Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
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
|
Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | |
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. Here's your host, Stephen K. Bamm. | |
Today, Sundar Pichai walks a narrow line. | ||
A few employees have quit, some believing that Google's AI rollout is too slow, others too fast. | ||
There are some serious flaws. | ||
James Manjica asked Bard about inflation. | ||
It wrote an instant essay in economics and recommended five books. | ||
But days later, we checked. | ||
None of the books is real. | ||
Bard fabricated the titles. | ||
This very human trait, error with confidence, is called in the industry, hallucination. | ||
Are you getting a lot of hallucinations? | ||
Yes, which is expected. | ||
No one in the field has yet solved the hallucination problems. | ||
All models do have this as an issue. | ||
Is it a solvable problem? | ||
It's a matter of intense debate. | ||
I think we'll make progress. | ||
To help cure hallucinations, Bard features a Google it button that leads to old-fashioned search. | ||
Google has also built safety filters in DeBart to screen for things like hate speech and bias. | ||
How great a risk is the spread of disinformation? | ||
AI will challenge that in a deeper way. | ||
The scale of this problem is going to be much bigger. | ||
Bigger problems, he says, with fake news and fake images. | ||
It will be possible with AI. To create, you know, a video easily where it could be Scott saying something or me saying something and we never said that and it could look accurate. | ||
But, you know, at a societal scale, you know, can cause... | ||
Okay, this is just one. | ||
Gotta remember, Joanne, I'll come here. | ||
Here's the key point when you watch this thing. | ||
Google didn't tell them about hallucinations. | ||
If you watch the thing, they were asking different questions. | ||
They said, tell me about inflation. | ||
And look, as you guys know, I'm a voracious reader. | ||
When I saw the answer on the page, I said, wow, those are amazing titles. | ||
And it was in two nanoseconds. | ||
I said, those are amazing titles. | ||
I got to get those. I got to somehow screen grab that and figure out those titles because I haven't seen those, but they look amazing. | ||
In one nanosecond, they put it up there. | ||
That's the brain. | ||
That's the machine creating that. | ||
And then he tells them, yeah, it's a matter of intense debate. | ||
Yeah, it's a matter of intense debate, right? | ||
It's a matter of intense debate. | ||
They've unleashed this with no control and not even a process to control. | ||
He couldn't walk Scott Pelley through, well, here's what we're doing. | ||
Here's how we're thinking about it. | ||
It's a matter of intense debate. | ||
No, no, no, no. Debate it before you release it. | ||
That should be a beta site or a test, a beta site test. | ||
A prototype, not release it on humanity. | ||
Did you see the collection of clowns they had there? | ||
Look, don't get me wrong, they're the smartest. | ||
They've got 350 IQs. | ||
They have no common sense, no discernment, and no judgment. | ||
We've allowed the world to be put in jeopardy. | ||
And I've said this now for years by this group of irresponsible clowns. | ||
And look at that on 60 Minutes Live. | ||
Scott Pelley, of course, he's part of the media apparatus. | ||
His eyes are bugging out. | ||
Look at that. The hallucinations. | ||
And remember, Google didn't tell 60 Minutes about the hallucination. | ||
It's the little intern or the staff producer that types in the books. | ||
Let's check the books. And she comes back to him and said, hey, the books don't really exist. | ||
The machine made it up. | ||
Joe Allen. Steve, this is really maybe one of the most important elements of artificial intelligence because it exhibits creativity. | ||
More importantly, it exhibits a creativity that is capable of lying and seems to enjoy lying, I guess you would say. | ||
ChatGPT, for instance, GPT-4, it has about a 20 % inaccuracy rate. | ||
Some of that is just wrong answers. | ||
It just got something wrong. A lot of that is what you just saw there, hallucination. | ||
It just comes up with stuff. | ||
There's a lawyer, last name Turley, I can't remember his first name. | ||
ChatGPT claimed that he had raped a student or something like that. | ||
And, you know, I believe he's going forward with a lawsuit. | ||
He certainly should. And these sorts of lies, these sorts of hallucinations, coupled with the ability to create deep fakes, we're going into Philip K. Dick country here. | ||
No, no. Hang on. | ||
You get it? It's not hallucination. | ||
That's a term of art. It's like a sentient being. | ||
People lie all the time. | ||
It's one of the flaws of the human character. | ||
They lie. The machine lies like a sentient being. | ||
It's about consciousness. I don't want to hear about, oh, it makes an error. | ||
To the machine, it ain't an error. | ||
It's an error because you deem it's not, hey, he made it up. | ||
People make up stuff all the time. | ||
This is my point. What's the difference of this and a sentient being? | ||
That's what they don't want to address. | ||
Hang on for a second. Put a pin in. | ||
I got John Solomon. Okay. | ||
Okay. I have said that 2024 that this is going to be it. | ||
Number one, it's got all the machines got to go immediately. | ||
I don't care about the frickin Fox lawsuit. | ||
It's not about defamation. | ||
This is not this is this is all the machines got to go and Democrats got to support it because the machines is going to pick who's going to win. | ||
This is going to pick who's going to win. | ||
You have no control over it. You put it in there has no control over it. | ||
We're 90, let me repeat this, only 90 days ago did this come up. | ||
Google wasn't even on, they had DeepMind, but they've shifted the entire business model. | ||
When it says, yeah, we have a check, if it's wrong, we're gonna go back and check a search. | ||
Search is like a Model T car to the Challenger. | ||
That's the difference in scaling this thing. | ||
Oh yeah, you know, it has a default position. | ||
They sat there and lied to your face last night from 60 minutes. | ||
Don't get me wrong, the 60-minute staff didn't know really what it was doing, kinda. | ||
In the second hour, they got the little robots playing soccer. | ||
I don't want to see. That deep mind has got the biggest things in the world. | ||
You got these little robots playing soccer. | ||
I don't want to hear about the soccer. They're teaching themselves soccer. | ||
I'm a Luddite. Full on. | ||
By the way, the guy we're going to get to, the guy that wouldn't sign, you got Elon Musk on tonight, and he's going to do Tucker. | ||
I heard it was six hours. | ||
I'll talk to Joel about that later, about this. | ||
And Elon Musk, here's what a great guy he is. | ||
He says, oh, it's a civilizational risk. | ||
Oh, by the way, I'm starting a ChatGPT. | ||
I'm funding a ChatGPT competitor because he wants money and power. | ||
Boom. I get it. | ||
It's simple. The guy that said, hey, we've got to have a moratorium, and here's what. | ||
Because remember, it's computational muscle also gives you this, just raw computational muscle. | ||
But the guy said, everybody's got to sign on and there's a data center. | ||
Forget artificial intelligence. | ||
If it's a data center in the world that's identified in any place in the world and they have not agreed to shut all this down, we do a missile strike. | ||
I'm 100 % for that, and I dare anybody come and give me an argument why you shouldn't do it. | ||
If you saw that last night, and call Scott Pelley up. | ||
I'm sure his eyes were bugged out the entire 40 minutes. | ||
Other thing, 60 minutes never does back-to-back, never does back-to-back segments. | ||
Lister interviewing Steve Bannon or John Gotti, but it's very rare. | ||
That shows you how important it is. | ||
Well, hang on for a second. John Solomon, you've also got break. | ||
My head's blowing up on your thing. | ||
You dropped last night at midnight. | ||
What is going on? I'm hearing all kind of rumors from people in the know, brother, and Solomon's always in the know, that these depositions about the laptop from hell and about the intelligence community and what they knew and what they knew about the election in 2020, brother, is going to blow up this town. | ||
Am I incorrect on that? | ||
Is John Solomon showing me a little leg here? | ||
I am a little bit, yes. | ||
So Mike Murrell, former deputy CIA director, former acting director of the CIA under Barack Obama, and Nick Shapiro, a longtime player inside the Obama administration, eventually became deputy CIA director for John Brennan. | ||
They were deposed last week, and they were able to guide the committee, the House Weaponization Committee, the Jim Jordan Subcommittee, To evidence that the Biden campaign was directly involved in instigating and sustaining another piece of disinformation. | ||
You worry about ChatGPI, which is very important to be worried about. | ||
We had humans engaged in disinformation in the 2020 campaign. | ||
This was the letter by 51 security experts saying Hunter Biden's laptop was a Russian ruse. | ||
It wasn't, of course. But that has always been portrayed in the media and quite frankly in the fact base as having been an organic moment by intelligence people concerned about interference in the election. | ||
It now has its origins in the Biden campaign. | ||
The actual names of the people in the Biden campaign who instigated it are going to be made public probably next week. | ||
But the idea that the Biden campaign is directly involved in the instigation of this letter It changes the entire nature of what turned out to be one of the most consequential disinformation campaigns ever conducted in an election. | ||
Solomon, here's what I'll get. | ||
You've got to help me out here. That's a blockbuster what you're reporting. | ||
Mike Morrell, if I pick up the Funkin' Wagnalls about Deep State, he's a very bright guy. | ||
But I pick up Funkin' Wagnalls, his picture's there next to it. | ||
So why is Mike Morrell serving up these guys? | ||
That's the part. | ||
He's totally dialed in. | ||
Did he sign the letter or not? | ||
But why would he serve these guys up? | ||
He was one of the signatures, yep. According to Jim Jordan, he was one of the organizers. | ||
So I believe Morrell gets a tasking order from the Biden campaign. | ||
He goes and rounds up the signatures. | ||
Then Nick Shapiro, who has a lot of press contacts, because he started in the press side of the Obama world, he starts feeding this bogus letter out to the media. | ||
And of course, a disinformation campaign has begun. | ||
Mike Morrell, I think the reason why Mike Morrell gave it up, I don't think he wanted to testify. | ||
I don't think he wanted to give a deposition. | ||
I think Jim Jordan's investigators have been rolling up people, almost like a mob case, rolling one, and they basically got to someone and said, hey, Morrell organized it, and he talked to the Biden campaign. | ||
They got him to come in. | ||
They got him to confess. Now, we don't know who in the Biden campaign it is yet, but when we do, it's going to be a blockbuster story. | ||
Well, the Biden campaign, yeah, because now, remember, the pincer movement, they're trying to connect the Mar-a-Lago raid. | ||
They're trying to connect Matt Colangelo to DOJ. Stephen Miller and the American First guys have got the Mar-a-Lago raid with the special access that you report on, all the DOJ. Now you're taking this to DOJ. And this is like a mob war. | ||
Because we take out one of theirs. | ||
They got this whole bogus thing on Judge Thomas. | ||
Mike Davis is going to be here tonight. | ||
They're trying to take out Justice Thomas with this thing. | ||
This is going to get quite intense, is it not, sir? | ||
It is, and quite frankly, I think it's intense behind the scenes already. | ||
Listen, trench warfare has been going on since 2019 when they tried to cancel my stories on Hunter Biden at the Hill. | ||
Then they went on to cancel the laptop in 2020. | ||
They've tried to gaslight or stop any truthful reporting. | ||
On democratic corruption and the culture of corruption that envelopes not only the Biden family, but quite frankly, the larger Democrats in Congress. | ||
We've had lots of scandals that are currently engulfing Democrats in Congress. | ||
They've been trying to gaslight people who report on it, who expose on it, who blow the whistle on it. | ||
And I think the game is finally up. | ||
I think with the House now in Republican control, They're getting facts. | ||
They're getting subpoenas. They're getting depositions. | ||
And I think I'm going to make a bold prediction here today. | ||
I think within the next month, we're going to know why the Hunter Biden criminal case hasn't been resolved, why they haven't made a decision one way or the other to charge or not charge him. | ||
That coupled with the revelation about the Biden campaign being behind that fake letter, that intelligence letter, going to be two of the most explosive revelations of the last couple of years. | ||
Oh, no. That's a bombshell, beyond doubt. | ||
Also about why they got it in 19 and held it to pass the Democratic... | ||
You would think Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren might be interested in that. | ||
It kind of confuses me why they're not all over top of this, because they would have been the nominee and not Joe Biden. | ||
Anyway, John, how do people get to the show? | ||
How do they get to Justin News? | ||
You're now... This is... | ||
unidentified
|
This is the wheelhouse of John Solomon, right? | |
So we're going to have you on a lot, I'm sure, the next couple of months. | ||
How do people get to you, sir? I'm lucky to follow you at 5 o'clock right here on Real America's Voice. | ||
Justin News, no noise. 6 o'clock on Real America's Voice. | ||
And then everydayjustinnews.com and Jay Solomon reports on all social platforms. | ||
unidentified
|
That's how you stay in touch. John Solomon, explosive. | |
Mike Murrell, wow. Who'd have ever thought that? | ||
Quite impressive. Mike Murrell, one of the smartest guys. | ||
Not a fan of Donald J. Trump or America First, but a very smart guy. | ||
Very smart guy. Interesting. | ||
This is explosive. Okay, we're going to take a short break. | ||
I've got Joe Allen. We got a ton more to do on AI. Terry Schilling, Jeremy Peters in the New York Times have an incredible piece over the weekend about the social conservative traditional movement in this country fighting back on this transgender ideology and actually a quite positive story in it by the New York Times. | ||
We're going to get into all of that. Take a short commercial break. | ||
We are packed wall to wall. | ||
We're going to get it all done here in the morning show. | ||
Back at 5 o'clock night. | ||
Also, 8 o'clock tonight, Tucker. | ||
9 o'clock, MTG. 10 o'clock, Royce White on Getter. | ||
unidentified
|
Make sure you're there. Bye. Okay, welcome back. | |
Joe Allen. I got Terry Schilling on deck. | ||
I got Joe Allen. | ||
Give me some more hallucinations. | ||
This is... It... | ||
This in emerging properties and black box where they admit they don't even know how it works. | ||
How could you possibly let this out on humanity not knowing how it works? | ||
Gerilyn, give me some more on hallucinations. | ||
So Steve, what the hallucination is is basically it's just the system creating things that do not correspond with reality, right? | ||
The chat GPT or open AI Google's DeepMind, all of them pride themselves on creating an artificial intelligence system that is able to describe reality in a chatbot or to isolate and model what a protein structure will look like, | ||
something we talked a lot about, how Google's DeepMind's Program AlphaFold has allowed scientists to predict the folding patterns of proteins, meaning they can predict the function of the protein from the genome, meaning that they can mutate the genome with some idea of where it's going. | ||
This is really big with the creation of mRNA vaccines, for instance. | ||
So the hallucinations on the one hand are just lies, so to speak. | ||
On the other hand, a hallucination gives the ability really to create something that a human brain hasn't already created. | ||
That's why, for instance, Google's AlphaZero Was so good at chess and go and was able to create all of these different novel strategies for those games and other games because basically it explores the field of possibilities beyond what is already known And then exploits them. | ||
So it's creative, right? | ||
It hallucinates. | ||
And in regard to proteins and protein mutations, or genetic mutations leading to protein structures. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Hold it. | ||
Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop. | ||
That terminology is going to mislead people. | ||
It's not hallucinating. | ||
It's like somebody that's lying or thinking error with confidence. | ||
That's not a hallucination. | ||
It thinks like a sentient being. | ||
It thinks like a sentient being. | ||
This thing has consciousness. | ||
It's obvious. At least it's obvious to the end user. | ||
It's not a hallucination. | ||
That's what the programmers want to say because they don't want to go there to describe what's happening. | ||
Hang on for one second. Let me get Terry into that. | ||
I've got to get this, please. Because 60 Minutes is totally misread. | ||
It's completely miserable. | ||
And correct me if I'm wrong. I'm going to play the proteins piece. | ||
The deep mind guy made it seem like the proteins thing was the greatest thing that ever happened in human history as a positive. | ||
If you understand what actually happened, you could see the end of the world right in the proteins piece. | ||
Am I wrong on that, Joe, before I play it? | ||
Am I wrong on that? When he's playing the proteins piece, one of the things I've always had the concern is that the machine can start, you know, they'll take over, and it can take over, and start doing their own proteins. | ||
It doesn't have to be the mRNA vaccine. | ||
They can do their own deal, which they will do, and I'm sure they have done, sir. | ||
You know, I think that the possibility of the machine doing that is less important than the possibility of the human having access to a technology that allows that person to predict Downstream effects of mutations. | ||
You've already seen AI programs that can create bioweapons, toxins, right? | ||
And the same thing can be used, the same sorts of process anyway, can be used to create gain-of-function viruses. | ||
The thing is, Steve, is that instead of doing this in a laboratory, instead of sitting there on a lab bench with your petri dishes, it does it all in silico in the blink of an eye, meaning that the potential to create lethal viruses or lethal chemicals has grown exponentially with the development of this technology. | ||
I think that's the big danger. | ||
And by the way, for the Google CEO, it's a matter of intense debate. | ||
Well, thank you. I'm glad you're intense. | ||
Screw you. I don't hear your intense debate. | ||
Intense debate this. | ||
How about this? The whole plug gets pulled on all of it. | ||
All of it. We got it? | ||
Let me play it right now. | ||
I'm going to get Terry in a second. Play it. | ||
unidentified
|
Demis Hassaba sold DeepMind to Google in 2014. | |
One reason was to get his hands on this. | ||
Google has the enormous computing power that AI needs. | ||
This computing center is in prior Oklahoma, but Google has 23 of these, putting it near the top in computing power in the world. | ||
This is one of two advances that make AI ascendant now. | ||
First, the sum of all human knowledge is online, and second, brute force computing that very loosely approximates the neural networks and talents of the brain. | ||
Things like memory, imagination, planning, reinforcement learning, these are all things that are known about how the brain does it, and we wanted to replicate some of that in our AI systems. | ||
Those are some of the elements that led to DeepMind's greatest achievement so far, solving an impossible problem in biology. | ||
Proteins are building blocks of life, but only a tiny fraction were understood because 3D mapping of just one could take years. | ||
DeepMind created an AI program for the protein problem and set it loose. | ||
Well, it took us about four or five years to figure out how to build the system. | ||
It was probably our most complex project we've ever undertaken. | ||
But once we did that, it can solve a protein structure in a matter of seconds. | ||
And actually, over the last year, we did all the 200 million proteins that are known to science. | ||
How long would it have taken using traditional methods? | ||
Well, the rule of thumb I was always told by my biologist friends is that it takes a whole PhD five years to do one protein structure experimentally. | ||
So if you think 200 million times five, that's a billion years of PhD time it would have taken. | ||
DeepMind made its protein database public, a gift to humanity, Hassabis called it. | ||
How has it been used? | ||
It's been used in an enormously broad number of ways, actually, from malaria vaccines to developing new enzymes that can eat plastic waste to new antibiotics. | ||
Most AI systems today do one or maybe two things well. | ||
The soccer robots, for example. | ||
Dump the soccer robots. | ||
I can't. I don't want to be a billion years of these are the smartest guys on the planet a billion years to the he did it they did it in what 10 seconds after they worked out the structure 10 seconds when the world ends go back to that clip right there if you're not scared out of your wits then you're not a sentient being right there boom Joe Allen they people should have read Mein Kampf what in the 20s and taking it to heart Okay? | ||
Then the world would have been a better place. | ||
They better watch this episode. | ||
They better watch what's going on here because that's for a general public. | ||
Right there, that is the heart of the matter. | ||
That is the heart of the matter. | ||
The heart of the matter. | ||
And now you understand why the guy said, anybody that has the computational muscle, he said data centers. | ||
Anybody that has a data center that does not sign on immediately to have a full and complete moratorium, you do a missile strike on it. | ||
I know this is Bannon with us here on fire. | ||
When you go back and look at the ones I've called, I'm telling you, I've been telling you this for years, and now it's out of control. | ||
We're 90 days from Davos. | ||
So we're in the first hundred days, and look what they're talking about. | ||
Right there, in the wrong hands. | ||
Now listen, I actually think the machine itself can start doing this itself, and that's true, but I'll leave that. | ||
Even Joe Allen's in the wrong hands, and you don't think you got the wrong hands? | ||
Have you looked at what the world's got out there with the radical jihadis, the nutcases in North Korea, all the bad element in the CCP? This is the Wuhan lab to the 50th power. | ||
unidentified
|
Joe Allen. Well, Steve, It's everywhere, right? | |
Meta has created a very similar program that does the protein modeling, much like what you saw with Google's DeepMind. | ||
We reported on this about a month ago. | ||
Salesforce has created an AI that is able to model proteins. | ||
And the most important thing about it is that it was a language model. | ||
It was originally created to understand language. | ||
But they turned it to train on proteins and genomes, and just with the same sort of mental architecture, so to speak, it began to create, model and create proteins, right? | ||
So they tested these improved proteins in the lab, and they were more efficient, more effective, meaning that the machine itself On its own, without the human tweaking it manually, was able to isolate the pathway towards a more efficient protein. | ||
So if you're going to make medicine, you're going to make different sort of cancer therapies, things like that, great! | ||
But what it also opens the possibility of, as I just mentioned a moment ago, You've got the potential to make viruses, bacteria, or other types of pathogens much more quickly and much more efficiently, and you can be sure the same technology is being used in China, and more than likely in Russia, and more than likely in a lot of different places, because these models are getting cheaper. | ||
And much more deadly. | ||
Much more deadly. Much more deadly. | ||
Joe, real quickly, we're going to have you back on today. | ||
We're all over this like a dog on a bone because now it's quite evident that the senior guys at these institutions have no earthly idea how to control this. | ||
It's a matter of intense debate. | ||
Screw your intense debate. I don't want to hear about your debate. | ||
It's not a debating society. | ||
You've unleashed a weapon. | ||
President Trump keeps saying the N-word about the nuclear weapon. | ||
This is the 100th power. | ||
The 100th power more powerful than a nuclear weapon. | ||
And I hope Elon gets into it tonight. | ||
Real quickly, what is your social media? | ||
How do people get to you, brother? We're going to get you back on here at 5, but how do people get to you? | ||
Twitter and getter, at J-O-E-B-O-T-X-Y-Z, jobot.xyz. | ||
And you can actually watch the entire episode. | ||
It's up at warroom.org. | ||
It should be at the top of the homepage by now. | ||
And we're going to figure out how to do it so we get a live chat going so everybody can get in there and get their two cents in. | ||
Hey, we built the Antichrist. | ||
We built it. With our own hands, we are smitten. | ||
Once an eagle said, by our own hand, we saw the arrow in him, by our own hand, we're smitten. | ||
We created it. Terry Schilling, Mike Lindell, next in the war room. | ||
unidentified
|
We rejoice when there's no more. | |
Let's take down the CCP! Here's your host, Stephen K. Van. | ||
Okay, um... | ||
Birchgold.com, we're going to get a lot of economics that you've got to get because the thing's exploding on getting off the dollar and the devaluation. | ||
That's what we had Congressman Green on here in the debate. | ||
You're in the middle of it. Remember, you're the creditors committee. | ||
Nothing's more important now than the fight over this money. | ||
Go to birchgold.com slash Bannon, end of the dollar empire, totally free, all three segments of this. | ||
Including the debt trap, the last one. | ||
Plus, you can go to Philip Patrick, get all the information, 401ks, all of your retirement, right? | ||
Everything. But looking at precious metals. | ||
We're not here to give you investment advice, but you've got to immerse yourself. | ||
You need to take responsibility and immerse yourself in everything related to money right now. | ||
You've got to understand it because we're going to go through some turbulent times. | ||
Also, you've got the Peter Navarro macroeconomic course for, I think, $10 or $12. | ||
Go check it out. Immerse yourself. | ||
And I don't care if you dropped out of high school in your freshman year. | ||
We can teach you, and you must understand. | ||
It's money and power, and we're going to teach you the money side and how that money side translates to power. | ||
Because you're the creditors committee, you need it. | ||
New York Times has kind of a puff piece on Terry Schilling and the team. | ||
Terry, tell us what the New York Times of Jeremy Peters' incredible piece about this radical transgender ideology and how it's galvanized the right, sir. | ||
Well, Steve, thanks so much for having me, and I was as shocked as you are, I'm sure, when you read it. | ||
Basically, what they wrote about is how there's this new culture war around the transgender issue, and that all the experts, all the elites, are just so darn shocked. | ||
At how far we've taken this thing. | ||
And what they're shocked about is the fact that along, and this has been driven by the war room, right? | ||
By all of you guys that listen and watch this show every day. | ||
We're up to 21 states now that have banned trans sports and only let girls compete in girls sports. | ||
We're up to 15 states that are protecting kids from these gender mutilation surgeries that sterilize them. | ||
And just this year, we are already up to five states That have banned pornography online that require age verification for kids. | ||
We're hitting the sexual revolution right in the family jewel, Steve. | ||
And it couldn't be more beautiful. | ||
And I was utterly shocked at the New York Times article and how much credit they actually gave us. | ||
It was absolutely incredible. | ||
I want people to get it. I want to go back. | ||
I'm going to get you in here when we start going through the states. | ||
We'll book you, I don't know, this afternoon or tomorrow. | ||
I want to go through where we stand in the states, where it stands. | ||
It's on the cusp on all of this because you guys have done a tremendous job, you and the other groups working with this, and you've done it with virtually no resources. | ||
That's the amazing thing. This is all. | ||
And it shows you this is an 85-15 issue or 90-10 issue or 95-5 issue. | ||
This is one people are pretty... | ||
Pretty straightforward about. We don't want this happening, and we want it out, and we don't understand why the media is pushing it. | ||
So the New York Times article is out there. | ||
Terry, how did they get to American principles and find out what you guys are doing? | ||
How did they get to your social media? | ||
And we'll have you back on to actually do a state-by-state breakdown. | ||
It's just shilling1776 across all the platforms. | ||
And we're on Getter, TrueSocial, all of that. | ||
And then also our organizational handle is just American Principles Project. | ||
Just Google it and look it up and we'll be there. | ||
But thanks so much, Steve. | ||
And I just want to reiterate, I want to thank the War Room Posse because Steve's exactly right. | ||
You know, everyone thought David was the underdog, but he was the favorite. | ||
We got the sling and you guys are the sling. | ||
And And we're taking on Goliaths everywhere, and we wouldn't be here without everything that the war room's built. | ||
And so we just want to thank you guys so much. | ||
You guys are the David. | ||
You got the slang. We'll provide the stones. | ||
How about that? We'll provide the stones. | ||
unidentified
|
We need a thousand more stones. | |
You need a thousand more stones. | ||
We're the stone provider, so we'll help you with the stones. | ||
Okay, brother, thank you very much. | ||
Terry Schilling, fantastic job. | ||
New York Times, an actually even-handed report. | ||
I don't want everybody to read that. | ||
We've got to get a payroll. | ||
Okay, Mike Lindell. Mike, artificial intelligence. | ||
Look, you know I'm not a machine guy, although you've brought some good evidence. | ||
I'm closer there than I've ever been. | ||
I said a couple months ago, I see where you're going in this. | ||
But the artificial intelligence changes everything. | ||
Everybody's got to be a machine person now. | ||
Democrats. Because with artificial intelligence, it changes everything. | ||
And now that it can be deployed, you can't have anything related to a machine have anything to do whatsoever with a vote. | ||
It's got to be a paper frickin' ballot. | ||
It's got to be counted by something called a human being, sir. | ||
Right. That's exactly right, Steve. | ||
And you're right. People are coming around to my evidence with the machines. | ||
Yahoo! and the left media this week, they called me a theorist instead of a conspiracy theorist. | ||
So things are changing out there. | ||
But we're at an apex in history, everybody. | ||
If we don't get rid of these machines in our elections, it's over. | ||
I've been saying that for almost two years now, or over two years. | ||
And with artificial intelligence, you won't even be able to catch them. | ||
You won't even be able to know. They'll know what you're going to vote for before you even think it. | ||
And with the place we're going, if you don't have elections with paper ballots hand counted, By humans, now you're electing people that are gonna be the ones that are controlling all of this new technology. | ||
So you better have some people in there that you trust that are for the people that are regulating all of these things. | ||
But Mike, can you finally... | ||
Look, the Republican establishments fought you worse than anybody. | ||
Can you now... | ||
Because the Democrats ought to join us. | ||
Because it's not even what Democrats want or the left wants. | ||
It's going to be what the machine wants. | ||
They said in the black box, the top guys in the world do not understand. | ||
They say it's a black box. | ||
That means they don't understand how the thing itself works. | ||
Can't you bring together everybody to say, look, we know we don't like each other. | ||
We hate each other's stances. | ||
We got that. But we got to just get rid of the machines and get back to paper ballots and then let the best team win. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And that's already been done, you guys. | ||
This has been just two weeks ago, the night of the big fake indictments and all this that they did to our great real president, Donald Trump. | ||
That same day was an election in Missouri, and we used paper ballots, hand counted there. | ||
In Osage County, and it was Democrats and Republicans working together, the people working together. | ||
They all wanted the same thing. | ||
It went off with a 100 % accuracy. | ||
Everybody trusted the vote. | ||
And by the way, in Missouri that day, they had problems with the machines, again, all over the state. | ||
So in the end, this paper ballots hand counted. | ||
They were done, Steve, on the first time ever to do this, 20 minutes later than the machine counts, which we know who knows what happened with the machines inside. | ||
We don't know. We do know what happened here. | ||
So anybody that says it takes longer, what are we going to do? | ||
How are we going to do it? | ||
We already have it. It's already set. | ||
We've got many, many counties that have come on board now that we're kind of keeping it under the radar so they don't get attacked by our own party. | ||
And we're working with the RNC, hopefully that they are going to endorse paper ballots, hand counting, get a resolution out there. | ||
And I'm working with them, the 168, so we can get everybody on the same page where, you know what, if we don't get rid of these computers and machines in our elections, it's over! | ||
It's over. It's end times. | ||
Everybody just pray. Everybody give as many people to the Lord as you can, and we all go to heaven. | ||
This is it. This is it, everybody. | ||
And this artificial intelligence, it's anybody that wasn't on board. | ||
I don't care what you think, or you've seen all our evidence, and it's over. | ||
If you're not important, then you better think again when you look at artificial intelligence. | ||
They'll hide it so good you won't even know. | ||
You won't be able to catch the crime. | ||
You won't be able to because it'll all be pre-programmed. | ||
They'll decide what you're going to vote for. | ||
I know you've got the timing. | ||
You're going to roll out some information here. | ||
We've got the conference 16th and 17th of August in Springfield, Missouri. | ||
You're going to be rolling out additional information on all this and maybe the CCP's involvement. | ||
So there's a lot there we're going to get to. | ||
But aren't you – I keep hearing – I think in Texas we're in place. | ||
Aren't you guys field testing, even though maybe like Shasta or Sajj, you haven't officially approved it? | ||
You're trying to field test to show people how – The paper ballot and the vote by hand and the hand count can actually work throughout the country, sir? | ||
Yeah, we just did a big test in Texas. | ||
That was another part of our team. | ||
There we had Clint Curtis, who, by the way, is a Democrat, and he showed his system of paper ballots, hand counted, and they just did that, I believe it was Friday or Saturday, in Texas. | ||
That went great, and he just sent me that this morning. | ||
Remember, Clint Curtis set the first algorithms to steal elections. | ||
He did it in the early 2000s, but the Republicans were doing it to the Democrats, and so he came clean about and said, hey, I did this. | ||
We can't use this to steal elections. | ||
He at Bridgely had set it up to protect you, to show you how easy it could be done. | ||
So this system that he came up with, very similar to our Linda Rantz in Missouri, and we're testing it all over the place. | ||
It's easier now to get more and more counties on board. | ||
And by the way, if you're out there, here's a call to action, everybody. | ||
Go to your county officials, the ones that are in charge of your elections, and say, we, the people, demand paper ballots hand counted. | ||
We've got to get rid of these machines. | ||
And you don't need to wait until 2024. | ||
There's a lot of elections between now and then, local elections and everything else. | ||
That's a great place for you to show that it can be done in your own county. | ||
Okay, Mike, tell me about the company, about the hiring. | ||
People want to know how you're doing financially at the company and how we're doing in hiring people, etc. | ||
Walk us through that in the topper, in the new MyPillow, because I know that's got the production line going. | ||
Absolutely. I'm back in Minnesota for a couple days. | ||
I flew back today. | ||
We actually are making moves in our production because now with the MyPillow 2.0, the buy one, get one free, and the MyPillow topper, mattress topper 2.0, which you save 40 % on all the toppers by using a promo code WARWROOM. We're doing this, so we're making room in one of our buildings. | ||
We hired now 150 more people over the last two and a half weeks. | ||
Because they're doing what they love, and that's manufacturing. | ||
They're down there. I'm going to be visiting the one building today, going through and seeing. | ||
Now we have to change our footprint back to doing what they love best, and that's making the USA products. | ||
Families here in the USA, we have We have careers at MyPillow, not just jobs. | ||
And we're very thankful for all the support the War Room Posse has given us and all you guys out there. | ||
So use that. Go to MyPillow.com. | ||
Use the promo code WARROOM. You get the MyPillow mattress topper, save 40%. | ||
They'll buy one, get one free. | ||
And we still have some of the percale sheets left. | ||
You can get king size for $39, queen size for $35, and all the way down to $25 for the twin size per kill sheet. | ||
But once they're gone, they're gone. | ||
We need everybody to go there. | ||
MyPillow.com, promo code Worm. | ||
You also get the buy one, get one free, and the MyPillow 2.0, plus all the other sales. | ||
Mike's got stuff to get. Discounts going on. | ||
And Steve, go to you guys. | ||
Yeah, go ahead. Yeah, we have a square right up there with Steve's picture on it. | ||
So you can go, because these are, some of these presents are exclusive to the Worm Room Posse. | ||
So look for Steve's picture there. | ||
We put it up, and then you know you're in the right place. | ||
Go to MyPillow.com. | ||
Go down to see Steve there. | ||
I just can't thank you all enough, Steve, you guys and all your audience. | ||
Mike Lindell, thank you. | ||
In order to be scrambling around, I want to get you back on. | ||
We're going to go through all this, everything related to the different information you've got, the CCP and all that, okay? | ||
Thank you, sir. Appreciate it, brother. | ||
Thank you. Thank you. | ||
Mike Lindell, carbon out of time. | ||
Can I play the spot? | ||
Let me go ahead and play the spot. I want to talk about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Donald Trump is being attacked by a Democrat prosecutor in New York. | |
So why is he spending millions attacking the Republican governor of Florida? | ||
Trump's stealing pages from the Biden-Pelosi playbook, repeating lies about Social Security. | ||
Here's the truth from Governor Ron DeSantis. | ||
We're not going to mess with Social Security as Republicans. | ||
What did Trump say? | ||
Entitlements ever be on your plate? | ||
unidentified
|
At some point they will be. | |
We will take a look at that. | ||
Trump should fight Democrats, not lie about Governor DeSantis. | ||
What happened to Donald Trump? | ||
unidentified
|
Never back down, Inc. is responsible for the contents of this ad. | |
Okay, that's the counter. | ||
Right there you're seeing, this is the DeSantis counter to all the Trump ads. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's the issue. This is supposed to be their big thing. | |
They don't answer the question. | ||
President Trump is calling out about what he thought with Paul Ryan and for the years doing it, and he's got a thing about March of this year. | ||
It's not going to work. We're going to break it all down, and at 5 o'clock we're going to play both in compare and contrast. | ||
But if that's your best shot, it's not going to work. | ||
Short break. Back in the warm in a moment. | ||
unidentified
|
On DeSantis, think again. | |
In Congress, DeSantis voted three separate times to cut Social Security. | ||
That's right, three times over three years. | ||
Worse, DeSantis voted to cut Medicare two times. | ||
DeSantis even voted to raise the retirement age to 70. | ||
The more you learn about DeSantis, the more you see he doesn't share our values. | ||
He's just not ready to be president. | ||
Make America Great Again, Inc. | ||
is responsible for the content of his advertising. | ||
Okay, since President Trump went to Nashville and told the donors of the RNC that, hey, the Republican Party, the old Republican Party's dead is not coming back. | ||
I'm going to play today either five or six, play those back-to-back and deconstruct them. | ||
Because Governor Santa still hasn't answered the question. | ||
This is about the Paul Ryan, about voting for Social Security and Medicare. | ||
And the argument they made for President Trump was some passing comment he made at the World Economic Forum back, I think, in... | ||
Anyway, we'll break it all down this afternoon. | ||
For people that have been with this show for a number of years, and particularly people after we went off impeachment in January of 2020, we were the first in the world to really focus on the pandemic. | ||
You remember Dr. | ||
Rosemary Gibson, or Rosemary Gibson, excuse me, we brought on... | ||
That had the book, had the cover of the book with the red pill. | ||
Talked about we had all of the generic medications were made in China. | ||
This is the first days of the, remember this, the pandemic. | ||
All the medications were made in China, and particularly the APIs, the really active pharmaceutical ingredients. | ||
Remember that? Like the vitamin C. 100 % of that's virtually made in China. | ||
This is still a strategy. Three years later, nothing's happened. | ||
Zero. President Trump did the joint venture down to Richmond, but even that's really, you know, Navarro put that together, didn't even get it. | ||
Hasn't really gotten off the ground. | ||
Want to bring in Dr. Sean Rowland. | ||
Doctor, you've got a system set up to get around this, but this is a, first off, this is a national security issue that we haven't addressed this. | ||
Give us what the problem is and what solution have you come up? | ||
And I want our audience to get involved here because this is a big league problem, sir. | ||
Well, thank you so much for this opportunity. | ||
You're absolutely right. | ||
I think Rosemary Gibson did a lot to shed some light on this through that book you mentioned. | ||
And it's not an easy task. | ||
When you talk about the pharmaceutical industry just in general, it's rather opaque and connecting all the dots just isn't easy. | ||
What we do know Here in the United States, 2021 is where some of these numbers come from, but in 2021, it's been estimated that about 90 % of the medications that are prescribed in the United States are generic medications. | ||
What's interesting is that it was only 15 years ago that that number was 50%. | ||
China and others have worked hard, and nowadays we've got 90 % of these medications that are generic and virtually all of them are produced overseas. | ||
China's a big player, India, Israel, there's some places in Europe as well. | ||
But I think the even underlying secret to all of that is that all of these, virtually all of them, get their active pharmaceutical ingredients, as you mentioned, out of China. | ||
All roads seem to lead back to China, certainly when we're talking about generic pharmaceutical production. | ||
This issue was something that, for me, pre-pandemic, we were already experiencing shortages here and there in hospitals with vital medications. | ||
The challenge was, what, if anything, can we do? | ||
I mean, we should be bringing production back to the United States for sure. | ||
That's a pretty complicated process. | ||
It takes a long time to build up that production capacity. | ||
So me, as a family medicine doctor in a community hospital, what can I do? | ||
So that led to the formation of Jace Medical. | ||
And at Jace Medical, Really, our mission is to empower everybody to be better prepared medically. | ||
We think it's not a matter of if, but it's when we will be experiencing worse. | ||
We've already experienced baby formula shortages, children's Tylenol, amoxicillin. | ||
This is all just in the last year, and these things are just going to get worse. | ||
So at Jace Medical, what we've done, we've put together a way that you're able to come onto our website, use telemedicine as a way to have an encounter with a physician, Basically, the goal of this is to prescribe you antibiotics, other generic medications that you can have on hand in a supply ready to go if or when you need them. | ||
The telemedicine, this is all approved by the individual states who do the licensing and everything. | ||
You get in your state, you can go do this, and it's all legit and above board. | ||
Right. We've got a network of board-certified physicians who are licensed in every state. | ||
We also do business up in Canada, have physicians there as well. | ||
We also built a network of licensed U.S. pharmacies, in the case of our U.S. patients, and then Canadian pharmacies up in Canada, to help facilitate this whole process. | ||
So yes, everything is... | ||
Strictly above board, and we're using standard practices. | ||
These physicians will approve the prescription. | ||
They send it to a pharmacy where we've prearranged special pricing in order to have access to these medications at something that's an affordable rate. | ||
Just because of the nature of what we're doing and how we're doing it, it's something that you do have to pay out of pocket for this service. | ||
It's not yet covered by insurance. | ||
We're able to accept HSA and FSA accounts. | ||
But this is something that is, it's a cash pay service. | ||
And so you can use HJSA. How do people, I just want to know, where can our audience go today to get more information? | ||
I want them to immerse themselves in this because we've argued about this strategic problem and it's not getting solved. | ||
So you've got to have an interim, this solution is a solution that's at least going to be for the next couple of years because essentially nothing's being done about this. | ||
Where do people go to get the information? | ||
Right, so it's JACE, J-A-S-E, jacemedical.com. | ||
Come on the website, you click on your start consult, and that'll take you through our telemedicine process, which is as painless as we could make it. | ||
It only takes about five, maybe ten minutes. | ||
You put in some basic information that the doctors need in order to prescribe the medications that we have safely. | ||
We just need to know what other medications you might be taking, if you're allergic to anything that's going to be prescribed. | ||
And some basic demographic information. | ||
That's about it. The physician will review the information. | ||
If they need to reach out, they will. | ||
Otherwise, they basically review it, approve it, send the prescriptions to the pharmacy who will fulfill it, and you'll get it mailed to your door. | ||
The whole process, like I say, five to ten minutes gets to your door in a matter of days. | ||
Jace, J-A-S-C-Medical.com. | ||
Go, you get promo code Bannon if you want to get involved and check it out. | ||
But I want everybody to get the information first. | ||
Go immerse yourself in this information. | ||
Doc, thank you. I want to have you back on a breakdown because this, it's unacceptable that nothing's been done in three years and nothing's going to be, I mean, the Chinese have almost 100 % of the API. Let's be blunt, okay? | ||
That's the problem. Dr. | ||
Roland, thank you very much for joining us here in the War Room. | ||
Look forward to having you back. We warned you a couple of years ago this was going to be a big issue. | ||
unidentified
|
We warned you. This is a big, big, big, big issue. | |
Charlie Kirk is next. | ||
We'll be back here five to seven lit. | ||
unidentified
|
Be even more, what do you call it, on fire than this morning. |