Douglas Rushkoff exposes tech elites' breakaway civilization plans, detailing how ultra-wealthy figures seek bunkers in Alaska and New Zealand to escape electromagnetic pulses, revolutions, or pandemics. He connects these fantasies to the Epstein files, Peter Thiel's transhumanist views, and the Kessler syndrome, which threatens space launches with orbital debris. Rushkoff critiques the shift from local economies to debt-driven extraction, arguing that pyramidal civilizations reward sociopathy while digital isolation hinders human rapport. The discussion highlights Gen Z's craving for tangible artifacts and communal experiences as resistance against algorithmic manipulation and surveillance by figures like Larry Ellison, ultimately suggesting that building resilient local communities is essential for survival amidst potential global crashes. [Automatically generated summary]
Transcriber: CohereLabs/cohere-transcribe-03-2026, WAV2VEC2_ASR_BASE_960H, sat-12l-sm, script v26.04.01, and large-v3-turbo
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Peter Thiel's Earthly Ventures00:12:59
Nice to meet you, Doug.
Good to meet you.
Yeah.
You are into some fascinating stuff.
You've written like 25 or so books.
Yeah.
And all kinds of wild stuff, the history of media, culture.
You can probably do a better job than me.
Why don't you sort of explain your background and how you got into this?
I don't know.
I started really, originally, I started writing because I was interested in altered states of consciousness.
And I wrote this book that no one knows about.
I wrote this book when I was like, 24, 25, called Free Rides Ways to Get High Without Drugs.
And the idea was that they're not so afraid of the drugs themselves, the people making the laws, they're afraid of the states of consciousness that they provide because then people can see alternative ways of understanding reality.
So once you're high on anything, you come back and you go, Why did I agree that this is money?
Why do I agree that that is rent?
Why do I agree that I work for him?
It's like, What?
All your social agreements go away.
So that was what it started.
And I was a theater person and I got really sick of theater because it was like very expensive and predictable and all.
And just when I was getting sick of theater, the internet thing was just starting to happen.
So I started to write articles about what is email, what is hypertext, what is virtual reality before anybody believed that the stuff was real or going to happen.
Right.
So I was in New York.
I'd go out to San Francisco, go to the house where they like, Publish Mondo 2000 magazine or hang out with Terrence McKenna and learn about all the weird stuff.
I started writing articles and then books about that.
I wrote a book called Siberia, which sort of took rave and psychedelics and hypertext and all that sort of new stuff happening.
I'm just going to tilt that up.
All right.
There you go.
And saying this is part of one thing society's changing.
So I was the guy on the beat of the original internet.
I wrote a book called Media Virus, sort of naming the viral media phenomenon.
That put me on the map.
Once you get a word, they kind of thing.
So I got that term and then started writing about how the internet went from this great creative collective playground to this kind of controlled big money surveillance manipulation apparatus.
Wrote a bunch about that.
And then I got interested in magic and the occult and weirdness kind of as ways of creating more wiggle room in consensus culture.
I wrote a bunch of those, wrote a bunch of graphic novels, one about Aleister Crowley, one about the Bible.
You know, went in a bunch of different directions and then now do a podcast called Team Human, arguing that being human is a team sport.
We can do this together.
The only way out is through, but the only way through is together.
And I wrote this book that kind of made a lot of waves, claps, both, called Survival of the Richest Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires, that looked at why do these guys want to escape our reality and leave us all behind.
How did you do the research for that?
Did you go meet with like a bunch of tech people?
Yeah, that was weird.
That happened accidentally.
You know, I get hired to do talks, and sometimes even by, I'm a counterculture guy, but big corporations will hire me almost as a proof that they dare, right?
Or they're tapped into the culture.
Yeah, exactly.
Or they do it as some sort of intellectual dominatrix thing.
You know, it's like I tell them what they're doing wrong.
Thank you, sir, May I please have another?
So it was one of those.
I got invited out to do a talk for, it was some kind of hedge fund about the economy of the future and whatever.
And they fly me out like business class, the whole nine yards and limo through the desert to this resort.
And it's a whole thing.
And I'm waiting in the green room to go on.
And usually, you know, when you're in the green room, the guy comes with the little clip on mic and whatever to bring you out.
And instead, these five guys come into the green room and they sit around this table.
And this is the talk.
It's these five ultra wealthy guys.
And they want to know.
I mean, originally, it was like these sort of investment questions.
They were like Bitcoin or Ethereum, you know, virtual reality or augmented reality.
Like, dude, don't come to me for that.
I would have said Betamax, I would have said CompuServe.
I, understand what's going to happen, but I'm not the guy to, I don't, I don't tell you what company to bet on.
But then finally they were like Alaska or New Zealand.
They wanted to know where to put their bunkers in case of what they called the event, you know, the electromagnetic pulse or revolution, climate event or pandemic that makes the world unlivable and forces them to go somewhere else.
And that was, you know, I got, I tried to play with them at that point because they're just crazy wealthy guys, you know, and I was like, so how are you going to protect your, bunker from the rest of us.
Like, oh, we got Navy SEALs, you know, on speed dial.
They're going to come out and, you know, like, okay.
And then how are you going to pay your Navy SEALs once your Bitcoin's not worth anything because the world's in?
You know, so they've like thought it out like walking dead level scenario planning, but they haven't really looked at how do you stay alive and you can't, you know, not for very long like that.
Yeah.
But so then that's what set me on the journey to figure out how did the wealthiest, most powerful people in the world Convince themselves that they're utterly incapable of sustaining our world, that the best they can do is prepare for the inevitable collapse of civilization and try to survive in some kind of a feudal bunker.
Yeah, that's kind of, you know, this recent stuff with the Epstein files kind of illuminated a lot of that because there are so many emails with Epstein and people like Peter Thiel.
There was like thousands, I think over 2,000 emails with Peter Thiel.
And Other people like that.
And you could kind of see if you started to like really spend the time to read it and digest it, how these people operate, you know?
And it really got me thinking like, I mean, I was sitting down reading some of these emails at night, like it was like I was binging Game of Thrones.
Like it was just, I was so into it.
And, you know, it got me really thinking about, thinking differently about these people at like the top of the, Hierarchy of the top of the food chain in society,
like people like Teal and Elon and all those folks, that like it's pretty clear these guys aren't necessarily, they don't feel responsible for society or they don't necessarily feel like it's their duty to, you know, push forward the American empire or whatever.
Their public claims are don't seem to be reality.
What the reality is, is there's this inner sort of something going on within their psyche, like deep within them, that is being projected out publicly and narratives are being spun in the media.
So we all have this like distilled, sort of like reconstructed version of what their reality is, if that makes any sense.
Yeah.
Although sometimes they really do just say it.
outright.
You know, Peter Thiel was doing these lectures on Satanism, right?
On what he sees as the satanic force.
And he sees mutual aid as the satanic force.
In his model of reality, a few humans will rise above.
A few humans will level up.
His book is called From Zero to One, meaning that you go from zero to one, that you need to become one order of magnitude above everybody else.
And in business, it can kind of make sense.
Like rather than having a website, own Facebook that controls the websites, right?
Rather than having a store online, have Amazon, which is the aggregator of all the stores.
So you level up.
But he sees that as kind of in his version of Christianity, you level a few humans will level up and they need the resources and the stuff in order to do that.
If you're busy spreading out the wealth and resources and giving it to people who are just going to die eventually anyway, you're wasting what could be going up.
So that's why, you know, to him, like a Greta Thunberg, Is the devil that anybody who's trying to spread it out when the object of the game is a pyramidal society?
The object of the game is to gather the stuff and climb up it, right?
And get to the top and transcend.
And that's, I mean, to cut to the chase, that's the vision of the most extreme of these kind of transhumanist tech bros.
What they see, they see human beings like larvae, like.
Maggots living on the earth, which is this piece of dung.
You know, you've seen maggots and they're on the other end.
That's what we are.
And a few of us are going to sprout wings and get off, right?
Either up into the ether of the cloud or off the planet or into another dimension or through a quantum leap or something.
A few of us will sprout wings and go.
The rest of us, we're only important insofar as we serve as the labor and the fuel for the few who get the wings and go everywhere else.
So, Now that they see, and they do believe in climate change, probably more than you and me, they see that the thing is ending.
The civilization is ending.
The economy got too poorly distributed, right?
The pyramid of the society, there's too many elites at the top.
It's going to collapse.
We all see it.
They see it.
So now the race is on.
They've got to build their AI to figure out how to get to the next place.
Temporarily, they could stave off maybe 50 or 100 years by.
Having a castle protected by droid armies and a police state.
That's sort of what they're building currently.
That is the plan.
But that's not the long term.
The long term plan is to get out, is to leave us behind.
And it's like the fact that he is the one in charge of, or he's the one behind everything in Silicon Valley, with wrapping everything in Christianity.
And there's all these articles that have been coming out about how now everyone in Silicon Valley is.
Going to church and he's trying to paint Christianity onto everything that's happening there.
And he's hosting these Antichrist talks, lectures that Duncan went to.
And what he's doing, like his beliefs, his values, wanting to live forever and escape the planet, doesn't seem to be a very Christian ideal.
No.
And because the thing he doesn't realize, and the tech bros in general don't realize, is their vision of transcendence is the opposite.
What they want to do is preserve, Their ego and personality exactly like it is.
You know, record it and stick it in an AI or get enough, you know, child blood so they can maintain it, whatever.
But they, the things they're doing are so earthly.
They're so heavy.
Even all the heavy metals that you need for AI, that's what they invest in is like rare earth, heavy, grounded.
They're trying to, even life extension as they understand it, it's not life extension.
It's not the blossoming of a life form.
There's no, um, I mean, anybody who's taken a decent plant medicine understands what we're doing here.
We're metabolizing, right?
We're metabolizing and changing state.
That's what mushrooms do.
They turn poop into life.
It's that change.
If you can't engage in that cycle, you're not really alive.
So, what are they preserving?
It's back to the pharaohs.
What did the pharaohs do?
What does any empire civilization do?
You end up with a few super duper wealthy, powerful people who genuinely believe that tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of lives can be sacrificed to preserve their.
Sarcophagus, right?
To keep them alive forever.
Wow.
I never thought about it like that.
Satellites and Sacrificed Lives00:15:32
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What else did you learn from those guys?
Oh my God.
Well, I mean, the thing that I was interested in, because I also have kind of a, it's weird, I kind of have an academic hat.
To the outside world, it looks like to people in academia, they know it's a frazzled little hat.
I mean, I was, you know what I mean, a regular kind of writer dude.
That got a PhD late so that I could teach for money and health insurance and stuff.
Because writing is an up and down profession, you know?
Yeah.
But getting a PhD taught me enough to really try to look at where did this thing come from?
You know, I've always been really good at looking at something and saying, like, that's weird, right?
Like looking at a dollar bill and in that kind of stoned way and going, why does this paper have value?
Like, huh?
Right.
Right.
But then what the academic does is say, let's find out, you know, who was it that.
Who was it that figured out how to make a piece of paper have value?
How do they enforce it?
Why do we believe it?
What are its biases?
What came before it?
What kind of money was there before central currency loaned out by a central bank at interest?
And how did it work?
And what did it do?
So that's the sort of thing I'll look back at those kinds of things.
So, I mean, money is a great one, right?
So, in my work, what I look back at is I kind of go back to the late Middle Ages as my starting place.
Although you can go all the way back to anything.
You know, the late Middle Ages was like right after the Crusades, they'd gone on all these Christian soldiers from Europe and out into Muslim lands and they, you know, fought and killed and whatever.
And then Crusades kind of ended and it was a whole bad thing, but they had opened up all these trade routes to all these other parts of the world.
So Europe got really cool and interesting.
They brought back all these new technologies and, you know, windmills and watermills and new money systems and even the marketplace.
We didn't have a market until then.
We saw this thing called the bazaar.
And it was like, oh, that's cool.
People just bring their shit and sell it to each other and whatever.
So we started in Europe.
We, I mean, I don't know where my people were at that point, but they started doing these marketplaces.
And these were people who were formerly peasants, right?
They would just bring their crops to the Lord and eat what they could.
So now people are starting to bring things.
like one person selling shoes, someone else is selling chickens, and then they started to use this kind of money that was like poker chips.
It was basically money that got issued in the morning, but usually by the baker or someone who had some kind of commodity, and it would expire at the end of the day.
So the idea is it was like poker chips that they had no value in themselves.
So everybody just traded stuff, right?
It was optimized for trading.
There was no way to save up, right?
So nobody would hoard money or try to hold it.
It wasn't gold.
It was worthless.
So it was just used like IOUs so that we can each get the thing.
I want shoes, you want chickens, he wants meat.
This was so we could all get the things and then sort of settle books at the end of the day and it was done.
So there was no money.
And people got rich.
People actually got rich.
And because they couldn't, and this sounds like a conspiracy theory, but this is actually, it's a happy conspiracy.
It's just history.
People got wealthy and they got healthy.
Like women at that time, late Middle Ages, England, 11th, 12th century, they were taller than at any time until the 1980s.
Till they caught up.
That's how healthy people were.
They worked like three days a week because what do you do if you're doing well, but you don't want to keep working?
We don't even have a reason to keep working because you have no way to store the money.
So if you can't hoard money, what are you going to do?
You're going to start optimizing your society for leisure, which is what they did.
How much do I have to work in order to have everything I need?
So the sign of wealth, the sign of doing well was oh, look, Joe only works two days a week, right?
Because his pig farm is doing so well, he doesn't have to work.
That much.
So, what is that like?
So, people started to get wealthy, and the aristocracy got really upset, right?
Because there were the former lords, they hadn't worked in a thousand years.
And now, all of a sudden, the peasants are becoming the middle class, the bourgeois that we hate.
So, what did they do?
They had to stop the rise of the middle class, and they came up with two ideas, right?
One that we know about was the corporation, or what they called the chartered monopoly.
The idea of a chartered monopoly, we know what a monopoly is.
Charter means it's the king mandated monopoly.
The king charters a monopoly.
So now it's like, if you're my friend, I'll be like, okay, Danny, now you're not just a shoemaker.
You are His Majesty's royal chartered monopoly shoemaker.
You're the official shoemaker.
All the other shoemakers in town, in the city, in our country, they got to work for you.
That's when employment was invented.
There weren't employees before that.
There weren't employees.
People worked, but they didn't have jobs at companies.
It wasn't.
It didn't work like now.
Now, instead, all the other shoemakers, instead of them making shoes and selling them, now they go work for you by the hour, right?
So that's when hourly wages happened.
That's when the clock went on the tower in the medieval village.
They didn't have clocks up there before.
They put them up really as a way of normalizing, showing time is our value.
That's the highest thing now.
Time is money.
That's when that started.
So what happened was people got really disconnected from the value they were creating.
You were punching the clock.
You were working eight hours a day, 40 hour week, whatever it was, instead of working for what, For the value you created.
And then what people like you figured out, what Danny, I'm not you in real life, but Danny, the guy who runs the company, figured out is you don't even want qualified workers working for you.
You want to go to the Home Depot parking lot, pick up a bunch of undocumented aliens and bring them in, train them in 15 minutes and pay them minimum wage.
You don't want some super qualified shoemaker that's going to demand 40 bucks an hour.
So that's when we got the assembly line.
That's when we developed the industrial age so that you could train someone in 15 minutes to do one piece of the job.
Pass it on to the next person.
And only you and your other boss people know the whole process of making it.
So we got that.
And we also got central currency.
They've decided to make all those local currencies we were using, all those poker chips, all that stuff, that's all illegal, right?
You can't use that anymore.
Now what you have to do is borrow money from the central treasury at interest.
So if anyone wants to buy shoes from you, you can't use your own money.
We want to make, the wealthy want to make money off that transaction.
So, the way they will is for me to have money.
I've got to borrow money from the central treasury at interest, do my transactions, and then pay back more money than I borrowed.
And that's a really weird ass idea.
How do you pay back more than you borrowed?
Where does the other money come from?
The only way to get more is the economy has to grow.
And that's why we talk about, to this day, GDP and economic growth and all that.
It's not so I can have the shoes I need and people can have the stuff they need.
The economy has to grow because the operating system of the economy.
This central currency needs to be paid back with interest in order for it to work.
That's the kind of money we use.
So we live in an economy and a society, a civilization that has to grow in order to stay functional.
That worked really well for colonialism, getting a new world, getting new territories, getting new enslaved people, keep going, going, going.
And we kind of ran out.
Like in the 1950s, we kind of ran out of room.
Palestine pushed back, India pushed back, no more.
What do we do?
What do we do?
So let's create consumers out of Americans.
We'll get people to buy more stuff.
We'll use advertising to get people to buy shit they don't need just to keep the economy going.
And they'll get storage facilities to stick all the shit they don't need.
And we'll get pollution.
We'll make stuff disposable so they need to buy more so that the economy can grow.
And we all accept that this growth is a great thing.
Finally, the internet.
That's going to be the best one of all because it's going to create infinite surface area.
We're going to have the World Wide Web forever, it's an infinite marketplace.
But what happened was it turned out people only have so many.
Eyeball hours in a day, right?
You only have so much time you can spend, so much attention.
So that's part of why we're seeing the breakdown of the human mind is we're mining human attention.
But that's the thing that's really reached its limit our ability to keep growing the economy in a way that's not just, well, in a way that's not just hurting people, it's not just extracting value.
So now it's really hard for almost anybody to make value except the people who are at the very top of that.
That growth pyramid.
And those guys see this isn't going to work anymore.
That this last thousand, two thousand years of growth through extraction and growth in this sort of corporatized central currency way, it's up.
That one's over.
So they're like, what happens after?
What happens kind of after this particular capitalist extraction?
And that's why you got folks like Nick Land in Europe saying, oh, it's going to be monarchy.
That's what's going to come.
It's no longer a capitalist society, it's a monarchic society.
And then things could work like that.
Some people see socialism, and that's what the Occupy people are all saying.
We're going to have a sharing economy, and that one sounds better to me than a monarchy.
And the tech bros are like, it's going to be nothing at all, right?
That whole thing's going down.
Forever chemicals are forever.
I don't want to live there.
We've got to get off this place.
We've got to get off this planet.
What do you think they think, those tech bros, like the people like Teal and all those people, what do they think?
That this AI stuff is gonna lead to.
Like, now that the AIs, the ChatGPT is updating itself and, you know, it's baked into everything, the social media, like, we can't figure out what's real or not real.
Now, Grok, when you ask Grok if an image is real, Grok can't even tell you if it's real or not.
Like, do they, I can't imagine there's any optimism within those people.
Well, there is sometimes, you know, the thing I love about these people, I mean, these guys were kind of like the guys I would hang out with stoned in college.
And have these crazy thoughts.
You know what, if we're living in an experiment that's being, you know, a simulation run by a grad student or somewhere on another planet?
You know, those are fun, great conversations to have.
It's just not great to like run a government or an economy based on right.
The most crazy answers to them they're there.
I mean different ones are thinking different things.
You know, I mean Elon Musk used to he really thought he was getting off the planet and pretty recently was when he decided oh, i'm not, That's not going to work.
We're going to dial it back to the moon, is what he said.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Dial it back to the moon or even try to make it work, you know, as we can here.
You know, because, you know, I'm sure you've had somebody talk about that.
What are they called?
Kessler syndrome?
Maybe.
Remind me what it is.
This thing that the satellites in space are crashing into each other and making smaller and smaller particles.
Oh, I haven't heard this.
Oh, this is a big one.
Right.
So Musk knows about this.
All right.
It's an aside, but it's kind of cool.
Yeah.
At least in terms of getting off the planet.
So, you know, we have all these.
Satellites and stuff up in space.
And occasionally they crash into each other because they're up there moving at 20,000 miles an hour or whatever.
And when they crash into each other, they make smaller particles.
And then those smaller particles are all going around crashing into other stuff.
Like the, remember the Chinese, they were just going to bring their astronauts down from the Chinese space station or something.
They couldn't do it.
They couldn't do it because the craft that was supposed to pick them up got pierced by one of those projectiles.
Oh, no.
Right.
But the more.
Satellites that get hit by projectiles, the more projectiles there are until it reaches this thing.
It's called Kessler syndrome, where there's so many that it cascades and then it's just like just zillions and zillions of particles.
They could be, yeah, look, they could be.
So it's like exponential.
It's exponential and they could be a millimeter or a centimeter big, but still, if your spacecraft gets hit by a centimeter, it still shreds you, right?
So the idea is then this whole layer of the.
Of the orb, this whole level of shrapnel is like exactly, it's like Gettysburg, right?
It's just like thousands of things.
And it's so bad, though, that then we can't get off.
It makes it impossible to get off planet.
Wouldn't that be ironic?
Because they trapped in there from that.
The irony.
Recently, what Musk did, he was just asked permission to start, I don't know whether NASA or whatever runs this, the FEMA, who knows, to start using a different orbit because that orbit's just too crowded with crap to start launching his satellites to.
So they want to start doing it deeper into space?
No, they can't.
They got to do it closer in.
Because every time you go deeper in space, you're going to risk going through that shrapnel.
Yeah, what's the number?
Isn't it like 30,000 something satellites are up there right now?
Or is it 60?
It's something crazy.
It's like, I think it's getting damn near 100,000 satellites.
And I would bet Musk has a lot of them.
And I'm not saying anything against space travel or whatever.
It's just like, dudes, work this out.
Oh, 15,000.
2026, there's approximately 14,000 to 15,000 active satellites in Earth's orbit.
Yeah, but there's 45,000 total human-made objects.
What?
Yeah, because those are inactive satellites and debris trapped in orbit.
Oh, my God.
With millions more smaller pieces of debris.
So millions of people.
Space Debris and Psilocybin Breakthroughs00:02:18
It's like, do you remember that movie?
Who was it?
Julia Roberts was up there or Sandra Bullock or somebody was in space and gravity.
I never saw that one.
Right?
And all these that's what screws them up as this shrapnel goes by.
But anyway, it's an interesting metaphor for the reverse impact of so many of these things, right?
The more it's like kind of like the more locks you put and and and guarded, whatever the more uh fences and and shielded doors you put on a city street, the more crime there'll be on the street, you know, because it's just like you're making it making it worse.
So it feels like exactly, and that's what they're doing.
They're so they're so afraid, but yeah, what I looked at, you know, was I looked at how capitalism, which is really what we were describing before, the corporations and central currency, how it led to this sort of Growth based economy where the only way to survive is to become really big, right?
You've got to, you live in a pyramid and you've got to get higher and higher up the pyramid.
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Billionaire Empathy Deficits Explained00:14:11
I blamed capitalism for killing the net for a long time.
That was like 10 years of books going, Look what they did to my internet.
We were just going to rave and party and share.
And it was a shareware.
Everything was free.
Free.
It was beautiful.
And then they wanted to capture our attention and they took these technologies that we were using and turned them on us, right?
So instead of giving people tech to realize their visions, they use tech on people to create our visions, right?
They reversed the whole thing.
It became what they called captology, right?
Using tech on humans to predict and steer our behavior forward and then use AIs and algorithms, which are basically algorithms are almost like demons, right?
I'm going to train something to use everything it knows about you to get you to act against your self interest.
So there was that.
But then I started to look and I thought, you know, it's not just.
It's also something about the tech and the science, also, is part of it.
And I look back at like the origins of empirical science.
You know, it was this guy, Francis Bacon, around the same period, late Middle Ages, early Renaissance, right?
It's that same period, Francis Bacon.
And when he was selling the idea of empirical science, meaning evidence based science, to the court, he said that empirical science will let us take nature by the forelock, hold her down, and submit her to our will.
So, take nature by the hair, hold her down, and right?
Submit her to our will.
That was the way early scientists looked at the world was like this scary, dark, feminine nature, moon, fairies, earthworms, unpredictable stuff.
We're going to use science to make it all predictable.
So, you take something, you kill it, you take it apart, and understand what it is.
It's not about life, it's about reduction.
Anything you can weigh and measure exists.
If you can't do enough metrics for it, may as well not be there.
It's nothing, right?
So it's like it wasn't just like anti female, but I mean, women kind of represented that unruly.
I mean, I understand.
What is that?
What is it thinking?
How is it thinking?
What does it want?
Yes.
And I need to be with it, but I'm afraid of it.
I understand they were there, but that was the way they dealt with it, was to control it.
So then you look at how that scientific mindset, that's not even scientific, I would go scientistic mindset.
It was like scientism.
It was sort of reductive materialist science as religion rather than science as the exploration it really is, not scientific model, scientific reductionism.
Then that came through to the tech bros.
Anything you can't quantize is not real.
Anything that can't be digitally weighed, measured.
Exactly.
And if you don't know what it is, then it's just noise.
So all that DNA, all that junk DNA.
Don't worry, but don't take my junk DNA.
What's, you know, so my monkey DNA or whatever that it's not junk, it's gonna just wait.
I might, it's there.
I might need it.
It's my history, it's my, it's all the species I was.
I don't wanna lose, I don't wanna lose that.
You know, it's like anything that's not on the quantized line is expendable.
Everything is kind of auto tuned into their reality.
You know, and it's like, I get it.
You wanna auto tune Ariana Grande or something?
She'll be a better product hitting the C perfectly.
Go at it, go for it.
Like James Brown, right?
Who's like reaching up to the note and lives in that in between space.
If you auto tune James Brown, you're literally removing the soul.
Right.
And the soul to these guys and to the digital realm is noise.
And it's not the soul, it's that all that in between stuff, stuff you talk about on here, the in between, the liminal.
The reason why we talk about even the stuff we don't believe in is because it puts your head in that weird in between.
Space, just the exercise of hearing somebody talk about aliens you decide later you don't believe in, wrapping your head around it for an hour or two, it makes you realize there's more going on here than meets the eye, right?
There is a shamanic sensibility, right?
There's, but that's the scary female power, nature, right?
Stuff that gets quantized out, right?
So, those are sort of the two histories I look at the history of capitalism and money, right?
Which only wants to value things that it can put a dollar value on and that will expand the market for the bankers.
And then a scientific view of reality that the only things that matter are the things that have metrics and all the other stuff.
Don't and that's how you end up with this kind of sociopathic marriage going, which is like it's funny.
I mean, you want a real conspiracy story that I lived all right?
So, I was at uh, I was at my late 20s at my first like important scientist party, I'd written my first book or two, and I'm there, uh, and I see Richard Dawkins, right?
The selfish gene guy, he came up with the term meme, you know, Nobel, whatever, scientist.
Dude, Cambridge, the whole thing.
And he's there and he's talking about memes and stuff.
And he starts saying that human beings are just like computers for memes, that a meme runs a human like a program runs a computer.
And that ultimately he had this very reductive view that there's nothing going on here.
We're in a completely materialist world and we're going to live selfishly because our memes and genes tell us to live selfishly.
And you know who was there?
Was Naomi Wolf.
Remember Naomi Wolf?
She was a big feminist writer and then she ended up becoming kind of a Maga Kennedy.
Really?
Yeah.
The name's not ringing a bell.
Naomi Wolf.
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
She's been on Bannon's show a lot.
She was anti vax.
I mean, she went from being a kind of a lefty intellectual feminist to.
She had gray hair.
Yeah.
She kind of horseshoed to the other side of it.
Uh huh.
But at the time, she was.
More, what would the word be?
More intellectually dependable to the regular classes, you know?
More a New York Times, you know, approved intellectual at that point, if lefty.
She hadn't kind of gone off road yet.
And she was arguing, and I saw her arguing with Dawkins saying, but isn't there a soul?
There's something, there's spirit.
And all these dudes, it was like Dawkins and some of the other scientists of that.
Of that ilk, these, you know, God delusion type scientists.
I'm like laughing at her and kind of teasing her.
And I tried to defend her because, you know, I was for a bunch of reasons, but, you know, but I wanted her to like me, I guess, you know, and so I'm defending her and, you know, arguing that the universe doesn't work like they're saying, these other things.
And I was bringing up Wittgenstein and systems of meaning.
And finally they dismissed me and Dawkins said, oh, you're a moralist.
Like, I didn't even know what a moralist is.
I like to dismiss, oh, you're a moralist.
As if I'm like, like, means Christian or something, or a moralist.
That I believe we live in a universe that does have some sense of right and wrong, that there is a conscience, that there is an ethical something that humans can do.
And 10 years later, I see Dawkins and some of the other scientists from that party in a picture on Jeffrey Epstein's Lolita Express, right?
Now, they weren't going to the island.
They were going to the TED conference.
And I find out that Epstein had funded my literary agent and all the scientists' conferences and stuff.
And I was thinking, you know, so I'm the moralist, and they're the ones who are on Epstein's plane.
So, what really is going on here is that the marriage of these things is Epstein funded, and he did, he funded these particularly scientistic, kind of anti spiritual scientists as a way of kind of justifying the exploitation of all these other people.
You know, if, if, People don't have souls.
If people aren't even really real, they're not even conscious, they're just kind of machine animals, then it's okay to have a harem of 14 year old girls.
What are they?
They're not real, right?
Nature.
We're going to hold her down by the forelock and submit her to our will because she's just stuck.
There's no nothing.
And that was when I saw the sort of sociopathic tendency of the kind of tech bro scientist to look at everything as.
Programmable matter rather than an other, right?
There's another person there that's not a thing to exploit, that's a human.
It really dovetailed perfectly with the billionaire sociopathic view of the rest of humanity.
And that's how they get to this weird version of transhumanism where the super elite can leave everyone behind in order to pursue.
I've always wondered though, is that something that's baked into us from the jump or is that something that just happens?
When you attain that level of financial wealth and power, is that something that bubbles up out of the human psyche naturally?
Because this stuff goes back to like early Greece.
Let's get maybe this stuff goes back to Pharaoh.
What is the Greek emperor, Tiberius, you know, who like famously had like, you know, was like testing and killing children all day long on his island.
And there's tons of stories of this stuff going back to ancient Greece and ancient Rome and like.
And is this just some like freak genetic abnormality in some people that also happens to coincide with becoming a billionaire at the top of society?
Or is that what happens when you attain all of that power?
I wonder.
There's some of both, right?
So it is true.
And I talk about these actually in that book.
There are studies that show, like, basically, you take a billionaire and put them in an MRI machine, show them a picture of like a starving baby, the parts of the, you're a my brain that would light up and empathy don't for them.
So as you, As you get wealthier, your empathy decreases.
And it's not that people with low empathy end up doing well, although that might be true too.
It's that as you get wealthy, you help less.
Wealthier people help less in the street.
You just do.
You have less.
Yeah.
You do separate.
It's part of the way you justify, you have to justify after the fact that you've gotten there.
I think it depends on how you got wealthy too, though.
Yeah, I would like that.
I know super wealthy people who are not like that at all.
Yeah.
Yeah, some, but they must have good upbringings or strong anchor.
The other thing you bring up, which is interesting, is some percent, you know, one out of a hundred, five out of a hundred of humans are going to have a sociopathic tendency.
That's just the way we are.
Yeah.
You know, say five out of a hundred, even 10 are going to have that.
So then the question is is the landscape in which your society is operating, is it a landscape that rewards the sociopath or?
or prevents the sociopath from gaining power.
So, if you look at some of the, some, not all, some of the Native American or indigenous cultures, they have a lot of safeguards to prevent a sociopathic, usually male, but not always, but usually sociopathic male from taking over.
So they'll have a, they'll say, we're going to have a male chief at all times, but we're going to have 10 females who are allowed to veto and change the chief whenever they want.
So it's a weird balance.
So you get the wisdom of the women and the, you know, macho.
Whatever brouhaha of the guy, but he's kept in check by this panel of women who can go, okay, you're out.
And then they even had mechanisms.
If we really don't like the dictator we're with, they were migratory societies.
People leave.
We'll go.
50 of us, we're going because this guy's a fucking maniac.
So you can build societies around that.
Those are called horizontal civilizations or you build pyramidal civilizations.
And they're throughout history.
Pyramidal civilizations, You have to climb to the top in order to gain power, and they're optimized for accumulation and control and taking.
That's what you do.
And then there's horizontal civilizations like the late Middle Ages time we were talking about.
Horizontal civilizations are optimized for leisure, you know, but we take our productivity and we give it back to everybody in the form of more time.
And that one to me seems like the more natural human state.
What are we here for?
We're here to fuck and play and create.
That's not.
Just stuff you let workers do so they work more.
That's the reason we're here.
You work in order to have time to fucking play.
Right.
And now it's becoming, you're compiling onto all that stuff, all the digital and all of the separation of humans where people only communicate via screens and text and dating apps and all that stuff.
And now I was laughing my ass off when you and Duncan were talking about this, but also injecting themselves with Botox so you can't see their emotions anymore.
So not only are they hiding their facial expressions, they're also behind a screen.
Right.
And like the separation is becoming exponential on top of all of that stuff.
So, right.
Ecstatic Dance and Sensory Resets00:05:37
That is interesting.
So, we're zooming already and we're unable to really establish rapport in Zoom.
I can't see if your pupils are getting bigger or smaller as I speak.
All of it.
Yeah.
You know, hundreds of thousands of years of painstakingly evolved mechanisms for establishing rapport are thwarted there.
And then you're right.
Then we go into the real world and do other things to prevent rapport.
It's like we're on this runaway apocalyptic train that.
I don't see there's an end.
It seems to be coming soon.
It doesn't seem, I mean, maybe, maybe.
Oh, it's collapsing.
I seem to be.
I'm optimistic.
I seem to be optimistic.
I like to be optimistic about this too because, like, I always look at all the stuff that was happening in the 60s when Kennedy got shot and all this other crazy stuff that was happening.
Like, imagine if we had phones and Instagram back then, you know?
Imagine how many conspiracies there would be everywhere and how people would be running wild.
So, yeah.
You know, people are getting sick of it, though.
I mean, they are.
I know.
And I feel like kids, not just, I know there's a, every once in a while there'll be an article about, oh, here's a group of kids that's throwing away their phones and they're only reading books, you know, but they're a tiny group.
On the other hand, I was in Target the other day and right in front of the Target they had, I think it was like Taylor Swift's last record or something, but it was in vinyl.
And I saw this girl buying it and I asked her, she's like a Gen Zer.
And I said, oh, that's cool you're getting.
I said, what kind of turntable do you have?
She goes, well, I don't have a turntable.
I just want the record.
So, It was both heartbreaking and sweet at the same time, but that she wants the artifact.
They want the thing.
Even if she's listening to it on Spotify, she wants the thing.
And I feel like we've kind of reached a place where, you know, I know all the stats say the kids are having less sex and all that.
Eventually, I think it's going to come back around.
Really?
Yeah.
How does that happen?
Through sheer nausea and boredom and sadness.
It's like things like sex and meditation and movement and ecstatic.
Have you gone to an ecstatic dance?
Done one of those?
No.
What's an ecstatic dance?
Remember Rave?
Were you around for Rave?
You know, thousands of people go and they're like, I never, I never, I went to maybe one.
Yeah.
So Raves was a thousand kids, 100 beats per minute, taking ecstasy.
Yes.
The ecstatic dance night is like 300 people, maybe not on ecstasy, but like dancing all together, not like with partners, but just like in this thing.
And you really do a few hours in, you end up in a beautiful altered state with people.
And it's like, you don't even have to do drugs.
You don't.
It's like, you know, the scene in the second Matrix movie, you know, where they're all dancing.
They show the people who are in Zion.
I remember that.
Basically, Zion is like this kind of.
Zion, yeah.
Zion is literally like a Burning Man kind of rave thing.
It really, you reconnect pretty friggin' fast.
You know, people go to one of those or one good mushroom ceremony.
You know, they're just like, oh, okay, I want to live like this, not like that.
Yes.
I was explaining this to somebody where there was a.
I went to a Metallica concert last year in Tampa, and it was my first time ever going to a Metallica concert.
And when I was there, it was like 60,000 people packed into this.
It was the Buccaneer Stadium, which is a huge outdoor stadium.
And what they do is they put this circular stage in the middle of the football field, right?
And they put all the people basically gather around.
They're in the stadiums too, but it's all on the floor, like in the middle of where the football field would be.
And it's like this.
Donut shaped stage.
And there's people in the middle.
They call it the snake pit, too.
And there's like these giant towers, the LED towers that show graphics.
There's like, there's smoke, there's giant beach balls, and the sound is like vibrating through everyone.
And it's like, it's hard to describe this like palpable energy that's there that just vibrates every fiber of your being.
And it's like, you don't have to be on drugs at all, but it's intoxicating.
Like, there's the sounds, the lights, the Energy, the smoke, just the ambiance in general.
It got me thinking.
I'm like, this must have been what the Eleusinian mysteries were.
Right.
Except, you know, it's interesting.
So you can do that, and in some of the ways we're describing, it's through a kind of a sensory overload that creates a reset.
It's a little bit like, you know, they've been doing it since the Roman games, the Nuremberg rallies, a sports game, or a terrific concert.
So it's through, Size.
The interesting thing, what I've been trying to play with is how do you get there through stillness?
In other words, so you can be bombarded by it, but you can also kind of fall into it.
And in some ways, like a drum circle of people, there's still stuff, but it was sort of what David Lynch was describing.
He wrote this book on meditation because he was a big meditator on sort of how you go into that state or.
I know it's tricky for kids now because they're trained on porn, but there's ways of having sex.
They're trained on porn.
What a crazy thing.
But you know what I mean?
Yeah, no, I know.
Breaking Out Through Stillness00:04:05
I know.
It's crazy.
It's what sex is.
So, but if, I mean, I invite young sexually active people to go enter and be still.
You know what I mean?
Be still and see what that's like.
It's like there's another, you know what I mean?
There's a kind of an intimacy, a connection, an opening to everything.
If you can be, you know, passively active and actively passive, you know, if you be yin and yang at the same time, really.
Fall into the moment.
You know, and that's the hard thing.
That's especially in our society.
That's what I've been pushing for now how do I be in the now and truly in the moment that I'm in?
You know, and not let even my most well intentioned social justice efforts distract me from exactly where I am in the moment.
I mean, here I am having great water and coffee with you in this gorgeous studio, and I know there's people starving somewhere else.
You know, some kid getting their hand blown off by an IED or something, the second.
Like, yeah, but it's still okay to be, to revel.
And here we are connecting about this weird shit, you know?
Right.
Right.
It's both.
It's both.
And if you truly fall into that moment, then you reconnect with all of that stuff again, you know?
And that's the kind of weird ass spiritual thing I've been working on lately how do you kind of.
Metabolize what's going on here?
How do you kind of make like a mushroom?
How do you be, you know, the, the, how do you, through your very existence, how do you metabolize what's going on in all of its horror and grief rather than try to make enough money to rise above it, to insulate oneself from it?
Like to break out of the system.
Right.
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What you just said translates into every aspect of life and to society.
From engineering rockets to the economy to meditation, religion, and all that stuff.
Everything in our lives, from podcasts to rocket engines, is just intertwined and baked into this pyramidical structure.
And, like, I can't comprehend how, other than what you just said, which I think is great, trying to reconnect with yourself and meditate how to break that system.
Climate Change and Lawnmower Economics00:04:57
I feel like it's going to take something just like overwhelmingly catastrophic to do that.
You would think, well, we want the Goldilocks event.
Is what they call it, right?
Something that's bad enough to wake us up, but not so bad that it kills us all.
We kind of hope that COVID would be that, or maybe the Trump prison camps or something would be that.
What is it that does that?
But for me, the easy way to play with it is like meet your neighbors, go ultra local.
If we conclude, like the wealthiest people in the world, that this pyramid's coming down, there's going to be a crash of one sort or another.
Whether it's a climate crash or an economic crash or both or all of them.
The ocean current we saw, that big ocean wave is dying down the North Atlantic, whatever that thing is.
So England's going to be in the magnetosphere or whatever.
Yeah.
The anomaly.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's bad.
The ocean is changing.
The climate change thing is happening.
There's going to be mass migrations from the coasts.
Even the Koch brothers are investing in it.
The people that are saying there's no climate change are investing in what's going to happen.
Everyone knows.
There's going to be that thing.
And then it's like we can work to try to prevent it, sure.
But I think the more important thing is how do we soften the landing as much as possible?
And the way to soften the landing of an economic or a food supply or an energy crisis is to have very resilient local networks.
The more you know your neighbors, it's not like to be a prepper, but to be how can our village, how can our town, whatever area be more sustainable?
Where do we get our food?
Where do the old people live?
Who needs help?
How do they get their water?
The more that we do for each other rather than buying it on Amazon, then the more prepared we'll be when Amazon's not delivering.
I'm not saying you can do it all overnight, but we can build more resilient communities.
And it starts really as simple as meet your neighbor.
We don't really know them.
I told this story when my daughter was graduating high school, we had this picture.
We got the frame picture, we wanted to stick it in the wall, we got plaster walls.
I don't want to put a nail in a plaster wall.
So I got a drill to put a set in there.
I don't have a drill.
So, what's my first impulse, like any American?
Go to Home Depot, get a minimum viable product rechargeable drill, use it once, stick it in the garage, maybe never use it again, or take it out and it won't recharge and throw it out.
So, I sent kids in the Congo into the mines to get the rare earth metals for the rechargeable drill, all the carbon that was made to make it, and then I throw it out and it's going to go on a waste dump in Brazil where some other kids are going to pick it out to pull out the renewable part and sell it to Apple so they can call themselves a green company.
Or.
I could walk down the street and knock on the door and say, Bob, can I borrow your drill?
Why is that so hard?
Why?
Because you know why it's so hard?
Because Bob's going to come out and he's going to say, Doug, you're a nerd.
You don't know how to drill a hole.
I'm going to come over there and I'm going to drill the hole for you.
He's going to come over.
He's going to drill the hole and set it and whatever and plug it in the wall like it's supposed to be.
You know, some non rechargeable crap.
He's going to do the whole thing.
Then that weekend, I'm going to have the barbecue party for my daughter.
And Bob's going to be over there working, routing the door, whatever he's doing in his garage, smelling.
What's going on?
Doug's having a graduation party for his daughter.
I drilled the whole fucking picture.
What's that?
Right?
So I invite Bob.
Okay, Bob, come to the house.
Now, Bob's going to come with his wife and the mother in law.
And the mother in law sees we have a piano and says, Oh, you know, we should come over and sing songs for Christmas.
And now we're supposed to be friends with those people.
And now the neighbors see that Bob's at my barbecue party and want to know, Why didn't I invite them?
So then I invite them.
So now I got the whole block and my daughter's graduation party having barbecue in my backyard, like a block party.
And that's the bad thing, right?
That's how screwed up we are.
Yeah.
Right?
That's the bad.
That's the good thing.
That's the good thing because then we start talking.
Well, how did you beat?
Why did you knock on Bob's door?
I needed a drill.
He said, You know, we've got every family in this block has its own lawnmower.
What if we had two lawnmowers for the whole block and we shared them?
And now we don't have to buy as much stuff.
We don't have to work as much.
We don't have to pollute as much.
And I told this story at a conference of those kind of tech bro banker people.
Someone got up at the end and said, Well, yeah, it's all nice and good, but what about the lawnmower company?
People are buying less lawnmowers and their stock's going to go down.
It's going to hurt the economy.
And what about the old lady who's Depending on the dividends from her stock in the lawnmower company for her retirement.
Now you've just taken food out of her mouth.
To which I say, I don't want to live in a society where the welfare of that old woman is depending on how many lawnmowers we buy.
We should be taking care of her.
She's part of our neighborhood.
Microcontent Feeds and Social Algorithms00:12:47
What kind of society is it that you have to earn enough money in your working years to support yourself entirely by yourself through the rest of your life?
Right.
It's a non-society, it's an every man for himself.
Competitive economy.
Yes.
And, you know, the social media stuff is hugely responsible for that too, because it goes back and forth because you have these people that are just competing to attain more wealth so they can have or have bigger Instagram followings or bigger Twitter followings or whatever.
So they're incentivized not only to just like run that rat race, but they're also doing this whole other thing.
On social media, trying to like prop up this fake existence to impress more people, and it's spending more time on that.
And it seems like that that is also spiraling into more and more of this control grid system where all those companies are also like intertwined with the government somehow that's like controlling what can be said, what can't be said.
And I know, did you see Zuckerberg that they released these messages?
That he was agreeing with, he told Trump that they weren't gonna, that they were censoring negative Facebook posts on Doge.
Oh, no.
When did this come out?
Last week.
Really?
No, I didn't see this.
Yeah, it's funny.
I mean, they did it for Biden too, with, you know, and not saying bad things about vaccines.
Now it's like, okay.
So it's like they didn't change their behavior, they just changed their allegiance.
Right, right.
And that's what I'm afraid of.
Like, I'm afraid of, like, when it comes to the integration of the tech, the big tech stuff and all of these, Platforms like Google and Facebook and YouTube and all that stuff, how they can just turn a dial and try to and like manipulate culture and manipulate humanity and manipulate this sort of like extra layer, this extra like this consciousness that lives above us that we're kind of all tapped into.
Yeah.
I mean, and the big name in that that no one really talks about everyone talks about Teal and Musk, it's Larry Ellison.
Right.
Well, Larry, I mean, what he's buying these companies that are like no one really gives a shit about, right?
Like CBS and and yeah, but he's got really watches.
He's got a bigger surveillance.
Infrastructure than Palantir.
Oracle was named after a CIA project.
The whole thing has been surveillance and control.
He's the one, he's on the board of peace, you know, in the Middle East.
He's got the contract with the IDF to be doing their data and analysis on Israeli Defense Fund, on all their intelligence.
He's got the highest security clearance his company has in the U.S. government.
He's got all of our employment data because all the companies, big companies, use PeopleSoft as their employee management system.
He's got our medical data, he just got our medical data, and he's building the DNA database.
He wants a DNA database of.
Everyone in America, everyone in the world, he's got more.
And what he wants to do with it is, on the one hand, be able to do, to cure cancer, predict all diseases.
On the other hand, he wants to help predict crime.
Oh my God.
Predict crime.
And it depends how you define crime.
So what we're looking at is AI being used, yes, in the way you're saying it, to control what the population thinks, but also to monitor and enforce those who don't behave as we want.
I mean, the easy thing, I can't imagine they're not already doing it, is you use AI and predictive analysis to see, you just look at the blogosphere, look at the podcast sphere, whose media and talking is most likely to sow discontent in the population.
And let's just throw a couple of tax audits at them, right?
You don't need the warehouse, you don't got to make a martyr, right?
I'm not going to only, if they cart you away, You know, they cart Danny Jones away.
That's not good, right?
All those people, what happened?
You know what I mean?
It creates a Charlie Kirk kind of movement around that.
You'll become cute.
It's a dry sand effect for them.
Yeah.
Right.
But a few tax audits will just take you off the playing field for a while.
If it really, you know what I mean?
It's like, ah.
But they don't even need to do the tax audits.
All they need to do is turn a little dial on your reach.
I know.
So, like with the shadow banning, they just turn you off in the algorithm so no one sees you anymore.
This has happened.
This has happened to lots of people I know.
Right.
It's crazy.
So, it's not just like, They're censoring it or they're burning the books or whatever.
Now they're doing it secretly.
So not only are they burning the books, but they're doing it and making it invisible.
So nobody even knows it's happening.
I know it is weird though.
It's like if certain posts, it's like, why didn't this one reach 200,000 people?
This one's really cool and it reached 2,000 people.
What happened there?
Right.
And they'll have reasons, you know, other reasons.
They'll say, oh, because, you know, that one was 7.3 seconds longer than the optimized.
Something or other.
Yeah, but we can't see behind the curtain, so we don't know what's really happening.
Yeah.
But they just have these loose rules that are on all these platforms, these sort of like vague, ambiguous sort of guidelines that you have to abide by.
Right.
But they're not really like enforcing them.
There's no court.
I know.
And we think that we're winning or losing the war based on sort of.
What?
You have an ant on your shoulder?
I do.
Eat it.
Other shoulder?
It's not an ant.
It's a.
It's an oracle.
It's a fucking nano.
It's a Palantir bee.
It's a Palantir bee.
I think it went under my shirt.
I'm okay.
It could go penetrate your skin.
Steve won't let me kill an ant.
Really?
No.
Oh, because he's a Buddhist?
Yeah, he's a hippie.
Oh, my God.
No, but the funny thing is, we think it's like we're competing against each other in terms of our content.
It's on my chest.
Oh, is he?
He's gone.
You're hurting him.
I know.
I just smashed him into my chest.
It's all right.
You're absorbing him.
Exactly.
Yeah, he's getting absorbed into my bloodstream right now.
It's part of your.
Now, your metabolism.
I'm going to start tripping balls here in a second.
I was thinking about this moment.
We used to have this show when I was a kid called Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom.
It was like animal documentary footage in Africa.
And there was, I remember I was a little kid.
I saw this and stayed with me until I figured it out, like last year, like 40 years later.
Of the, you know, the gazelle is running and the cheetah's running after it.
And the cheetah jumps on the gazelle and the gazelle kind of struggles for a while.
And then you see the gazelle stop and its eyes kind of glaze over.
And I always thought about that moment what's the gazelle thinking?
And why does it give up?
You know, why does it stop?
And then I realized there was this moment that the gazelle realizes I am now cheetah food.
I'm cheetah food.
That's what I am.
I am now more cheetah than I am gazelle.
And it, not that it's blissful, but a little bit like those vampire movies, you know, when the person getting bit finally goes, ah, you know, that there's this moment of, it's scary to say it.
I'm sure this is what like masochists or sadists or something are all in.
There's a moment of bliss in the surrender.
So it's like, I'm sick of it because of the ant on you, that when the ant finally.
If it's like absorbed, the ant becomes Danny.
The ant is part of you.
You know that it's.
I don't, so I mean it's.
I know it's an anti pita justification for eating animals or something, but yeah, but there is that we are metabolizing each other.
Everything it's it's life is.
Yeah, things go into other things like that.
It's the way it's the way it is, and I feel like the the tech bro mentality we're talking about.
They're at the one hand, they're resisting that.
They don't want to be part of that.
They don't want to be in the swirl.
And on the other hand, they're using it as an excuse to be fucking sadists, right?
It's okay for all these thousands of kids in the Congo to be going into mines at gunpoint as slaves to build the chips for my AI that I'm going to use to solve the world's problems and make a trillion dollars and get off the planet.
Mm hmm.
Totally.
Yeah.
That's a crazy thing.
I think that when the, when the, Going back to what you're saying about the animals, which is kind of not to your point, but I think it's interesting.
I think that when that happens, when the animal starts eating them, I think they start probably tripping.
I think it's for like a DMT trip, probably.
Like something gets released in their brain.
Yeah, like a breakable glass capsule in the brain or something that goes pshhh.
And then all of a sudden you're just like shuttled into like another dimension.
Right.
But that dimension, in other words, that you're tripping, I like that you're saying you're tripping.
It's not like it's morphine, it's not like you just shut down your nervous system.
Right.
That you trip.
So you return to.
You get to see the way things are.
In other words, so when you're in this dimension here, trying to live, okay, we got to have some, you got to keep this life form alive.
You got to do this stuff in order to promote your DNA.
And it's like, okay, you're dying.
Here's how things are.
Nothing matters anymore.
You're one.
You're one with everything.
It's all good.
It's all part of this world.
Welcome home.
Welcome home.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because, and it's like the DMT thing.
Like when DMT feels like death, it feels like you're actually dying sometimes, right?
Like you're disconnected from everything in the material world.
And all of a sudden, whatever is in there, whatever consciousness is, seems to be.
Shuttling through like a different dimension and a different universe, right?
And like everything that's around us is its own organism, but not a material organism.
It's like something that you can't really touch.
It's not tangible.
It's hard even to put it into words.
Yeah.
I think that could be it because I don't know what.
I've been thinking about that lately because my algorithm's been feeding me all these videos of people being eaten by sharks lately.
Really?
Yeah.
For some reason, my Twitter algorithm and my Instagram algorithm have been feeding me all this crazy stuff of people.
Getting eaten by animals.
Very weird.
Yeah.
I don't know why.
So much death on the internet lately.
Yeah, I've been off social media and it's a little hypocritical because I create now, I create content for social media.
I used to just do my podcast just as an audio podcast.
You can download it.
Everything was organic, you know, no Gary Vannerchuk micro content, anything.
And now, what I'm doing, because I got a sponsor for it, I'm just trying and I moved it to video.
Yeah.
It's on YouTube too, because all the kids watch it on YouTube.
They'll even start watching it and the behavior is they open another tab and then they listen to it in the background.
Yes.
But if you've got to be on the YouTube, because Who wants to sit and just watch the video for that long, you know, but they want to hear it?
But I make micro content on Instagram or YouTube Reels and all, but I'm not making micro content to get them to come to the podcast.
I feel like I'm making the podcast in order to be able to create micro content to reach other people.
I'm thinking of it in terms of cultural transformation.
How do I get, you know, these sort of, you know, pockets of, of, of, Smartness?
How do I create sparks of intelligence out there?
So the podcast is kind of funding the social.
It's not the social as feeder content because they don't go from there, not from me, and they don't click on a watch a good TikTok and go, I'm going to listen to the two hour version of that.
Right.
No, those are totally different people, I think, that do the TikTok.
But I like reaching them.
Sure.
Yeah, totally.
Did you recently stop using social media as a.
In 2013.
2013?
It was when Facebook started the policy of where they could use your posts as advertising.
Yeah.
It was one of the things that they tried.
And I was just like, oh, fuck this shit.
I'm sick of it.
Wow, that was a long ass time ago.
And I played on Twitter when Evan Williams started Twitter, the very early Twitter.
I was on there, the 140 character thing, using it to send links to things.
And it was interesting.
And I played around on there.
But I got sick of it before.
Once the algorithm was tweaked to sensationalism, it was just like I felt.
I mean, maybe I'm overly sensitive, but I didn't feel good physically after I'd be on it.
You know, and it's like email is hard enough.
Viking Shamanism and Written Language00:11:31
Yeah.
I wanted less screen time.
I wanted to do your own detox.
I need to take a break from it to see how you feel.
I've heard people, friends, talk to me about like taking like month breaks from it, from the scrolling stuff.
And like they literally feel like a physiological difference.
Yeah.
They feel healthier.
They don't feel as.
Bogged down.
No, I'll tell you, I did.
I've been bogged down anyway just because of the way I live my life.
I'm doing too much work, too many jobs, and all that.
But I took my first vacation like 25 years.
The last time I went on vacation was 1999 when the planes were supposed to fall out of the sky because the Y2K bugged.
Oh, yeah.
And all that they didn't know.
So, and I just because I'm a writer, thinker, artist person, and in some ways I don't have a job, so I don't need a vacation.
But I didn't really apply.
I went to Costa Rica.
I did this crazy thing.
You got to get someone from this called ISTA.
Have you ever heard of this?
No.
The International School of Temple Arts.
It's kind of like sexual shamanism.
Oh my God, it was intense.
But just being off that and doing sort of meditation and weird practices for a week in Costa Rica, eating that totally natural food.
You know, I come back and it's like I realized every ping from one of these devices, every email, it's all fake.
There's this reality that we're in.
Right?
That you touch it when you're tripping or having sex or you meditate or you're in an art.
It's like, it's a shamanic thing.
You can feel when someone shitty is coming around the corner.
You can feel, you know what I mean?
Can there's, I believe, retro causality coming from the future?
You can feel events from the future rippling back in time.
You can feel this is real.
This is the way that real things that's why you see birds fly before the storm and the it's not all physics, a lot of it's this thing, this thing that we're in, this thing.
And that's how our brains evolved, yeah, and our hearts, and our gut biomes, and our physi, our nethers, and these devices and these things and these systems are.
It's almost as if they've been designed to distract us and occlude that, right?
It's back nature by the forelock, right?
To hold her down.
So we submit to the will of the system.
But when you rediscover, it's like, I've refounded again.
It's like, I don't want to let it go.
I don't want to.
It's like, it's too luscious, you know?
Yeah, no, I like to what you're saying, like that there's something baked into us that has probably evolved for millions of years that is.
Tapped us into nature and made us because we've become sort of unlike any other species on earth that sort of like lives in this symbiosis with nature, right?
We're sort of like we have become the one species that doesn't really fit, right?
Like we don't really add anything back to, we don't give back, right, to nature at all.
Like every other animal in the rainforest does, but we sort of like exist outside of that, right?
We're out, right?
Like most or all other animals are kind of part of some symbiotic circularity.
All the way down to phytoplankton, you know.
Right.
And it's circular.
And we live in this linear thing.
Right.
Exactly.
You know, which has externalities and waste, or at least the illusion of one and progress to some future.
We have like forever chemicals.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
Mice don't make forever chemicals.
They pee.
Yeah.
So, what is that one way thing that we're on?
And when you go into like the woods and stuff, and I've had multiple people explain this to me, like when you go into the woods, whether it be You know, like the redwoods or the Amazon rainforest, and you're completely disconnected from the grid.
And you're in this, like, almost like another universe when you're in the woods, right?
You are almost tapped into another realm.
It's like these buried senses start bubbling up to the surface, where now, like, the sound of the branches and the birds and the footsteps and the insects, all that stuff is sort of like another language that.
We used to be able to understand, and now it's kind of like bubbling back up.
Yeah, but you can, without tripping, um, if you're in, put your hand on a tree, you know, there's something there that's it's a living thing with a kind of I don't know whether to call it consciousness, but a presence.
Uh, yeah, it's there, you know, it's uh huh, and it's like once you kind of get that, it's like.
Boy, what about befriending this place?
I mean, I understand why we didn't.
Big things would come and eat us.
You know, it was scary.
I remember watching, you know, Kubrick's Space Odyssey 2001, those little caveman creatures.
There's this one scene where they're like sitting on this cliff at night and they're shivering, and you hear this like, like some saber toothed tiger out in the somewhere walking around and they're just sitting up.
You know, how many hundreds of thousands of years did we as a species just sit and go, you know, that's going to breed?
An Elon Musk, right?
That's what's right.
Yeah, that's kind of inevitable, right?
Yeah, yeah, that's bizarre.
But we didn't, you know, but we did have these sort of indigenous societies and not just, and other ones that did develop in other ways.
There are, you know, there's that great book, Donna Civilization, that writes about all these different civilizations that happen.
We think it's just this one line from, you know, sort of, you know, Israel and Greece to Europe to us.
And it's like, no, there's a ton of others that have risen and fallen throughout history.
Some of them, you know.
That we probably don't know about.
Yeah, a lot of them.
Before written language, you know.
Right.
For recorded history.
I had the psychologist on a couple, maybe a couple months ago, who was explaining to me her take on like written language.
How she was explaining how, like, the story of Adam and Eve in the garden eating the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge was like a deviation from inherent knowledge to trusting the written word.
Mm hmm.
And she was explaining how the written word, you know, we get everything that we've got going back to recorded history has been, we rely largely on writing and text and stuff like that.
Obviously, we use things like archaeology and other stuff to corroborate all that.
But like the written word is inherently deceptive.
Yeah.
Because it enables you to lie and it gets you away from intuition.
Yep.
This is why I became a media theorist.
That's in theory my job, right?
Is looking at that.
You can look at the whole Bible, the whole thing, as an ethical manual for a society that was transitioning from an oral society to a written society.
It's the whole thing.
That's called the Axial Age, it was when we started writing things down.
Once we wrote things down, we got two things we got history, because now you could write down your history, what happened, and we got contracts into the future.
Now you could bind someone in the future the way you couldn't before.
Now you've got that there.
You end up with this sort of thing, that's what sort of invented this linear notion of time that we didn't have.
Before writing, you just went by the seasons.
It's next winter, plant the crops.
Once you could write it down, this happened, then that happened, then this happened.
And then what happens is God promises Abraham, oh, and your future generations, if you do this for me, you know, don't kill your kid, but cut his little penis, do something, whatever, then I will reward you in the future.
You know, and there'll be a Messianic age, there'll be all this stuff.
So we ended up in this society that.
That values its past as its origin story.
We own this land.
This is our thing.
We deserve this.
And we have our inevitable, our Messiah is going to come and save the day and do all that.
So we get the linear story and we lose that.
And we're combining it with thermonuclear weapons.
Well, it's an endgame, the Alpha to the Omega, you know, where before that, before writing, our spiritualities, they didn't have future points.
They didn't have.
There was no goal.
Right.
It was a way of being.
Yeah.
And then, you know, also before all that, there was a plethora of religions and, you know, these secret societies and religious cults and stuff.
And people worshipped multiple gods.
And there was no one exclusive God until, like, this whole biblical canon came about and, like, the Council of Nicaea to include this book and this was the doctrine and we had to follow this.
And that was kind of like what shuttled society.
Into what it is now, and like all the other gods, and you're a pagan if you do any of that stuff, and burn down the temple of Eleusis, no more drugs, that's bad.
And yeah, in some ways, the pagan gods long term did better in that deal.
You know, I was watching, I guess it was during COVID, I started to get obsessed with all those Viking shows.
You watch any of those Viking shows?
They're really good.
You know, like Netflix and Amazon, they do these long, you know, four season sagas of Vikings, but they have like Odin.
Is their god Odin and Thor and all these?
And the Viking gods didn't stay alive in church, but they stayed alive in like popular culture and comics and movies.
So they were allowed to sort of almost live better lives.
They could morph and get refined by sort of successive, you know, TV shows and comics and popular culture things.
So in some ways, they got to live in a way that, you know, the kind of the Jesus or Muhammad gods were sort of locked down, you know.
In their first or second century form, and not allowed to sort of iterate with culture.
So I kind of like, you know, I'm into like Grant Morrison and Alan Moore and those guys who are sort of imbuing popular culture and comics and novels with these spiritual sensibilities because they've sort of, in some ways, they're, even though they're pop culture or low culture, in some ways they've gotten more evolved because they've been allowed to.
Allowed to simmer and change.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's really, that's really interesting.
But yeah, what do you make of like the fact that there's this merging going on of like, on one hand, you have this super advanced, unbelievably high tech group of people that run the world who are embracing ancient texts and sort of using like this ancient writing as like an excuse to, Do whatever they can to control the world.
Strange Bedfellows in Christian Politics00:05:35
It's weird.
I think about it a lot, and then I look at each one of them, it seems to be doing it for a different reason with a different philosophy.
You know, like Musk is getting over a childhood, trying to spread his seed as far as possible.
Teal is gay and wants to be transformed and awakened.
Oracle and Larry Ellison are kind of like Rupert Murdoch power family.
You know, Trump and his people are just sort of, you know, kind of lowlife.
You know, organized crime criminals, you know, using government to get lots of money.
Right, right.
You know, and it's like, there are all these different ways.
And then there's some genuine kind of Christian believers who want to get Israel and bring on the Messianic age.
Then there's like the chameleons like JD Vance, who are like everything, everyone, depending on who's going to give them the money or whatever.
So it's like, it's really hard.
It looks like kind of strange bedfellows or an amalgamation of.
Of people who have very different reasons for supporting this kind of regime.
I mean, Justin, I'm not saying there's equal opportunity.
The left had a very different amalgamation of people.
I mean, what makes these, the left and right, not really work is that the people in them don't really have common interests for the most part.
They don't have common cause.
But it is weird that there are people in the White House now who go to prayer services, like in the White House, in Congress, where they say, the Jews killed Jesus, or let's do, we're going to bomb Iran so that the Messiah sees the fire and comes down to earth.
When you've actually got some people who will say it just to get.
Approval, and then there's people who actively believe it.
And if we're working on those, I'm fine for people to have faith, but you don't, this is why they're so mad at the Pope.
And the Pope is saying it's good to have faith and all that, but don't blow people up for your faith.
There's this sort of papal doctrine on when you do war and when you don't.
And that the international laws around war are based on these.
This Catholic doctrine.
And Catholic doctrine basically says you don't like go to war on somebody unless they're doing something really bad to someone else.
Like, unless they're actively bullying somebody, you don't attack.
And even if you do, you can, but then you don't use, don't say you're doing it for religious reasons, right?
Yeah.
So now they really, they really, they're mad.
They're mad at the Pope, the war ones.
Yeah, because the Pope was talking shit about, or not, wasn't talking shit, but basically he was like going against everything that.
Our government's doing right now, and that's bad because we're trying to paint everything as like this big Christian thing, right?
And trying to promote this war based on there was a crazy story that came out where like the generals were trying to they were talking to their subordinates and telling them that like Trump was like commanded by Christ to do this.
Yeah, that's literally the guy who broke that.
It's my friend Jonathan Larson.
He's got this great oh, yeah, sub stack, yeah, called The News.
Oh, yeah, he's so cool.
Oh, yeah, he should put it on sometime.
Yeah, The News is one who broke it.
TFN.
And it's great.
They got this logo instead of like the Facebook thumbs up.
It's in Facebook style.
It's a figure.
Perfect.
Perfect.
But yeah, they were, yeah, troops were complaining because their generals and their commanders were telling them, you know, we're fighting, you know, we're fighting to bring back Christ.
Right.
Christ will come back.
Yeah, you're not supposed to do that.
No, that's not good.
You're not supposed to do that.
Well, at least we say that.
But now there's people who believe we should.
You know, and I get it.
They think it's a Christian nation.
And that America can be, America and Trump are instruments of a kind of a triumphalist vision of Christ.
This is like nothing what Christ said or did.
I mean, it's not Bible-based.
It's not Christ-like at all.
Right.
But there is a religion that's been built around Christ that's a legitimate religion.
It's got churches and stuff where the idea is to, you know, we do what we can to bring about Christ.
The apocalypse.
So we got to get the Jews to own Israel or greater Israel, which is like a bunch of other countries.
And then once that happens and there's the red heifer and all those things happen, then boom.
And there's some Jewish cults that believe that and some Christian cults, but that's the Washington, D.C. That's the prayer breakfast group, that's the prayer breakfast cult.
That's their vision of how it goes.
Therefore, you need sort of American triumphalism.
I don't know what's crazier the fact that that's true, or the fact that everybody in society has access to that information and that knowledge.
And they're not freaking out about it.
Right.
Exactly.
That whole thing combined with all the Epstein thing they dumped on us.
Everyone's got their own thing.
So it's like, even if I, oh, I'm going to be all mad about that, I'm going to be all mad about that.
But then it's like, oh, look, Trump just signed that psilocybin's legal.
Prayer Breakfast Cults and Triumphalism00:05:36
It's like, boo.
Joe Rogan.
It's like, Joe Rogan, I don't like Trump.
I don't like Trump.
Then it's like, oh, well, I think I'll show up for that one.
You know, and it's like, every once in a while, they throw you a bone.
But the thing is, we shouldn't be living in a society where our dictator has so much power that they throw you a bone.
For you to then, I think Trump's probably getting so desperate because he's losing so much popular support from the people that lobbied for him so much during the when he was running.
Well, I know that Marjorie Taylor Greene and this one.
I think he probably, I don't know, I have no inside knowledge, but if I was to guess, I would guess that he saw an opportunity to do something that he knew Joe would like.
And he's like, hey, man, I'll do this for you.
I'll get the FDA approval.
Will you come to the White House and be in front of the camera with me?
I bet you he asked him to do that and like put Joe on the hot seat and then.
Yeah.
And it helps with all the.
Because the RFK thing.
That helps Trump way more than it helps Joe.
Oh, yeah.
And the RFK stuff was going shitwalled, you know, that I don't even know the whole story, but, you know, RFK lost all his popularity and changed his mind about this and the vaccine thing and the measles.
So the whole sort of RFK, you know, health nut new age, you know, to get that contingent wasn't working.
It was like, you legalize mushrooms, man.
You get, you know, you kind of win a whole lot of that.
That this sort of failed FDA, right?
Right, it is a small victory, right?
That's like it's like celebrating the gut biome or something, you know?
Oh my god, I got can I pee and come back?
Yes, absolutely, because that's the main thing I did.
I got a pull up bar and I went from I could do one pull up now, I'm like at six.
That's great, yeah.
And then and then just try to like increase the amount you do and then start increasing the weight.
You don't have to do a lot of them, just do 10.
Do 10 reps of a weight that's like you can barely do right comfortably without hurting yourself.
And, um, and yeah, keep doing that.
There's lots of supplements you can take.
Creatine's a great one.
Yeah, I did.
I got that.
Creatine's a good thing, a good daily thing that you can use.
And machines are all right.
Someone said, don't use machines, only do free weights.
Oh, no, machines are fine.
Yeah, because that feels like I'm so much less likely to get injured.
Machines are totally fine.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You don't, that person's crazy.
Um, I prefer machines, honestly.
Um, but, Yeah, lots of the more you can do outside is the better, is way better.
Oh, really?
Because the oxygen?
No, because the light.
Yeah, it's better to do stuff outside.
It's better, like for me, like if I wake up early and I get out and when the sun's still rising and to do some activity out there in the morning.
And also, you don't have to think of it like this big task.
You just like, if you just keep some weights around your house, you can like, you can microdose it.
Right.
You know, like before work or whatever, just for five minutes, lift some weights, do some push ups, stuff like that.
Right.
Just like throughout, like work it into your day.
You don't have to do, you don't have to go crazy.
Yeah.
And then eventually you'll, eventually you'll start to see some progress and you'll get more and more in tune with it and it'll work.
No, because it's good.
I got like nice little stringy, like Bruce Lee muscles, which is kind of, I mean, they came from nowhere.
They really came from nowhere.
Like two weeks in, I was like, oh, that's great.
A lot of people, a lot of people, um, because I had no fat, so I didn't have to work off fat to get muscle, I was just bone, right?
So it came from it was easy, it's easier to grow it than I guess.
Then creatine is a great way to do it.
Do you get your blood work often?
Or have you ever gotten your blood work?
I mean, I've been here.
You can test your hormone levels, and there's things you can do to optimize your testosterone level.
And if you can get your testosterone level optimized, it'll really help with muscle growth.
And not just that, but mental clarity, all kinds of things.
Sleep gets better, recovery gets better, more energy, all kinds of stuff.
It's amazing.
Yeah, I'll do it for real.
Because I look at it online, I'll get tribulous, get this, get that.
There's all these names of.
Shit, but yeah, I'm going random.
If I should have a professional, you know, yeah, yeah, there's a ton, there's a ton of stuff you can do to optimize, but for like the weights, for like the weightlifting stuff, you don't have to go crazy.
So, you're not a big, you're not a daily gym kind of guy, then yeah.
I am a daily exercise guy, I do a lot of cardio stuff, and I do like when I have a gym in the other room here and I do heavy weights, I have like a sled that I push, I have lots of weights, like kettlebells and stuff like that, but I do it, I don't do it every day, I do it maybe two days a week.
But I just go really hard when I do that.
So I'll just do as much weight as I possibly can until I'm just like exhausted.
But because you got babies, right?
Yeah, I got three.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a lot.
I know.
I know.
It's a lot.
And there's like no amount of money that changes that either.
You know, I mean, I guess it could if you're an asshole, but.
What do you mean changes it?
You know, that changes the amount of work it is having to get.
You know?
No.
No, I try to spend as much time as I possibly can with them.
You know, I don't want to be an absent father.
And then, like, you know, like the other thing is, you know, you don't want to give them too much.
You don't want to make them feel like they have like an easy way.
You don't want to make them feel like they're going to have an easy way through life or that they have any money or that they have any sort of like backup.
Epstein Interactions and Eugenics00:15:14
Yeah.
You kind of want to make them feel like it's, it's like that, it's like that fourth turning thing, you know, where it's like the hard times.
You heard this saying?
It's like, we should record.
Are we rolling?
Yeah, we're still rolling.
All right.
It's that fourth turning phrase where it's like hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men.
You know what I mean?
And like I grew up with not any, I didn't grow up with no money.
Right.
But I grew up around a lot of kids.
A lot of my friends were very wealthy, you know?
And there was like a big difference between us.
You can see, you know, people that by and large, I would say most people that grow up with a lot of money, with really rich parents, they don't always seem to be like the most.
Interesting, adaptable people that he would grow up with the most.
It was always like people had money and no class or a class and no money, is what it felt.
I used to think we were rich because I lived in the suburbs, you know, and we had two cars.
We didn't, you know, we got our clothes from Sears Robot catalog, but, you know, it seemed fine.
Then I got into Princeton and went there and was like, oh, that's what rich is, you know?
There's people who like had like country, like the girl there, her last name was Rhodes, like Rhodes Scholar, like Rhodesia, you know, like Timmy Forbes.
It's like, Forbes.
It was like, those were the people that I was like, oh my God.
And they would go to New York every weekend and have these, you know, Park Avenue things or, oh, we're having a party.
Oh, this weekend, where?
Oh, Martha's Vineyard.
We'll send the plane around, you know?
It's like, jeez.
Yeah, I kind of got blasted into that world when I was really young too, because one of my first jobs ever was working for this car magazine called the DuPont Registry.
And I was surrounded by the DuPonts, you know, and all these people who were flying around in jets and driving in Ferraris and stuff like this.
And I was like, whoa.
I got to like, Spend some time at their parties and hanging out at their houses and, like, you know, rubbing shoulders with their kids.
It was like, God, this is a whole different world.
It was like crazy that I was like even in the same room as these people.
Yeah.
I quickly realized when I got invited to one of those events, I only got to like two or three things.
I was the entertainment.
You know?
You should tell your Epstein story.
You went to a party?
Didn't you go to a party?
Yeah.
Well, it was sort of the same people.
I mean, what I was talking about before, the whole Dawkins crowd.
Yeah.
I went.
This was really funny.
So after I went to that, I didn't.
You know, hang out with those people much anymore.
I'd kind of disgraced myself, I think, and my agent by challenging the great Richard Dawkins on his atheism and being a weird ass spiritual psychedelic.
Didn't you?
I was listening to you and Duncan talk about it.
You brought a lesbian to an Epstein party.
That was a big no no.
I know.
Yeah, well, it wasn't.
I didn't know it was an Epstein party.
I mean, Epstein wasn't famous yet.
This was the late 90s, but it turned out to be an Epstein party.
But no, it was a party of supposed to be these.
The scientists and tech bros.
It was called like Millionaire Dinner or something, Millionaire Dinner Club.
So it had a bunch of the people who were running the big tech companies at that time and then the famous scientists.
And this guy, this literary agent, invited me to go to it.
And I was like, oh, this is like my chance to really meet the movers and shakers and all.
And he said, you can have a plus one.
He said, but make it a really good plus one because this is, make it count.
And I figured, so I thought, like, who's the smartest person I know?
Right.
So there was this woman in Brooklyn who ran this literary web scene, early web days, but she was really smart, the kind of person who can finish your thought before you've even had it, you know, one of those.
And I thought, okay, I'll bring her.
So, and she said, sure, I'll go.
So I bring her, I go there, and the host of the thing, as soon as he sees her, he takes, he grabs me on the phone.
I can still feel it, pulls me aside, and he goes, how dare you waste your plus one on it, on it.
Ugly lesbian.
Actually, he said ugly dyke, I think.
And how did he know that she was lesbian?
Was it obvious?
I guess.
I don't know.
Or maybe he knew her better than I, or whatever.
Looked up her wiki.
I had no idea.
I didn't know.
I was like, she was a lesbian.
Oh, darn.
Looked up her MySpace.
Yeah.
I didn't think she was ugly, you know, and I didn't know she was a lesbian.
Still don't necessarily.
But you were supposed to bring a young, hot, big breasted.
I was like, what are you talking about?
And he's like, you were supposed.
Supposed to, I invited you because I was East Village 20 something.
I invited you so you'd raise the quotient of the party.
And he goes, Look.
And at the tables, it's all middle aged guys with these very, in some cases, too young girls that look like they could be seniors at Dalton, right?
And it was only like 10, 20 years later, I realized, Oh, those dinners, including that, were.
Paid for by Epstein.
These were Epstein funded dinners.
I mean, they were essentially dinners for scientists to become part of culture and all that and to meet potential funders.
I mean, there was a lot of, you know, it was the tech science funder world, you know, and they're together.
You could still go to conferences and find all those people together, but it was like, oh, you know, but I remember once that I had such a sick, Feeling in my stomach about what is this?
And this is, am I, should I be more cool?
Should I have known?
Should I be going out with someone hot?
Should I?
And it's like, this is, this was, I was kind of immersed in suddenly in the sort of wealthy, toxic male Epstein value system and, you know, ended up just staying away.
You know, I just stayed away from them for years.
It's so funny.
Like, you have to bring this accessory, this human accessory.
Right.
But you realize how people fall into that.
I mean, I should have been a more impressionable 28 year old or whatever, but I was already kind of set in my ethical ways.
But, If you're a scientist and you're not getting laid and whatever, and now you're in this thing and there's millionaires and other scientists, and it creates a sort of a permission structure around doing icky stuff.
It's like, oh, really?
Look, there's Noam Chomsky over there, right?
You know, and he's as lefty as it gets.
And he's kind of saying, oh, he's a friend of the thing.
Stephen Hawking's over there getting a lap dance.
I'm good.
So it's like, I guess this is really, and I know the arguments they'll make.
It's like, look, since ancient Greece, you know, scientists and men, you do it, and it's, And these young women are getting something out of it.
They're there.
They're giving consent.
They're going to get professional things.
They're meeting you.
How much better is it for them to be with you?
They weren't dragged here against their will.
Right.
They're going to want to be with some 17 year old who's going to come in 20 seconds.
It's like, no, they're going to be taken in and cared for, and you appreciate them and honor them.
You can create a story around that kind of abuse.
Totally.
Yeah.
And they're, but for the grace of God, go we, right?
Because anyone could be frustrated and.
Tempted into that.
100%.
Yeah, no, I had actually, we had a guy on here a couple weeks ago who was telling us a story about how Jeffrey Epstein wanted to meet with him.
And they ended up doing a Skype call.
And he's like basically looked him up.
This was before all, I think this was before his first arrest in the early 2000s.
And he was like, oh, yeah, this guy's funding all of the smartest people I know.
Why wouldn't I do a 20 minute Zoom call with him?
So we did a 20 minute Skype call with the guy.
Yeah.
And, He said Jeffrey Epstein was just sitting on the Skype call asking him to tell him stories about spoon bending and telepathy for like 20 or 30 minutes.
Right.
Like he was fascinated with this paranormal ESP type stuff.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, that combined with all this other occult stuff that he was into and then Ghislaine was into with like, we were talking about before, I don't know if we were recording, but we were talking about the Temple of Poseidon earlier and her obsession with like the lost city of Atlantis and all this stuff.
And then you combine that with the eugenics stuff that he was interested in and like.
Well, right.
If you can connect it to something really old.
Then it doesn't feel like you're such a psychopathic aberration, right?
Right.
Part of a, it's sort of a continuity of it.
You know, the other thing I was thinking when talking about these sort of Epstein interactions and stuff, what got me out of that alive, right?
The reason I didn't fall into it was because I, it's my spidey sense.
You know, our spidey sense is what goes, something's off here, right?
That's why we've got to stay connected to this, whatever, this natural shamanic, whatever this realm we're talking about.
The more, Invested you are, or distracted you are by all the social media metrics, if those are your gauges of good and bad, of right and wrong, then you lose that gut, spidey, ethical thing, you know?
Yeah.
And that's, and of course, I mean, it's like, it's just like saying, oh, if you're completely a capitalist and nothing else, you're going to end up doing immoral things.
Of course you are, because you're not going to feel the externalities of your actions.
You're not going to feel the people you're killing or whatever.
So it's that.
I really feel like the way to survive and thrive in this unfolding landscape that's getting weirder and weirder and darker is to stay in touch with that, you know, the part that we're trying to crush, the sweet, innocent, vulnerable, fleshy, psychedelic, thoughtful thing.
You know, that's the strength.
Yes.
Yes, exactly.
Have you ever heard of Adam Curtis, the documentarian?
Yeah, yeah.
You know his film, Hyper Normalization?
That's what this whole moment reminds me of.
Yeah.
You should get him on.
I want to get him on my podcast.
We've talked to him before, but he doesn't, he's not interested in doing podcasts.
I know.
But he's making five hours of movies every year.
It's incredible.
It's incredible the stuff that he does.
And like the whole hyper normalization thing seems to be more relevant today than ever because like the way the media is, where it's like you have access to all the deepest, darkest secrets of the people that run the world now, but everyone knows they can't do anything about it.
You know, it's like all we can do.
You have two levels of it.
You have like people like us who talk about it for a living, who like we can talk about it and do everything we can to like boil our little pot of water in this ocean.
Right.
And then you have like people who have real jobs who have to go to work and to take care of whatever they have to take care of.
And they don't really have the time and the bandwidth to pay attention to all this stuff, but they're kind of peripherally aware of it.
They know it exists and they know that, like, oh my God, like, This whole system is kind of not real.
So I'm just going to keep pretending my way through.
Like, if I accept the fact that it's all a sham, how can I reconcile that with like getting up and going to work every day and being a part of this whole system?
Right.
You know, it's so tricky.
It's like we're pretending.
Yeah.
But then the object of the game is to start to dedicate as much of your time and energy toward the alternative ways of being, you know, whether it's just being nice to people in the street or not being on the phone or.
Answering less email or changing jobs, doing favors.
You know, we can't single handedly create a new social economic order that doesn't reward sociopaths, right?
That can't happen overnight, but we can engage in behaviors and ways of moving through our lives that engender a more compassionate, local, friendly human.
Approach.
That's what my podcast, Team Human.
It's like to say, being human is a team sport.
Let's act like that.
What would that look like?
Yeah, 100%.
Behavioral.
It's behavioral.
It starts really easy.
The first thing I would tell people is, and it works for the Christian too, remember the Sabbath.
Maybe start that way.
Take one day a week and unplug from these systems.
Don't even look at a screen.
One day from Friday night to Saturday night.
Don't look at a screen.
Meet people, touch people, have sex.
Play games one day.
And that's enough to recalibrate your system.
When you go back on Saturday night at sundown to the device, it's like, oh, this is.
Yeah.
This is doing something to you.
Yeah.
It's like an alternate reality.
Yeah.
It's an alternate reality.
It's the simulation.
People always keep saying, are we living in a simulation?
No, we are.
No, no.
We made a simulation.
Right.
You know, we weren't living in a simulation.
We are now.
Yeah, 100%.
And also, inside that simulation, you have multiple simulations because, like, the way the algorithms are, there's There's pockets.
Right.
There's like little like pocket echo chamber echo chambers that people live in where they don't cross over.
The other day we had this dude on the podcast who he's like a an academic attack dog.
He's like an attack dog for academic consensus.
And so like normally online, all of like the alternative stuff, like the alternative history, all of the any anything that doesn't go anything that goes against like scientific.
Consensus or norms, right?
Seems to get the most attention online, like exposing corruption, talking of stuff that Graham Hancock talks about, like ancient civilizations, the possibility.
Like when you use your imagination and you try to say, you know, what if they were wrong?
What if the textbooks in the schools aren't actually what the truth is?
What if there's more to this story?
Right.
Right.
And this guy is like the one that goes, Online and like publicly humiliates and belittles that group of people.
And I was like, I'm like, what if we just went completely against the grain and had this guy on the podcast, the guy that everyone, right?
The guy that everyone who listens to my show would despise and hate this guy.
I'm like, let's, let's, let's give it a shake, see how it goes.
Dissertations vs. Traditional Science00:14:20
And I thought it might like open up a portal, but it didn't.
It was just like, A brick wall.
Yeah.
And, you know, I mean, we got into some, we were talking about everything from like the pharmaceutical industry to ancient civilizations and Graham Hancock and stuff like that.
And this guy was like, I was asking him, Is there anything, is there anything that you looked at originally that you thought was 100% a bona fide fact that you were able to come around on and change your mind on with other?
With other evidence.
Like, are there any of these crazy fringe things that you hated at first that you were able to change your mind on?
He goes, No, never.
And he's like, I don't think it'll ever happen either.
Like, he thought he thinks he's absolutely right.
So, like, it really illuminated to me that this whole sort of like podcast ecosystem is its own separate universe from a whole nother part of reality.
And I don't know if it's a fact that the people like him, the people that are in academia, the scientists that work, in labs all day, every day that don't pay attention to the media, like are they, like, are they so disconnected?
Are they in a completely separate universe and reality from what this podcasting world is?
Like if you were to introduce them into this or inject this world into their veins, would it be like a total disconnect?
Would there be, would it be like, what is this?
This is completely not real.
This is completely disconnected from my reality of what I see every day working in the lab with my hands on.
Science and looking at atoms and all this stuff.
It shouldn't.
I mean, and there's some of those guys have podcasts, right?
Some of them do, yeah.
Some cool science y people and astronomers talking about other universes.
Yeah.
But this guy's take is all those people are grifters.
Like anyone who does real science, who goes on a podcast, is most likely a grifter because the fact that they're going in front of a microphone means they have some sort of a financial gain going on.
I don't think so.
I think some are.
Like public educators.
Yeah.
You know, and it's thrilling, especially with kids, to tell them about what's going on in the.
I mean, I understand what they mean.
I mean, the guy had like no imagination whatsoever.
Right.
And the fact that he can't change his mind about anything is not, he's not a real scientist then.
You know, what the podcast universe can do, the thing I think it's most valuable for, is kind of exercising the what if muscle in people's brains.
What if this?
What if that?
Like I was telling you just before, before we started, that I was listening to a bunch of your shows, you know, before coming on and like people talking about space and the aliens and stuff.
And like some of it, I'm like, I don't believe that.
But the experience of what ifing, the experience of imagining it, kind of creates more space in the brain.
And the way, I don't know if you're owner, do you remember Art Bell?
Were you around for him?
Of course, yeah.
So you do an Art Bell thing with people, which I like, which is even if they're going off and it's like, well, these people are enslaved for the gold and they're going to bring it to the other planet.
But you stay with them, not necessarily positive reinforcing, whatever, but.
Okay, and then what?
And then why would that?
And so you follow them logically through their thing and try it on, at least.
You know what I mean?
Which is what art used to do.
You know what I mean?
And you're just like, is he believing it or not?
It's like, you can never really tell.
Yeah.
And I like for you to stay in that space between because it's like.
Yeah, I've always just been fascinated by this rift between academia and the inner.
Podcasting, sort of world, you know, like the Art Bell world versus like the strict academic science, because there's been this emergence of people that have been popping out of like the traditional consensus by the book sort of like PhD world who have like started sort of have been like coming out and like there's there's this like there's this phenomena where they clash online and and um, right, it's become this team sport, it should be.
If we on the PhD side, which I am now, don't embrace Our wonder, then people will hate us to say, Oh, you're stuck in your ivory tower.
You're not open to any ideas.
You're just there to protect the establishment view of this and that.
That's not what it's for.
Yeah.
And I see the value in both.
I think they should both exist simultaneously and they should be intertwined.
But I've just heard so many stories of people in academia being like, For example, you know, one guy who was like publishing his dissertation and like went in front of the dissertation committee, he did a dissertation on drugs used in ancient Rome.
And the committee on his dissertation said, You have to take out every reference to recreational drug in ancient Rome before we give you your PhD.
And he goes, Why?
And the head of the committee says, Because the Romans wouldn't have done such a thing.
And he's like, Well, that's some weird form of censorship.
So he did it, got his PhD, and then he went out and made a book about it.
Right.
That is weird.
You know, it's like, but I know that's not.
What the committee should be doing is saying, you haven't demonstrated that it was recreational.
In other words, you're making an assumption that they were doing recreational drugs.
We don't have any evidence of that.
So you can't say it.
But it doesn't sound like that's what they were doing.
No, he had overwhelming evidence that they were doing it.
One thing I do when I'm on dissertation committees is I try to flip it and I explain to the person defending their dissertation, you're not defending your dissertation.
We professors are defending the canon against your dissertation.
When you write a dissertation, the underlying drive is to say, the canon is incomplete.
I have new information that you need to include in the canon.
And we are defending.
We're here to say, no, no, no, we don't want something new.
Because if you're writing a dissertation, you're basically saying that the establishment is either wrong or they're ignorant of something that they need to know.
So who's defending what?
And if you flip it to that, it makes them feel the dissertation, they're not nervous anymore.
Right.
You know, it flips the thing.
Right.
Yeah.
And I think that one of the cool things about, you know, one of the cool things about some of these like fringe ideas or fringe, you know, scientific theories or whatever it might be, UFOs or anything like that, is that that stuff can kind of be, which has happened for me, what draws you into something else.
Like that can be like the hook that gets you interested in something that sort of draws you in, like, uh huh, this sounds a little bit crazy.
Maybe they're wrong about something and you, At first, you may think it's all real, and then you kind of like learn something else, like, oh shit, maybe it's not real.
Now I'm kind of incentivized to like really drill down and find the truth about this.
And then before you know it, you become an expert in whatever it is.
Yep.
And the stuff was, I mean, the stuff we accept now that was seen as crazy when I was a kid.
Gut biome, no one believed in that.
They didn't even believe when I was a kid, I would eat milk and I would get sick.
They didn't even believe in lactose intolerance when I was a kid.
That's in the 70s.
It was like not a thing.
Yeah.
And now it's like it's science.
You know, it's real.
Gut biome is real.
There's real bacteria in there that.
Determine your mood and your health, and yeah, all these things.
The second brain, it is, and your immune system, and these are all friggin' real.
And you know, amazing Randy, whatever it is, he says he's going to give a million bucks to anyone who proves something supernatural.
He's this magician who, but he'll never give it because there's a ton of stuff that's that's weird.
And when someone from the academy challenges the laws of science, like Rupert Sheldrake.
I don't know if you know him.
Oh, yeah.
He came up with morphogenesis and all great morphic resonance.
Morphic resonance.
Yeah.
He did a TED talk, and it's the only TED talk that ever got censored.
And in a TED talk, he said that he believes that the laws, what if the laws of science themselves evolve?
Yes.
The laws of physics change.
Right.
Because everything else does.
What if they do too?
Or if we're in a bigger system and they just freak the fuck out and they just erased it off the thing?
You're not allowed to do that.
That's so crazy.
Why would you do that?
Because it undermines all the whatever, but it's like that was the best.
It's like, because then it's like a meta scientific, there's a scientific model, but the scientific model is living in a reality that's changing.
So, how does it model?
It's like beautiful.
And whether it's true or not, it's just a big, beautiful what if.
It's not as crazy as, you know, it's not a Bigfoot what if.
It's a pretty straightforward one.
Right.
Well, there's, I mean, there's absolutely shit out there that is around us all the time that you can't measure or weigh in a lab, you know?
Right.
And that, There's a real thing happening out there, a real multiple phenomena that don't fit into the scientific method.
You can't measure up to scientific method muster and you can't quantify it.
Well, maybe they do at some point if we had other languages and ways of understanding things.
Right.
You know, with some alternate universe.
Like retro causality is the one that I'm really into lately.
Mitch Horowitz talks a lot about it.
Have you had him on?
No.
He's a great occult historian.
So, retrocausality, he didn't prove it, but I first heard about it through him, is the idea that events in the future affect the present.
And the present affects the past.
So, what they've done are these experiments where a whole bunch of people take a test and they don't show how well they did or whatever.
And then people who study for the test after the test do better on the test than people who didn't.
People who study for the test after the test do better.
Why is that?
Because it's retrocausal.
Retro causal learning.
Right.
So events in the future affect the past.
You know, and it's interesting, you know, that crazy Nick Land, the guy who all the, he believes that capitalism is a strange attractor in the future, that it's what's drawing us toward it, which is why things are happening the way they are.
That capitalism is what?
Is like a strange attractor.
Capitalism is a future state that is rippling back and drawing us toward it into its future, that it's an inevitable future that's already there.
Yeah, I don't buy that.
This is like that idea, that time loop idea, right?
Yeah.
And their precognition.
Have you heard stories that have dreams that predict the future and stuff like that?
It's the future is broadcasting back to us.
And there's another physics theory, I figure out who it is now, that apparently it kind of makes sense that when the Big Bang happened, the time moved forward and backward at the same time.
It didn't just move forward.
So we're, right, it's a loop that we're coming back around.
Time Loops was that guy, I interviewed him on a podcast.
Wargo?
Yeah.
Eric Wargo.
Yeah, he's great.
I know.
And he's a real scientist.
Right?
He's the real deal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, it's interesting because it's a real, it's been documented throughout history of people like recording their dreams and like actually proving that these events happened after they had the dreams about them.
Yeah.
And then there's that, I mean, it doesn't show a heck of a lot, but the Princeton random number generator.
Number generator.
Yeah.
It's weird when something's going to happen.
There was a book, there was an entire book written about the Titanic sinking before the Titanic actually sunk.
And it was like, it was called, the name of the ship was called the Titan, I think, right?
Remember, we looked this up?
Titan.
Titan, back to Titan, Poseidon.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah, man.
It's bonkers.
Well, thanks for doing this, dude.
This has been really fun.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
My pleasure.
I'm really excited that you can get a whole cathedral this way.
I'm doing a podcast.
I want a cathedral too.
Yeah, it's definitely fun.
It took us a while to figure out the design, but once we figured it out, we knocked it out pretty quick.
I'm not sure what kind of a cathedral it is, but people can use their imagination to make it.
But they're not that pointy, so it could still, it's got a slight, you know, slight Islam shaping.
Uh huh.
So it's good.
And a contemporary, I don't know, it almost got a slight, a slight reminiscent of the carpet in Kubrick's The Shining.
The Shining.
We wanted to put that carpet in here, but we found some people who made it and it was just too expensive.
Oh, really?
They just went nuts.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was like overseas.
They like hand make that carpet, that shining carpet.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
That's crazy.
That would have been cool.
All right.
Next time, I'll put it in my cathedral.
Yes.
Do it.
Yeah.
I just got to get advertisers.
That's how it gets paid for.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, all right.
Thanks.
Well, good.
Tell people where they can find your podcast again.
Team Human.
And your books and all that.
Yeah.
Team Human's the podcast.
You can find it everywhere, you know, YouTube and all those places.
I'm Douglas Rushkoff.
Go to rushkoff.com.
The book you'll like is called Survival of the Richest Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires.
If you want a book that'll just make you happy, get Team Human.