
Yeah, let's go ahead and roll it, Denver, and then we'll bring in Joe Allen. | ||
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What emerges is not a rocket or a missile. | |
It has wings that are beginning to unfold just before the video cuts away. | ||
We can see enough to identify what this is. | ||
It's what's called a loitering munition from Israel's state-owned defense manufacturer, IAI. Its model name, the HAROP. The company's promotional videos show what loitering munitions can do. | ||
Once launched, they fly autonomously to a target area, where they can wait or loiter in the sky for hours, Scanning for a target, typically air defence systems. | ||
Once they find a target, they don't drop a bomb, but fly right into it to destroy it on impact. | ||
It's earned them the nickname Kamikaze Drones. | ||
It's a future that's coming at us fast. | ||
Ever more advanced models are coming onto the market, designed to hit a wider range of targets and to have greater autonomy from human control. | ||
The manufacturer IAI even markets one of its models with the slogan, Fire and Forget. | ||
Swarming is one of the hottest areas of autonomous weapons development right now. | ||
The US Navy has released footage of early demonstrations. | ||
Here, fighter jets drop over a hundred tiny drones in mid-flight. | ||
Once they're out there, it's almost impossible for the human eye to keep track of them. | ||
The whine of their motors, almost the only sign of the threat in the sky. | ||
Experts say they will make highly effective weapons. | ||
Rebecca Koffler is a strategic military intelligence analyst and joins us now. | ||
Rebecca, always great to have you on set with us. | ||
We must demonstrate to China that we can defend Taiwan, right? | ||
But the truth is, as you said, we're stretched pretty thin. | ||
The nature of war has changed, Todd, since World War II. We, right now, the United States is the top dog militarily. | ||
The reason we are is that we're highly reliant on technology. | ||
The type of military hardware that we fight wars with takes a long time to build, and it's super expensive. | ||
You also look at the satellites, the space order of battle that we have. | ||
It takes time to launch a bunch of those up into the sky, because that's how we conduct missile warning, precision targeting, navigation, everything. | ||
And finally, we also have not transitioned onto a wartime footing, because officially we're not in a war, even though we are in a proxy war with Russia right now over Ukraine. | ||
And we are in a deterrence posture with China. | ||
But our production capacity is just not up to par to be able to meet those requirements. | ||
Joe Allen, what did we just see there, sir? | ||
Well, of course, that was Rebecca Koffler. | ||
It should be very familiar to any War Room viewer. | ||
And I really put the first part in there. | ||
It's a DW documentary. | ||
Very, very good. | ||
Well worth watching. | ||
There are a lot of similar documentaries out there. | ||
You really have to get your head wrapped around the types of technologies that are being developed, these lethal autonomous weapons systems. | ||
It has terrified people from really... | ||
I remember reading P.W. Singer's Wired for War back in the early 2000s, and these systems were already alarming to anyone who was following it. | ||
But now, the swarming technology really makes for a much more sinister element. | ||
What that means, swarming technology just simply means that you have anywhere from, say, a dozen to a hundred, and they hope to create swarms of thousands of drones that would just completely overwhelm any sort of defense system, that would overwhelm any sort of surveillance system. | ||
And if they are weaponized, right, if each one of these drones has a payload that can then target an individual or equipment and explode, then you basically have a sort of a flock of seagulls that will swoop down on you and kill you. | ||
And maybe the most terrifying thing about it, Steve, is that people are developing artificial intelligence systems that can pilot these, that can organize the swarm itself, that can recognize the target independently, and then strike the target independently. | ||
Meaning that that whole fire and forget sort of notion, you have these systems are unleashed with a target programmed into them, and from that point forward, who is killed or what is destroyed would be up to that system. | ||
Joe, I'll tell you what we're going to do. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
Sam Altman, we've had clips about Sam Altman. | ||
We've talked about this open letter to slow things down, to take a moratorium. | ||
You've had some of the alternatives. | ||
People actually want to do missile strikes into data centers that would go rogue and wouldn't comply with some moratorium. | ||
Altman has responded to Elon Musk and his team. | ||
We're at the beginning. This is the 90th day. | ||
of the rest of your life, the artificial intelligence that was rolled out in Davos to Davos Man at the World Economic Forum. | ||
Joe Allen is my guest. | ||
We're getting all that, the economics of it too. | ||
I started to write a book talking about how technology has always changed the world and we're in an inflection point in the world. | ||
The technology was changing so rapidly and things were changing so significantly. | ||
That it wasn't so much who led any country. | ||
It was the changes that are just happening at an incredible speed. | ||
Incredible speed. Look what's happening with artificial intelligence right now. | ||
It pulls enormous promise and enormous concern. | ||
Our world stands at an inflection point, where the choices we make today are literally going to determine the future and the history of this world for the next four to five decades. | ||
Literally, not figuratively. | ||
We're at one of those points. I had a professor in school who said an inflection point is when you're riding down the highway at 60 miles an hour and you make a radical turn six degrees in one direction. | ||
You can never get back in the course of your own. | ||
That's who we are as a world. | ||
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So paint a picture for us. | |
One, five, ten years in the future. | ||
What changes because of artificial intelligence? | ||
So part of the exciting thing here is we get continually surprised by the creative power of all of society. | ||
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So what is the worst possible outcome? | |
There's like a set of very bad outcomes. | ||
One thing I'm particularly worried about is that these models could be used for large-scale disinformation. | ||
I am worried that these systems, now that they're getting better at writing computer code, could be used for offensive cyberattacks. | ||
And we're trying to talk about this. | ||
I think society needs time to adapt. | ||
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And how confident are you that what you've built won't lead to those outcomes? | |
Well, we'll adapt it. | ||
Also, I think... | ||
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You'll adapt it as negative things occur? | |
For sure. For sure. 2024, the next major election in the United States, might not be on everyone's mind, but it certainly is on yours. | ||
Is this technology going to have the kind of impact that maybe social media has had on previous elections? | ||
And how can you guarantee there won't be those kind of problems because of ChatGPT? | ||
We don't know is the honest answer. | ||
We're monitoring very closely. | ||
And again, we can take it back. | ||
We can turn things off. We can change the rules. | ||
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Would you push a button to stop this if it meant there was a 5 % chance it would be the end of the world? | |
I would push a button to slow it down. | ||
And in fact, I think we will need to figure out ways to slow down this technology over time. | ||
Listen to those responses right there. | ||
5 % chance, not at 50. | ||
5 % chance to get into the world, would you hit the button to stop it after he's given you assurances? | ||
You know, we'll adapt. | ||
We'll adapt this. If we see bad things, we'll adapt it. | ||
Do you feel comfortable having the fate of the nation and yourself and your children in that guy's hands? | ||
Sam Altman, another one of these pencil neck geeks with no moral courage, no faith in anything, just a narcissistic, nihilistic, right there. | ||
What you're seeing with the Altmans is what all of Silicon Valley is like. | ||
Do you feel comfortable Having the fate of the nation and the world and a guy that, yeah, if we see things, we'll adapt it. | ||
We'll make sure we adapt it. | ||
We got that. We adapt it. | ||
I've told you for a while it's going to be a massive issue In the 2024 presidential campaign, that's not even about what it's going to do to actually impact the campaign by the use of it. | ||
Altman was a guy that did not sign on to Elon Musk and sign on to this letter. | ||
In fact, he had a response at MIT the other day why he did not. | ||
His thing was kind of general. | ||
I think there's other ways that we can go about it. | ||
But let me first lead off with Joe Biden threatened Joe Biden. | ||
Folks, think about this. | ||
Would you line up around a Barnes and Noble? | ||
To get the latest copy of Joe Biden talking about technology. | ||
Joe Biden, the huge brain from Delaware, dead last in his class, as Rudy Giuliani always loves to say, dead last in his class in law school. | ||
Joe Biden, you know, the very profound, you know, technology has always had an impact and we're at an inflection point. | ||
Come on, dude. You're boring me already. | ||
Joe Allen. Well, Steve, I've already threatened on Twitter that if Joe Biden's ghostwriter rips off a single line that I've written, I'll find him and say very mean things to him. | ||
So be warned. | ||
Hold it, stop. Hold it, stop. | ||
Joe Biden was forced out of 1988. | ||
The first time he ran for president in 1988, he was one of the frontrunners. | ||
He was forced out because he plagiarized. | ||
He ripped off what the British... | ||
The British labor guy that did the thing about the coal miners in Newcastle, the coal miners in Wales, where his family came from. | ||
Joe Biden ripped the whole thing off, made up some story about his own family and ripped it off, plagiarized it, stone cold plagiarized it. | ||
They forced him out. | ||
This is before the Internet. They forced him. | ||
He only had a couple of networks. | ||
CNN was just a nascent technology. | ||
The major networks and the New York Times forced him out of the race for stone-cold plagiarism and then lying about it. | ||
Joe Allen, so certainly if he was writing a thing, he'd have a ghostwriter cutting and pasting Joe Allen's best stuff. | ||
There's no doubt about that. I mean, it's absurd. | ||
But it does show you that Biden, this is why we had the executive order, the whole of government. | ||
Right now you understand something. | ||
Your government has a whole of government approach with Biden. | ||
Tons of money in back of it on transhumanism. | ||
I mean, they admit they call it the cancer moonshot. | ||
That's just something, a shiny toy to throw somebody. | ||
They have a whole-of-government approach from all the weapons labs, billions of dollars, tens of billions of dollars in back of it in transhumanism, obviously artificial intelligence being the top, but Altman. | ||
Altman is another one of these scary, these are the guys making decisions, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We've got to make these guys famous. | ||
Tell me about Altman. | ||
And he has not signed on to the moratorium because he's guaranteeing you that, oh, I think there's other ways that we can adapt. | ||
Adapting is his big term. | ||
I feel so much better knowing that Sam Altman is going to look after us and he's going to adapt as he sees this thing getting off course, sir. | ||
Well, Steve, Sam Altman sits at the center of much of what we talk about when we talk about transhumanism. | ||
There's three ways that you can get to know Sam Altman, really. | ||
He's a prolific writer, so you can read his articles and blog posts to get a sense. | ||
He speaks oftentimes quite honestly in public. | ||
He's not really that deceptive, I don't think. | ||
If he is, he's holding back much more horrible things than he already says. | ||
And also his investments. | ||
So, if you look at his writing, I think we've recommended this to the audience many times. | ||
Look at his article, Moore's Law of Everything. | ||
Moore's Law, of course, was the trajectory in computing in which transistors doubled their speed. | ||
every 18 months or so. | ||
Basically, what that means is an exponential increase in the technology. | ||
So what Sam Altman's talking about with Moore's Law of Everything, he's talking about artificial intelligence, which is showing an even more dramatic increase in capability as we speak right now. | ||
But Moore's Law of Everything proposes In essence, that all human labor, whether it be mental labor or physical labor, will be done by automation, will be done by artificial intelligence and robots, meaning that we have to figure out what to do then. | ||
And of course, it's this bizarre kind of quasi-socialist structure in which the bazillionaires are forced by the state to keep the rest of us entertained as we have zero use to them and nothing to do. | ||
In his public statements, what I've noticed is a kind of open embrace of a lot of the ideas in transhumanism that we talk about, right? | ||
So he believes artificial general intelligence is imminent. | ||
His company, OpenAI, is working towards artificial general intelligence. | ||
He believes it will have godlike capabilities. | ||
He believes also that some portion of humanity will have to merge with that artificial intelligence. | ||
He doesn't specify, at least that I've seen, but one would imagine that a lot of it has to do with Elon Musk's sort of program of a brain-computer interface of some sort. | ||
He also recommended in that talk, the fireside talk that we discussed some weeks back, that humans who don't want to be merged with artificial general intelligence could live in exclusion zones. | ||
Now, the idea is that the people who don't want artificial intelligence running their lives are excluding the artificial intelligence. | ||
But if you think about the argument he is making, that the godlike force on Earth will basically determine the future of humanity and perhaps the whole cosmos in the most dramatic schemas, then that means that normal legacy humans, Luddite humans, are being excluded from the stream of history. | ||
And then if you look at his investment, Steve, I think that's maybe the most amazing. | ||
You've got Genomic Prediction, which is basically a genomics company that is dedicated to pre-implantation genetic testing for women who get in vitro fertilization. | ||
And what that means is that basically their ovaries will be coaxed to produce around 10 to 15 eggs. | ||
Those eggs will be tested genetically, or I'm sorry, they will be inseminated. | ||
The embryos will be tested genetically, frozen during the testing, and then after genomic prediction goes through and tells you everything from do they have a disorder like diabetes or do they have any sort of disorder like Down syndrome, or will they be in the bottom 2 % Will they be in the bottom 2 % shorter category? | ||
They offer information on intelligence and height for women basically to eugenicize their frozen eggs and choose the best one. | ||
We've talked about this a lot too, especially that recent poll showing that about a third of Americans over a third would actually do that if it would get their kids into the top 100 college. | ||
So there's a market for it. | ||
And then you look at his company or the company he's invested in, WorldCoin, which is developing WorldID, which is it operates on the basis of an iris scan. | ||
And so one of the arguments is that this will be used because the Internet is being flooded with bots. | ||
This world ID can be used as a biometric identity to prove that you are human in a world full of bots. | ||
So he's creating the bots that are flooding the internet, and he's funding a biometric system that can be used to track and trace you and make sure that you're human in the system that he's helping to create. | ||
And finally, Steve, I think maybe one of the more shocking too, for at least some members of our audience, is a company he's investing in called conception and in conception the idea is that two gay men would be able to have a child one of the men would have a skin cell taken or some other cell taken it would be reverted back to a stem cell and the stem cell would then be coaxed to become an ovary or I'm sorry an ova and the ova would then be inseminated by the other man's sperm Creating a new type of human being. | ||
And the proof of concept's already there. | ||
A Japanese university showed that this was possible in mice just a couple of months ago, so I assume there's going to be a market for that, too. | ||
So I don't know if you can judge a man by his writings, his public statements, and his investments, but that's who Sam Altman is as far as I can tell from those sources. | ||
I think it's, you know, you are what your record says you are. | ||
That's the record. That says it all right there. | ||
Remember, he's one of the ones that's not signing this, right, that says, oh, there's other ways to do it, to adapt it. | ||
This is one of the dangerous guys. | ||
This is all in research labs, in companies, in prototypes. | ||
This is happening. This is not some science fiction magazine. | ||
This is not AM Coast to Coast, one of my favorite shows ever, talking about something that's going to happen 10 or 20 years from now. | ||
That was the whole thing about transhumanism. | ||
They kept telling you the singularity, oh, it's 50 years away. | ||
Au contraire, it ain't 50 years away, because now with technology, the capital that's been applied, all of it, it's happening, and it's happening now. | ||
Short commercial break. Back with Joe Allen. | ||
We also got a lot else to go through. | ||
Updates on economics. | ||
I've got to specifically talk about Brazil here for a second. | ||
We're going to get it all in. | ||
You're in the war room. Strap in. | ||
Get another cup of coffee, ready to go. | ||
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Okay, welcome back. A bunch of things to go through. | ||
Number one, make sure you get, because Monday the gun goes off and it's going to be this intense debate. | ||
And hey, what I'm seeing right now that's being leaked out in the press, I am not that blown away by it. | ||
They're talking about going back to the 2022 number, which would be immediate... | ||
I think $130 billion cut out of social spending, no cut out of defense spending. | ||
Then they would agree to no more than 1 % increase in the budget in the next every year going forward. | ||
And on that, they would give some relief to the debt ceiling to May of 2024. | ||
I think that's the number they're talking about. | ||
None of that's acceptable. | ||
It's just not acceptable. | ||
And we have to take a hard line here. | ||
That has to be dramatic cuts and even has to be cuts out of defense. | ||
And they say, Steve, how can you do that when you're facing this war with China? | ||
And you got Rebecca Koffler and Joe Allen, all these people talking about artificial intelligence. | ||
We need to use our unrestricted warfare, particularly the American capital markets and economy. | ||
We can't always be focused on kinetic war. | ||
That is the that is this misnomer. | ||
of thinking about modern conflict. | ||
Modern conflict has a political aspect to it, it has a cyber aspect to it, it has an information war aspect to it, and also principally has an economic war. | ||
We know, and I've had the experts on here, if you cut off the Chinese Communist Party and you need to focus on the CCP, don't focus on China, don't focus on the nation of China. | ||
Focus on the transnational criminal element that run the deal. | ||
And that's not the 92,000. | ||
Remember, a nation of 1.4 billion or 1.3 billion, however the CIA is calculating it today. | ||
And by the way, the difference in that's a big deal because the people with the women are not having babies. | ||
Although the restrictions are off at the one-child policy, they're not having babies because they live in a totalitarian dictatorship, and they don't think it's a great future for their children. | ||
That's a big tell. Economic warfare, if we decouple, hard decouple on technology and capital... | ||
And at the same time start to seize their assets here. | ||
And we need some of that for the reparations for the attack by the COVID seized by the bioweapon. | ||
And let's assume they didn't release it on purpose. | ||
But once it was out, they exacerbated it and lied about it. | ||
We know that. If you did that, every expert we've had on the show, I asked that question, Cole, how long did it last? | ||
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Six months, six months, six months. | |
If we don't do this, we're going to be in a shooting. | ||
We need to cut the defense budget. | ||
We need to stop being everywhere, like in the Ukraine, like in Syria, like in these places. | ||
Got to be out. Can't no more blood and treasure in these places. | ||
It has to be America first and focused on the existential threat we have. | ||
Now, President Trump would disagree with me in this. | ||
He'd say, Steve, I hear you, but the existential threat is the administrative and deep state. | ||
And I said, hey, I gotcha. | ||
I said that in CPAC when I went out there and said we had economic nationalism, America first national security, and the third part was going to be deconstruct the administrative state. | ||
And nobody went after it harder than Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
And hey, we can do it again. | ||
And we got to do it. But the CCP is on it right now. | ||
We're going to be in a shooting war here. | ||
I don't know, shortly, if we don't take care of business. | ||
And taking care of business has got to be stopping our enemies. | ||
I'm going to try to talk a little bit in the next hour about our buddy. | ||
I told everybody this when it was happening, that Lula and Biden heading to the White House and loving up on him after he had stolen the election a week, loving up on him, rubbing up on him over in the Oval Office, you know, had a little thing in the Rose Garden, right? | ||
It's all happy clappy. He's the number one part. | ||
They're talking about a global anti-Trump movement led by Lula, financed by the CCP. But he's over there right now, went over to Beijing. | ||
And right off the bat says, no, we have to have a new economic order based upon the yuan. | ||
You've got to get off the dollar. | ||
And I'm prepared to lead that. | ||
And Brazil, all the natural resources we've got in Brazil, we'll do that right off the bat with the CCP. Said it right there in the tarmac when he landed. | ||
Then went to the Chinese Development Bank, which is the Bank of the Bricks, which is the Bank of the Global South. | ||
This is where One Belt, One Road came from. | ||
And right there said, we have to have a new economic order. | ||
And the Americans have to be put into place. | ||
We should be sanctioned. | ||
We should have sanctions on Lula immediately. | ||
The Biden regime, and the reason you don't have it, you got so many Marxists and fellow travelers that were all sitting there. | ||
Remember, the CIA flew down and told Bolsonaro, we're watching you. | ||
If we see anything untoward, you're going to be in real trouble. | ||
They went down the summer before the election. | ||
The Biden regime is filled with Marxists, traitors, atheists. | ||
that are in cahoots with the global communist Marxist movement. | ||
Look at their praise in Lula. | ||
How could you miss that? How could Steve Bannon in the war room, how could he be right and you be dead wrong? | ||
We told you in advance he was going to betray any type of historic relationship we've had together. | ||
This wasn't hard. | ||
And yet you guys got him in office. | ||
Trust me, the CIA and the Biden regime was deeply involved in bringing Lula to power. | ||
Let me repeat that. | ||
They were deeply involved in bringing Lula to power. | ||
They went down to intimidate. | ||
I know they went down to intimidate the Bolsonaro's. | ||
They went down to intimidate the Bolsonaro's in the summer. | ||
And then Jake Sullivan went down there. | ||
But the head of the CIA, the New York Times, he reported Bernie Sanders even said it. | ||
You have traitors inside this government that are nothing but Marxist. | ||
And now they've got a tool with this artificial intelligence. | ||
The fabric of society, the fabric of culture is about to be rendered asunder. | ||
One, this weapon. And I'm telling you, it's not just people think it's computer can think so much faster. | ||
No, you can get into things like proteins. | ||
You can have this doing such nefarious work so fast. | ||
It can change the entire structure of human life on Earth, boom, in a second. | ||
That's what we're talking about. We're talking about, oh, maybe we should have a six-month moratorium, and maybe Sam Altman doesn't agree. | ||
He doesn't. Sam Altman, he's got this. | ||
If there's anything wrong, Sam Altman's going to adapt. | ||
Go to sleep tonight comforted on your MyPella products knowing that Sam Altman, that Sam Altman, if Sam Altman thinks that there's something off cue, Sam Altman's going to adapt. | ||
Okay, we got Joe Allen's gonna come back and join us. | ||
We've also got, I think we're talking about the satanic clubs in your schools. | ||
Isn't that great? Not enough going on with kids. | ||
Not enough, tough enough being a kid today. | ||
Let's throw a satanic club. | ||
Let's throw a Satan club in a grade school. |