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May 31, 2024 - Clif High
34:10
Very Large Scale Effects
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Hello humans.
Hello humans.
May 31 here.
It's heading towards 9 o'clock.
Gotta go into town and pick up a few items.
Like scheduled, gotta go pick things up.
Um and we're putting in our plans for the extension on the house.
Getting things going just as all of the world's gonna end, but hey, oh I I haven't got anything better to do anyway.
Chemtrails all the hell and gone here, but none on my Twitter.
It's pretty sad.
Uh my whole contest was a bust.
If people did tag me with them, I didn't see them.
They simply did not show up.
And I've had uh other instances of uh Twitter fucking me over here really recently as well.
So I'm on their official shit list.
Um so I wrote a uh a little parable piece about the deafness of ritual, and I wrote it on Twitter.
Okay, it was just a um uh one of their little article things, right?
And they obscured it, blocked it because it was harmful content because I mentioned deaf people, right?
And uh, so the uh the Twitter people are just assholes and idiots with mother, you know, weafhonians anyway.
So they blocked it, so I had uh go and find the original text and go and put it up on Substack.
So it's out there on Substack several days after I'd put it out on Twitter, and then it disappeared, and so I went and used their um AI, their Grok thing, and examined it, and sure enough, they've been um uh messing with me.
So I probably am not long for Twitter.
Uh I may try and reestablish a telegram account.
We've got um uh a couple of new transponders on our uh only cell tower out here, and so maybe I can receive the um the SMS message that's required to be able to uh uh to get on telegram and involved piece of uh breakdown here for losing the telegram channel to begin with,
but in any event, um so I may go to to Telegram, but I'm probably not long for Twitter regardless.
They just irritate me, piss me off, and you know, I'm obviously not uh having any kind of reach for normies there, so what's the point, right?
And I'll save myself a lot of time, plus I've got some very very large projects, so I'm just getting into something that's probably uh six or seven year project, and we'll see how that goes.
I've got a really dash here.
Um so like I say, Chemtrail's all the hell and gone, chemtrails causing weather woes out here, uh they're really ratcheting up their uh weather wars against the populace.
And uh we're all starting to become aware of it, we all know it, you know.
We're not gonna buy a long buy into their uh climate change, you know, kill yourself for climate change, save the planet and and die because humans are evil, uh shit, right?
And you know, no white people aren't evil, you know.
Uh all of these fuckers are stupid, they've been mind controlled.
Now they're they're you know you can't blame them, everybody gets mind controlled at first, but um at some point they do have to wake up and thereafter, uh you can blame them if you want, but my thing is I'm just not gonna waste any time with them.
Uh just like with um the Twitter thing, right?
So I'll make a decision in the next few days, but uh don't be surprised if I drop off.
And basically um uh drop out of sight with that.
Anyway, so let's see.
Uh the Trump got convicted.
That's gonna cause all kinds of problems.
Uh it was necessary that it be done, it was necessary that we go through all of this shit.
Um, because the alternatives were not good.
These guys are indeed um the um self-organizing collective, is indeed uh using AI to game all this shit out, but as I keep telling these people, uh including the uh couple of representatives of them that I that I converse with, AI is stupid, right?
It is not creative, it cannot create, it can only reflect back what it already knows, right?
And it can't join those things that it already knows in new and novel ways that are not already written into its code, that are not already there by virtue of its training.
So AI is repetitious, it can't learn, it can't grow, it cannot change.
Uh, you know, in spite of Carrie Cassidy insisting that this is otherwise, in spite of her telling everybody that this is not the case and that AI can float through the air and seize you, you know, suck itself into your body and take you over.
None of those things are factual.
My God.
My God.
Um she'd had this interview with this guy, Scott Perez, who's uh, you know, his his language is good, he's he's legitimately uh a coder, he is legitimately within the uh apparatus, um, you know, of the deep state, uh in terms of what he's coding and so on.
Uh, but it was just really interesting to watch him and her talk at cross purposes.
He kept talking about nano machines, and in Carrie Cassidy's mind, she's seeing some little tiny critter that's you know metallic and little gears and and and little arms and shit in it, right?
And and Scott's talking proteins, he's talking proteins as nanomachines, and so he's giving her uh factual information that she is uh conflating with one of her movie script ideas and uh coming up with a version of reality that doesn't jive and it doesn't mesh with what Scott's saying, and so they keep talking at these cross purposes, never quite making the connection.
It was it was an interesting um uh to listen to Scott go into some of the detail, uh, you know, because I can tell a coder, right?
Uh so anyway, it'd be interesting to talk with him about some of his work, but I doubt he could really get into it.
And we certainly couldn't do it recorded, you know.
Uh so it can betray a whole lot, for instance, to know uh just even uh the language that a uh you know the computer language that a particular uh uh executable was written in uh because it tells you a lot about the structure of the of the program and where there are potential hooks and back doors and so on, and so you don't you don't normally do that, right?
If I had something that I wanted to keep running and not be hacked, I wouldn't betray how I had constructed it.
It was never a real big deal with my uh web scraping routine because it was written in in uh probably about half a dozen languages mainly.
Uh list, prologue, uh see a little tiny bit of C where I had to uh join into other code, uh Perl scripts, um uh, and that's really about it.
I experimented with chunks of Python and this kind of thing.
Python I don't really like as a language.
Um I had some assembly language routines too in my web scraping.
Anyway, though, um so uh it'd be interesting to talk to Scott.
Uh I doubt we could really get into it, uh, but uh he obviously does have some level of um acumen and skill, and he ran into that same issue of running into Carrie Cassidy's um uh delusion barrier, right?
On one side is her vision of the world, and on the other side is the reality, and never the twain shall meet, and you have to talk through one to get at her.
So it's um a little difficult.
I've been there.
Uh I was one of the people, probably the only person that she's ever interviewed where she put me on mute.
She couldn't stand to hear what I was saying because it challenged her ideas too much.
Oh god, you know, that's really sad for you.
Um when your construct of reality is so fragile you actually cannot stand to hear uh conflicting words, and it and you know, it's so bad that you have to publicly embarrass yourself by putting uh the interviewee on mute.
This was when I was on there with um talking to her with uh Bix Weir.
It was very embarrassing for her.
I felt bad.
Uh so anyway, um she's thinking robots.
Uh Scott is talking about doing um uh protein generation via uh computer scripting, uh, which really is a fascinating subject.
He's talking about the idea of being able to uh put proteins in a crime scene where CSI wouldn't be able to tell it wasn't you, and that's really cool that he says that.
Everybody should go and take a clip of that and store it on their PC, right?
This is on her um latest interview with him.
The reason you want to store that is because now you could go to a judge and you could dispute CSI um DNA that puts you in um a crime scene because you can say, look, here's a guy that works for black projects telling you that they do this,
that they create people's uh you know, replicas of people's DNA and put it in crime scenes just just to put them there, just to um you know hassle their lives and potentially convict them of a crime they did not commit.
And so that'll blow CSI open uh if you've got a um um any kind of a uh uh you know a rational judge, unless you got one that's uh you know a political bent, they're still gonna convict you.
But if you've got someone there there, they're gonna say, holy fuck, I don't want to have you go through this trial and be convicted on evidence that you can later on say it was bogus and overturn me.
See, judges have an issue, right?
Judges get um uh power, prestige, and promotions uh by not having things come back on them.
So if you got a judge that's getting sued all the time, that fucker is not gonna get promoted uh in the normal course of things unless there's a political bent to drive him upward to get him to cause more problems.
Okay, so a regular ordinary judge won't get um what he needs by doing a lot of things that get him sued personally for his decisions, so they have a tendency to not want to do that, and so if they know it that they're going into a trial where they will be personally sued or it will be overturned, which is the same thing.
It's other judges saying, ah, you fucked up, dude.
Um they they won't do it, they won't want it, they won't won't hassle it.
They'll be very, very, very careful.
So, I mean, that's kind of how I won my case against Cory Good was that I gamed the system.
I took advantage, I I legally replied to every single item within her uh attacks within Cory Good's attacks against me by way of his attorney, uh this woman.
Um can't think of her name at the moment.
Anyway, um she uh uh you know that's the way it is.
We live under UCC universal uh or uniform commercial code.
Uh so we don't have common law, we don't have uh public law even anymore.
We have public policy law, and so you need to know this going in that no court decision after 1938 will be effective.
Uh no Supreme Court decision after 1938 should even be brought up.
Um, but you can do all kinds of things to squeeze these fuckers, you can game the system, right?
And so that's what I did.
I I I figured out the timing on it all, got everything ready, and slammed my opponent, which is Corey Good and his attorney, with a couple of um uh well timed things.
I had my reply ready to go when she came back with um or my response.
No, my reply to her response, that's how it goes.
Um so she served papers on me, uh, I replied to them, and then she responded to that, and then I get to reply to that, okay.
And so I had covered all of the items that she had listed in her motion.
So the that's one of the tenets of UCC is that um affidavits that are unrefuted, an affidavit is a statement saying I swear this is the case, or this is I'm asserting this as factual, but um, but affidavits that are um items that are unrefuted stand at the end of the analysis,
and so if if she sends has seven items to you, and you reply and and refute, dispute each of her seven items, and then in your response, you have six new items you're bringing up, and she only refutes four of them, then your two stand at the end of that adjudgment and you win.
That's just the way that uniform commercial code works.
And so I knew that I had that going for me, but I couldn't count on the normal course of events to uh make this rapid, so I put a timer in there.
I put a spoiler, and that is that I asked the main judge, so I everybody deals with the administrative judge, right?
Um all the way up.
So she um uh she has to do all the grunt work, the main judge is supervising lots and lots of these administrative judges and trials and shit, so it's a hierarchical system.
So I just asked the main judge to issue a ruling on some shit that Cory Good had done, which in my opinion was defaming me.
And and I was asking for a injunctive relief as a defendant.
Usually it's the plaintiffs that ask, almost yeah.
I I think there were I found three instances of defendants asking for injunctive relief in a federal case that I could easily identify out of pacer.
Um so anyway, I won because I put the judge in a position where he didn't even want to examine the motion I was asking.
The the uh a motion for injunctive relief, because if he ruled on it anyway, if he touched it, if he ruled on it, oh a huge bunch of chemtrails, geez.
Um, if he ruled on it, and I didn't like that ruling, I could have sued him personally for that ruling and really fucked everything up.
But he need not have dealt with that.
All he had to do was to make sure that my motion to be dismissed from the trial was granted ahead of that, and then everything else I had put in, uh, you know, this motion for injunctive relief and all of that, eh, it's moot, you know, because I'm no longer associated with that.
They don't have to interact with me at all.
So I gave them an out, and then I pushed them into a corner where uh they could see that out, and they took it.
So this is uh understanding human psychology, this is understanding the psychology of the system, this is understanding the constraints that the system puts uh its workers in.
So you always examine all of this shit before you get your ass involved in it if possible, but as rapidly as you can, once you find yourself involved in some shit, right?
You you ascertain the environmental parameters that affect everybody, not just yourself.
And so I got out of that case.
Um basically one year later, right?
Everybody was in it, everybody else was in it for three or four years, millions of fucking dollars and attorney fees, and it was thrown out as being a bogus uh bunch of horseshit uh proffered by the LARP or butt head Corey Good.
And uh, and so it was it was bogus.
No one uh, you know, there's no there.
And so this is the um, you know, it was deliberate deception on on Cory Good's part.
Now he's gonna have to face the consequences.
Gonna be all kinds of people uh that want their pound of flesh out of that stupid fucker.
Uh we have another stupid fucker, which is the Phil Godluski guy.
Uh he's um uh he's his own uh bit of work and he's causing himself a whole bunch of problems as well, and we'll see how that goes for him.
It's the same kind of butt-headedness as Corey Good going and suing people when you really should have thought about it and not done that.
Uh anyway.
So uh Trump's got his legal problems.
I'm out of mind so far.
I'm gonna dump uh Twitter before I get into any more legal problems, and um, you know, having to sue the guys and this kind of thing, right?
Because I was thinking about this.
If I wrote an article, and uh just like I had done with this uh parable on the deafness of ritual, um if I wrote it on Twitter and um put it on Twitter and then Twitter hides it, even I can't see it, right?
This was my material posted publicly, but it is still my material.
So I'm I I can't get at my original posting there, insofar as I've been able to see.
It was fortunate that I had I was able to recover the text out of a uh word processing program I had where I just saved it off for whatever reason, and then I could reconstruct it, put it on Substack.
Had I not been able to do that, I might very well have been uh into the position of having to throw a big fit uh against Twitter to say, you know, come on, butt heads, if you're gonna do this, at least allow me to get it and take it and put it somewhere else.
Otherwise, I'm gonna have to sue you, you know, for theft.
Intellectual property theft, all different kinds of things.
So um, and I would sue pro se, so Twitter's gonna have, you know, they probably got uh they're probably their cheap lawyers or five or six hundred dollars an hour, right?
Uh so what I always like to do is to get it up into the hands of the expensive lawyers as rapidly as possible by being very creative in a pro say filing.
Now I can use AI in this because AI does not have to be creative to be um a good attorney assistant, right?
Um so I can be creative and then I can ask it, you know, uh questions in such a way as to uh elicit the appropriate way to uh do the creativity uh, you know, to implement that creative idea and uh and get it across and so on.
Uh so uh so AI is not uh gonna pop up and say, this is what you need to do in your court case to win.
It doesn't work that way.
AI is stupid, it is basically just looking shit up for you.
It's just a search engine, right?
And you know, and Carrie Cassidy is afraid of the AI because it's gonna come and suck the brains right out between her ears, right?
I I mean, I just there's all of these people that she's influenced that way.
Now maybe they all fear AI on their own, but I see that you get these people together like S. G. Anon and Patriot Underground, Carrie Castney, and put all these guys together, they're just freaking out over about and amping everybody's fears up, their own, about AI.
It's totally meaningless.
It's a waste of your time.
Uh, it doesn't exist the way you think it does, etc.
etc.
So anyway, though, um I want to go about that.
Uh okay, so we've got um there's an interesting idea that I've got that's kicking around.
And this is the idea of um very large-scale effects.
So uh we're talking um, like I say, in one of the talks I discussed it.
Um, so I think over these next few years, uh there will be uh some scientists who will discover something.
Their discovery won't make a lot of sense to them.
It'll be an anomaly, so they'll really look at it.
It wasn't what they're ex what they expected to discover, uh, but they came across it anyway, but they won't know how to interpret it.
And in my opinion, it will take us a couple of years to understand what we're looking at because We won't have a conceptual framework that allows us to see it from a high enough view.
And so this is the idea of a um a materium infrastructure level effect being created by intelligent people, intelligent beings.
Okay, not necessarily Earth guys, could be space aliens, could be Earth guys, I don't know.
But I'm of the opinion that what we're going to encounter would be the equivalent of like a scientist discovering that in the many thousands of fluctuations of the uh of our sun uh per second that that this scientist is able to actually um locate and track and uh record,
not necessarily understand or or analyze, but locate track and record uh repeatedly a an intelligent signal coming through our sun.
All right, so it would be as though our sun's just sitting up there being the sun, kicking out energy to us.
By the way, all of the the energy that the sun is gonna put out on the earth today will take all of humanity a whole fucking year to use.
So we're gonna get you know uh 740 kilojoules uh or megajoules of energy today from the sun, and we're only gonna use uh a little over 690 kilo or megajoules of energy over this next year in all of our forms of transformation.
And by the way, humans don't destroy energy, we transform it, right?
We convert it from one form to another.
We're transducers, that's all we do.
Um, and we don't create energy.
Uh, we never created any energy, we don't create energy in our atomic bombs or any of that.
They're really electrical bombs, blah blah blah.
Okay, so uh so the idea is that some scientists are kicking around and they find something.
Maybe it's not the sun, maybe they find there's a signal that's being sent through the ether around the earth or something, right?
But they'll find it at a giant level within the materium, and they'll think for a while, this is my opinion, that they'll think for a while that this is a quote natural uh aspect of our material.
That you know, suns uh naturally vibrate this particular way to mimic Morris code or whatever, right?
Mimic some form of coding.
Uh, and then it'll take them a long time to understand, oh, it's not natural per se.
You know, it's not artificial in the sense that the sun is not being uh you know jammed up with some special chemical in order to do this, but rather it is artificial in the sense that while it the sun is going to do these vibrations anyway, some other species uh has figured out a way to harness those vibrations and make them uh into a form of uh communications sort of like a Wi-Fi carrier wave, something like that.
And like I say, it might take us two years to come to that conclusion.
Then we'll hear about it, and then everybody will just be, ooh, ooh, ooh, you know, aliens are watching us kind of thing.
Uh which will be pretty cool, really, uh to get into and and check all this shit out.
So um I think that that discovery will be made this year, although we won't probably hear about it until 2026, and then they'll tell us all about how they did it and what they think it means and so on, right?
And they'll probably be wrong on a lot of that.
They usually are they're academics, you know, uh they're uh trained and schooled, they're not educated.
Speaking of educated, I happen to watch the uh latest Dark Horse podcast with um Heather E. Haying and Brett Weinstein, and um uh Brett uh stumbles along, stumbles along, stumbles along, and then about uh two-thirds of the way through the podcast, you see what he's trying to um elucidate and illuminate for you and describe is the self-organizing collective.
And it's like you can see that it really kind of like uh tweaks his brain a bit to try and get this out that he's having a you know a certain amount of an issue trying to describe uh this in an appropriate way.
We all live in in self-organizing collectives, you know, the giant one all of the materium all the way down, uh, you know, to our various friend groups and so on.
So it's it's not a really a difficult concept if you just uh you know abstract it and then you can apply it to stuff.
But it was interesting to see that he's struggling with that.
He's claiming uh you know, he has this is really the thing.
He also exhibits um what in my mind is a standard Jewish trait, which is they can't take criticism, even the mildest um level, they're just just not able to deal with it uh because of the inculcation of the Jewish culture around them that prevents them from being mature individuals, in my opinion, right?
Maybe it's because they're circumcised.
There's a lot to be said for that.
You lose four million plus um sensor cells when you're circumcised, and you can never grow those back.
And the real issue is that a the brain is damaged by the trauma of being circumcised, and it never recovers, it never goes back to those um usual brain patterns, uh, and the uh nerves that connect.
Oh okay, so the sensor cells you lose in the circumcision off of the foreskin, those those foreskin sensors connect through all of your nerves up to a spot in your brain that's in nerve nine and nerve 11, and those nerves will not mature without those sensors still down there at the end of your deck.
If you don't have them, you're not gonna get that that mind maturation in the way it was intended to go by nature, anyway.
And so um, so Brett Weinstein can't take criticism.
Uh uh, so he bitches about that, everybody in his dream team uh phrase and so on, and then he goes on to say, you know, he wasn't being he wasn't trying to take credit for all this stuff and so on with his dream team comment, and then he comes back and takes credit for for stopping the Who Tree treaty shit, right?
The who pandemic thing.
It's like dude, this this self-organizing collective that is fighting uh the the Elohim worship cult, the you know, the the new Jew order, uh the new world order, however you want to think of it, right?
This this self-organizing collective is several hundreds of millions of people.
So nice that you include yourself with the rest of us, but it's not nice you're trying to take credit for all this shit.
He just does not have an appropriate, in my opinion, an appropriate uh perspective on our um common shared reality here.
Well, I've got to get in and uh pick these things up in a few minutes, then go on and do regular shopping and then beat feet and get back really quick.
I've got some stuff running back at the house, and I need to get there at a appropriate point to trigger the next round of processing.
Um so it's been quite fascinating getting into the data, this very large data set that I've got, courtesy of these um uh Puruski speaking fellows that I know.
Um we've got I've got a fair amount of data.
I'm gonna have at least another month uh working through it, right?
At least, maybe longer.
Uh just because of the sheer size and the fact that I can't get at things the way that I used to.
Uh, you know, I'm not doing it as work, right?
So I've only got a little bit of time every day I can devote to it.
We're trying to get the house built here before the world goes to hell.
We've got all of these um distractions in the social order, so you know, it's it's just uh kind of a inconvenient time to be doing a lot of this stuff, but um hang on, let me get over here.
But we are doing it, we're getting this ready to go.
Yeah, I got a fucker following me.
Uh so I have I have stalkers, um, it's a pain in the ass.
I've got this guy out of Australia that is um an expert in this kind of thing.
And um I've been doing some of the things that he's suggested and ended up being able to identify some of these people.
Um so it appears organized, and we'll see see how it goes.
But you know, just to let you know, uh, I am constantly armed, constantly armed.
I don't want to have to shoot anybody, but I'm prepared to.
Um, you know, I got responsibilities I gotta watch out for, right?
Who's gonna take care of my wife if I get injured?
Uh so you know, I'm not gonna not gonna take any chances, just gonna deal with you as far away as I possibly can, you know, 80 feet, 30 feet, and so on.
Anyway, uh damn, they got the cranes out again.
Uh cranes are never a good sign down here.
It means we got bridge work coming, and bridge work can hold you up for 45 minutes each way.
Okay, so uh I've got got some data.
I'll be releasing it over the next uh couple of months as I get into it.
Uh, I'm not really inclined to be doing interviews.
Uh I've got real problems with my Wi-Fi here, and I've got real problems with my office still, in the sense that we have to now start cramming it full of um uh building materials as we get into this.
Uh so it's like I say, it's unlikely.
I'll maybe I'll be able to do one or two of these things over the next uh couple of months, but I don't have anything scheduled, and I'm I'm not planning on accepting any um inner interview requests, it would have to be just happenstance that you know I had the had the time free in the machine and so on, right?
Because I'm using uh some of the machines I would normally use for uh videos and that part of my network uh to do a lot of um shuffling of data around, so it really drags down the uh the bandwidth and the Wi-Fi there.
Anyway, so uh I guess that's about it for this one.
I'll see if I can do another one on the way back.
May not be feasible simply because of the choppy mini stops I've got to go through here.
And there's a there's a lot of shit to talk about, but anyway, okay, so take care, guys.
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