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Jan. 23, 2023 - Clif High
30:23
Tiny AI 2

More on distributed, decentralized, tiny thinking.... https://purebulk.com/products/clif-highs-pure-sleep https://knowledgeofhealth.com/what-if-cancer-was-already-cured/ https://clifhigh.substack.com/

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Okay, guys.
Hang on a second.
A second.
I have people with uh stuff showing up here, and it's cold as hell, but we've got to repair some equipment.
The ocean is very harsh.
You get this electrolysis effect, really, with the uh negative ions.
Anything metal corrodes really quick.
Okay, so where were we?
Okay, so um we're at that point in the big ugly where the uh victims are starting to realize they're victims, it's going to escalate the emotional tension.
This escalation will rise fairly rapidly.
There will be a uh a building wave, and then it'll crest and sweep through.
Um we'll see the effect uh of distributed versus centralization.
So at this moment, in my opinion, there's too many humans on the planet for centralization to ever work.
We've passed that point.
And so the Khazarians were doomed with their plan anyway, right?
And so I want to start off here by saying, now that we're way the fuck into this, that I was in Europe in the 60s, and in Europe in the 60s, uh uh there was this uh thing called the the displaced persons um uh period after World War II.
The displaced persons were all those people that have been moved by the war, you know, uh like we're seeing in Ukraine, your village gets bombed out, no fault of yours, you've got to move.
So you move to your cousins, etc.
In Germany and the in the war, there was also the period of time where you know they were moving people into concentration camps and all of that sort of thing.
So I was in Europe at the end of that period of time.
And in Europe at that period of time, um I saw the hand of the uh Kazarian mafia, but I didn't recognize it, okay.
This was before Kennedy was assassinated.
So then I for sure saw it.
Uh and I saw it back here when I was over there.
So anyway, um, I also saw it in the Cuban Missile Crisis and that sort of thing.
But in Europe I saw something that I couldn't understand at the time, because I was a kid.
But everybody in Europe wanted to get the fuck away from everybody else.
So when we got there as a military brat, um I had basically lived on military bases all my life.
I was like, mm-hmm 10.
Uh and we get there and there's no space on military bases because they're tiny, and you know, everything's been bombed out, there was debris everywhere.
Germany was getting into the rebuilding after the uh 50s, uh uh, you know, through the 50s and into the 60s, but still there was just debris and shit everywhere from the war.
We were still finding unexploded munitions in local forests around the areas we lived.
Uh so we had to live on the economy, okay.
That's what they called it, living on the economy, as opposed to living on the base.
And so you had to convert all your money to German marks and fennings, etc.
Um living on the economy.
I lived in this little place called Friedrichsburg.
It was maybe 25 or 30 minutes by train from where I needed to go to school and all this kind of shit, right?
But it was the best we could do at the time.
And uh we lived on the fourth floor apartment, and on the first floor apartment was this old SS Nazi colonel.
He was a colonel in the Schwarz Asana, the SS Brigades.
And um uh he had uh part of his leg blown off, and he was a nasty mean old fucker.
Okay, they'd lost the war, everything that he had uh fought for all of his life.
He was a true believer, it was all destroyed, uh, and he had his leg blown off, he couldn't get medical attention, he was basically dying from other injuries, shrapnel through him, and he was a mean, nasty, uh twisted little son of a bitch.
Uh but I ended up having to spend a lot of time with him through circumstances, okay.
Yeah, it's long involved and isn't pertinent.
Anyway, so I get to talk to this guy, and he's jumping up and down about uh, you know, not I mean, figuratively, he was in a wheelchair the whole time I knew him.
Um, but he was he was irate and um out of uh out of his mind, really, uh, about uh what the current circumstances that were taking place in Europe.
And he was bitching and moaning about the United States and how we were stooges, in his opinion, we were the stooges of the Jews, right?
Us and the Russians and the Brits and everybody that fought Germany, um uh we were all stooges of the Jews for doing so.
Um and uh, you know, he isn't far wrong.
We were stooges of the Cazarian Mafia, you know, Roosevelt, all these bankers, the central bankers, and Germany had gotten rid of their central bank, and it was all the rest of the central banks and the in the Western liberal republics that uh had World War II go in order to destroy Germany and get a central bank in there.
And note that the central banks have taken over all of the planet, except uh we're not dealing with them in Russia and a few other small places, right?
And they're all dying now.
So uh so if he had said you guys were the stooges of the central bank, I would have been a lot more receptive.
But by that time in the 60s, the uh anti-Semitic, you can't be nasty about the Jews, the Jews are the people in the Bible and all of these other lies were put into place.
The Jews are not Semitic people.
Um so you know, I and I'm not being anti-Semitic by saying that you know the Kazarian Mafia, and that's why I like thinking of them.
They're not Jews, they're they don't even practice Judaism the way that the Jews do, right?
And so these guys are truly satanic uh blood drinking um motherfuckers.
Anyway, um so as I say, I might have been more receptive to this old guy, but he um he articulated something that uh at the time I had noticed because living on the economy for I don't know that year, that first year in Europe, and it was not just that one apartment.
It took us like we we moved six times before we got that apartment.
We were sort of stable for about four or five months, and then they moved us on to base.
Um not the base we should have been on, but that's a different issue.
So anyway, um uh I got to see a lot of what was going on in Europe during the last of this uh displaced persons waves, and in the displaced persons wave I was in, they were primarily dealing with the uh people that were gonna ultimately end up going to the Middle East and repatriating to Turkey, Syria, etc.
But uh, but they were primarily dealing with the people up here in uh Belarus, Ukraine, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, all of these kind of guys, right?
There was they were getting all of the people in Europe that had been shuffled around by the by the war sorted back out and put into their own countries again.
And it was being done to them, right?
They had no choice in this.
Uh they would be rounded up and put into these basically concentration camps by uh British, French, American, or Russian troops, and then put on trains and shipped back to a country that that they were told that's where they came from.
Some of those countries didn't exist as we understand them now at that time.
And so the SS colonel was saying, oh my god, oh my god, the the terrible Jews, Kazarian Mafia, uh were taking over Europe and they were going to United States Europe.
Okay, and they were.
At that time, they had just come up with this idea of the EM.
Um no, it was the EC first, okay.
I believe it was the EC, EC for European Community.
I believe it was the EC.
And then it goes to the European market.
Uh then it goes to the European Union, right?
This was their progression.
And I saw this happen from uh 1960 up until today.
And it's step by step by step by step.
The thing is, the old Nazi dude, let me let me think.
He was all beat up and trashed.
He'd been very young in the war, like one of the teenage soldiers.
Uh so I suspect maybe he was only in his late 50s, early 60s at the time I first came in contact with him.
I know his name, I don't know any of the much of the details of his life, our relationship wasn't like that.
Um I just had to spend time with him for a while.
Um anyway, uh so at that time he recognized that, and he articulated in German and in broken English, his English was fairly decent, uh, was that nobody wanted this.
Nobody wanted the United States-ifying of Europe.
None of the people.
And he was quite correct.
None of the people wanted to be bonded and unified into Europe.
It was sold to them on the climate change of their day.
And the idea was that if all you people join into a big giant union like the United States, you won't go to war with each other.
I don't know why they thought that.
Since the British had busted up the United States and we had the civil war and shit, the British bankers.
But nonetheless, that's how they sold the idea of the European community and then the European market and then the European Union was that in the community days, it was being sold as a uh proof against war.
You're not going to fight with somebody who's in your own damn government, basically.
Um would stop war in Europe, okay.
And uh, you know, so it's this long trail.
Now they're into the replacement migration, killing off all the white people, all of this kind of stuff.
That's their end game.
Uh, but but I saw it from the 1960s with all of this.
And so now the old Nazi dude, the old colonel, uh, Colonel uh Steckel, um, he saw it too.
He saw it in the displaced people that were all through that area that that uh we were in in Friedrichsburg.
There was like a displaced uh persons transfer camps, I think they called them, where they would sort you out, give you paperwork, you know, give you some nominal amount of money if you needed it, and put you on a train or a bus or a truck or something, right?
And send you in the general direction of where you were theoretically supposed to go.
Uh that was a horror itself.
Okay, that was just a horror, the displaced persons thing.
My dad worked on the very end of that uh second wave, and it was just uh huge botched up mess, people dying, illness everywhere.
Uh we should have had a pandemic as a result of that.
But in any event, he knew this uh Colonel Stickle, he knew that we um we're that people wanted at that point, he said everybody was tired, and that everybody just wanted to go home and look at people that looked like themselves and spoke like themselves.
And I felt that too.
Everybody in Europe was just tired of all of this internationalism, right?
They were just tired of all of this shit.
Uh the populace was.
But nonetheless, they were able, the Kazari Mafia were able to gin up all of this stuff towards centralization.
And that's how they move, all right?
They always move towards unions that they control, towards centralization that they control.
Whether it's a workers' union that gives rise to communism that they control, or whether it's um a political union that gives rise to communism that they control, yada yada yada, it's all the same thing.
This is their methodology.
Now, in my opinion, their methodology is failing because there's too many humans.
And that's one of the things that they recognized with their and putting it into the to the guidestones.
They could, with AI and uh surveillance state, they could control very effectively 500 million people.
But eight, nine, ten, twenty uh billion, no, they don't have a hope in hell.
Uh, you know, the Chinese effect will happen.
And that is that we'll all um that'll be revolts and and riots constantly and we'll all be doing the shit we want to do anyway.
So um, so now we're coming into a different world.
Well we'll come out of the big ugly and we'll go into this um uh displaced persons world again, because uh in my opinion, the data in my uh process had always pointed to uh a vast reverse migration.
All these people that had been brainwashed or forced into migrating north, uh there's gonna be a lot of them, they're gonna want to leave naturally because the climate, the circumstances won't favor them, then we're gonna have a giant economic crash and nobody will be able to afford them, right?
So as the dollars uh central banks die, uh to get there won't be welfare in the United States.
Uh we just won't have it.
We just don't have the the money.
Uh we're gonna barely be able to squeak through and keep the uh vast amount of the seniors, people in my generation alive uh on Social Security.
We're gonna barely be able to squeak through on that.
And this uh this uh poverty that is gonna hit the Western liberal republics at this level uh is gonna be multiplicitous in its um impact on our social order.
One of these impacts is going to be this reverse migration, okay?
Because a lot of the guys and a lot of the guys and people that are doing this, women that are doing this, were sold an easy life idea.
Just make it up to the land of milk and honey in the United States, and you got it, you know, you're fat, dumb, and happy, you don't ever have to work again.
You can get on a reality TV show and make millions of money and all of this kind of shit.
And so they're all going to be graceful greatly disappointed, and then the conditions here are going to be very harsh, the weather's going to be very bad, and it'll push them back south, some portion of them.
We're going to get into a rebuilding phase that will try and keep some portion of that reverse migration here.
The skilled workers, etc., etc.
We're going to have a hard time because of the state of the currency and the state of political and social disruption within our our countries within the Western liberal republics, right?
Because we're going to go through a massive die-off.
We need to replace that population.
And we need to inculcate those populations into our belief system rather than allow them to be inculcated and operate as agents of the Kazarian mafia who are our enemies.
But we need some of those people, okay, because they've killed off so many of us.
And are and so many of us are dying now.
We need to really boost our health care to deal with invalid persons because we're going to hit an invalid person wave throughout the entire Western liberal republics.
Okay, so that's one of the effects is the reverse migration, and we're going to try and pull some of the people back and keep them here.
Now some of the other effects are going to lead into what I call the little AI future.
Alright.
And so we're not going to have big giant AI.
In my opinion, it's if you ever built it, it would go psychotic.
And so what's the point?
But also big giant AI doesn't work.
And it's the same concept of centralization gone to an extreme that powers the Kazarian mafia because of their original uh interaction with the L in all of the Middle East, but as well as up in Turkey in those areas.
So the Kazarian Mafia interacted with the L, the Anunnaki, whatever you want to call these guys, the Elohim, before the Elohim relocated to Yemen and started fucking around with these 12 tribes of the Essenes.
Um are not Jews.
They'd been fucking with the Jews.
There's there's indications within the Talmud and the Zohar that indeed the L had done stuff to the Jewish population in Turkey, in northern Turkey and Ukraine and that area, right?
The Khazarians had the L had interacted with the Kazarians before they went to Yema.
Um set up this whole thing where we're at now, basically.
Anyway, though, so we're gonna get into this little AI period.
Now, little AI is gonna show up uh as opposed to big AI because we need the assistance.
We can call it tiny AI, it doesn't matter.
Um but little L AI is where you have, you know, an individual device uh that has uh little tiny bit of code in it, little tiny circuit board, maybe a little tiny chip, perhaps, a couple of sensors, and that's it.
And that's the entire goal was to do something with that little tiny device, and then that's it.
You don't have to screw with it anymore, right?
And so um so uh you could have for instance, you could have a uh uh tiny AI built into almost anything if it was worth the trouble.
We're gonna be very selective because we're gonna have people issues and resource issues and so on.
But here's this little light bulb thing, right?
I'm gonna turn on for a second.
It it's just this little light bulb that you can use and clip it uh in the case in in working, you know, you're changing your oil or whatever, right?
You could, if you Wanted if you had the little uh capacity to build the circuit board and put it in here, you could give it a little tiny instruction set that that and in a sensor that said, you know, if there's no movement around you for 20 minutes, turn yourself off and save the battery.
And that would be it.
That would be a little tiny AI.
And so if you clipped it somewhere and then wandered off on a tool and got involved with a heated discussion with your wife, you come back and it's not drained itself beyond those 20 minutes that you'd expected to use it anyway.
And so that's little tiny AI.
So little AI is in the um the traffic lights.
Okay.
You got little AI all through your car.
You know, nowadays they're getting AI that you know has a little tiny sensor and watches the viscosity level of your oil.
And when it gets too beat up, it tells you, hey guy, you better change your oil.
And so that's little AI.
Uh, and it's useful, it's intelligent, it's um cost effective, uh use effective, uh, because you don't ignore it, you know, those kind of things, right?
And it's not very large to build uh right once copy many, has works in various different areas.
So, say the little sensor for the viscosity of the oil is not limited to your particular machine.
You can use it in any number of machines.
You could use that same sensor and the little tiny AI uh tweaked a little bit to monitor the production of seed oils or any number of things, right?
Just flowing past the little sensor.
And so we have these little AIs, they don't think, no AI thinks, in spite of what uh many of the woo-woo people uh do think.
They think that the machine's watching them and and you know has a bad opinion of them that has somehow had an emotion about them.
Anyway, um, in my opinion, we're coming into the little AI period.
This little AI period is going to be um really cool, okay, because it's gonna be a big advancement for civilization.
We're gonna put in all different kinds of uh little AI into devices because of the population pressure.
That will be because of the big kill-off, the big die-off, and then the reverse migration from the weather, forcing a lot of people down south again.
Well, those of us up here in the north, we're gonna get really into little AI.
Uh now I'm sort of working along that idea.
I'm working on a uh distributed decentralized energy production facility, and what we're doing is we've got a little Tesla turbine here that's got a power um a genet.
And the Gen set the turbine is like let's just say it's three inches.
Uh a little tiny guy, right?
Uh it's a Tesla turbine.
And then the Gen sets tiny and it produces nine volts or more of electricity.
So this little tiny operation, probably in bulk about the size of this cup, would replace a solar panel.
All you would have to do is to provide the energy.
Now you could uh create a Sterling engine that just puffed out hot air based from the sun, and so you could just have a plate that heated up to power the Sterling engine, so you'd have a hundred percent solar power and it would puff and it would run this guy, wouldn't be continuous, etc.
Um, but this can run, it's scalable, so it can run off of any number of things.
So we're gonna connect with some uh people, and so we'll have a basically the idea is that you could power this with a um uh steam engine that could run on waste wood.
Maybe it could even run on um uh charcoal briquettes or paper, no, anything that could be used to create heat to get the the create the steam, but for our purposes here, I'm looking at something that really would operate it at about a half of a pound of pressure over the ambient air, right?
Uh so it only need about a half a pound of pressure in order to make this the turbine run and and run the gen set to do this.
So If you had perhaps even a small candle, so maybe a small candle could run a little tiny steam engine that you'd have to monitor the water, so maybe you put in you know it to be effective and so on and heat up rapidly, it'd have to have a feed, a drip feed, probably.
But you so maybe you'd change the water or add water to it once a day, and maybe you'd replace it with a candle once a day, but it would generate nine volts of power continuously to charge batteries.
At nine volts, that's the replacement for uh the maximum possible output from a hundred-watt uh solar panel running at peak at noon, and they usually that's you know, solar panels operate like this in terms of their efficiency.
So that's their noon period with maximum efficiency up here, but from the morning sun and the evening sun here, they're really anything over anything under that area, they're not getting much power out of it at all because of the differences in the UV and the infrared and the so on, and then this area up here, they're working up to their maximum, so they rarely work at maximum for eight minutes, eight and a half minutes is estimated.
Anyway, though, so that's my goal is to replace all these fucking solar panels with something cheap and effective that runs 24 by 7 with some little tiny source.
And I'm we're gonna talk to some people here in the in the Pacific Northwest where we've got all these damn trees, but we're gonna talk about scaling this thing up so that all these wood processing plants that use lots of electricity can use the waste heat that they're generating to power Tesla turbines with gensets.
Now you can make a Tesla turbine giant, you could use it to power a 20-kilowatt genet, 20 kilowatt uh kilovolt um uh uh generator.
Uh so you can make these things as big as you want.
It's just gonna depend on your heat source here.
I was looking at them for me for my little house, a couple of batteries, do my whole house.
So if the power goes out, which it did the other day for like 12-15 hours, uh, you don't have to run the big diesel gen set, you just connect to the battery and then recharge the battery as you need.
And if you have this thing running all the time, you've got waste electricity, really.
You got tons of electricity to do anything you want with.
So this is a decentralized, scalable, as you make any size you want approach to the generation of electricity that does not involve any of the weird fucking around with multiple layers of stuff trying to catch solar energy, yet it's works 100% off of solar.
Let the trees do what they do, which is to convert solar energy into something we can burn, and then we burn the tree, right?
And the tree is gonna grow again.
So anyway, so it's sustainable in ways that solar panels are not, in the way that um Tesla cars are not, okay, because we're gonna run out of a lithium, you're gonna run out of uh, especially these days with the badinistas clamping down on pipelines and drilling, we're gonna run out of oil to make the gin or make the excavators and then run the excavators to dig the lithium.
So, anyway, so in my opinion, we're gonna go through this reverse migration period that'll start probably two years in seriousness.
You'll be able to see news reports of it maybe at the end of this year, and then there will be a big wave due to the winter of uh 23-24.
Okay, so next winter's gonna be much harsher than this one in the northern hemisphere, and it'll participate in that.
Um, but as part of that, we're gonna have this concurrent little AI period, right?
And so you find all kinds of people that will be inventing little kind of distributed decentralized things and putting AI to it, which I think is really cool.
I like little AI, you know, it keeps me from making the stupid mistakes, you know.
Um the little AI can be thought of as um the mechanism that knows that the coffee pot's plugged in and it's running out of water and it shuts it off.
So you don't have the stupid mistake, right?
You gotta hung hung over, you get your coffee, and you forget to turn the coffee pot off, that sort of thing.
Anyway, um shit, guys.
Sorry, uh I gotta get on with it, but um centralization is too big to work anymore, and we're gonna get this little AI future.
If you're if you're into that sort of level of creativity or you want to do circuit boards and that kind of stuff, uh now's really the time to get digging in because we're right at the cusp of this very large change from the centralization which is failing around us into this decentralized world.
And you can make a big name for yourself and go at some of these large problems in a small way and have a giant impact.
So uh say that you got, I don't know what the cost of a solar panel is these days.
Let's just say that it cost 800 bucks for a hundred watt quality solar panel.
Well, I mean, we're thinking that maybe extreme costs if we made everything we could for our little system out of very high-end shit.
Um, as much as we couldn't packed as much money into it, maybe you could get it at a uh up there to $80.
So a tenth of the cost of a solar panel, and it's gonna outproduce it in uh by thousands of percent in um in electricity, and then you have to figure out the way to power the Tesla turbine.
And in fact, we're gonna release these as open source, yet another aspect of the distributed uh decentralized uh approach to things and build your own, right?
Once we've got this thing worked out, we'll tell you, oh, this is the kind of little motor you need to buy for your gen set.
Here's how you hook it up to effectively do the battery charging.
Uh by the way, maybe we'll sell a little battery control charge controller for it, uh, but you can make your own.
Here's the plans for them.
Here's the schematics for the circuit board, yada yada yada.
And if you got a 3D printer, here's how you can print the uh housing for the Tesla turbine, here's where you can buy the blades uh for it, you know, this guy's set up to manufacture them and so on.
Um so for us, it's not particularly about a matter of money, right?
But I will tell you right now that I know that in a decentralized world, that's really the way to go to maximize your uh level of income from your effort.
So it sounds kind of counterintuitive, but all your life you've been told that the way to maximize your um income from uh creative thought is through total control.
This is the centralized approach, and it's failing, it just does not work anyway.
And here, if you tried to do it, someone would then you'd spend all of your time in um engaged in um contention.
Uh so uh now we see that, for instance, bringing it back to something personal, uh Corey Good wanted to control the story, and he was bitching and moaning about people that disbelieved the story, and he's bitching and moaning about people that are using elements of his story for their own stuff.
And so Corey Good claims to be a content creator, and in fact, what's he doing all the time now?
Nothing but lawsuits.
So he's not a content creator anymore, he's a lawsuit participant, right?
And so, uh, and that's what control brought him and his whole you know karma and all of that kind of shit.
But nonetheless, it was the attempt to seize control and maintain control that leads him down that path.
So I'm saying that you know, there's so many people on the planet that you can be mega wealthy uh being smart, doing it the easy way, doing it decentralized and not worrying about trying to control shit.
That's the Cazarian mafia's ethos, their approach.
Anyway, guys, I gotta go.
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